Military service After graduating from Williams College, Burns spent a year as an
intern in Washington for
Utah Congressman
Abe Murdock. He spent a year at Harvard, then six months in
Colorado working for the
War Labor Board.
Academic career After earning his Ph.D. in political science from Harvard, Burns joined the faculty of Williams College in 1947, and taught there for nearly 40 years, retiring in 1986. A member of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, he served as president of the
American Political Science Association and the
International Society of Political Psychology. He was also an elected member of the
American Philosophical Society. During the early 1990s he taught classes at the
University of Maryland, where he was inducted into
Omicron Delta Kappa (ODK) and was honored with the naming of the James MacGregor Burns Academy of Leadership. In 2004 he was also awarded the Laurel Crowned Circle Award, ODK's highest honor. In 2010 he won the
Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. Award for Distinguished Writing in American History of Enduring Public Significance presented jointly by the
Roosevelt Institute and the
Society of American Historians.
Political career A liberal, in 1958 Burns was the unsuccessful Democratic nominee in
Massachusetts's 1st congressional district, meeting then-U.S. Senator
John F. Kennedy and helping him gain Protestant support to get re-elected, while Kennedy helped him gain Catholic support. Burns gained personal access that allowed him to write his biography of Kennedy, published in 1960, which calls JFK "casual as a cash register," "quiet, taut, efficient—sometimes, perhaps, even dull," and generally too cerebral and lacking in heart. This angered Kennedy's wife
Jackie, who said Burns "underestimated" him. Burns graduated from
Lexington High School in
Massachusetts in 1935, and then received his Bachelor of Arts from Williams College and his Ph.D. from Harvard University. He and his first wife, Janet Thompson, had four children, whom they raised in Williamstown after he joined the faculty at Williams College. In 1964, he met Joan Simpson Meyers, daughter of renowned paleontologist
George Gaylord Simpson, in New York City when she interviewed him for her best-selling book about President John Fitzgerald Kennedy; four years later Burns and Meyers were married at High Mowing, the family home in Williamstown, where they lived together for the next quarter century. At the end of his life, he lived with his collaborator and longtime companion, Professor Susan Dunn, and remained close friends with his first wife. Burns died in
Williamstown, Massachusetts, on July 15, 2014, at 95, after publishing more than 20 books. ==Views on government==