Following are key events in the life of George H. W. Bush, the 41st president of the United States who died on Friday at the age of 94.
(Reuters) – Following are key events in the life of George H. W. Bush, the 41st president of the United States who died on Friday at the age of 94.
June 12,1924 – Born to New York banker, and later U. S. senator from Connecticut, Prescott Bush and Dorothy Walker Bush in Massachusetts.
1941 – After Japan attacks Pearl Harbor, Bush joins the Navy and becomes the youngest U. S. naval aviator, flying 58 combat missions during World War Two. 
1944 – His plane is hit by Japanese anti-aircraft fire, forcing him to bail out over the Pacific. He is rescued by a submarine crew. 
1945 – Marries Barbara Pierce, with whom he has six children including George W. Bush, the 43rd U. S. president, and Jeb Bush, a former Florida governor and a 2016 presidential candidate. 
1948 – Graduates from Yale University and moves his family to West Texas, where he enters the oil business. 
1964 – Loses his first political race, for a U. S. Senate seat from Texas. 
1966 – Wins his first elected office, a seat in the U. S. House of Representatives from Texas. He is elected to a second term in 1968. 
1970 – Loses his second bid for a Senate seat to Lloyd Bentsen. 
1971 – President Richard Nixon appoints him U. S. ambassador to the United Nations. 
1973 – Becomes Republican National Committee chairman. 
1974 – Becomes chief of the U. S. Liaison Office in Beijing under President Gerald Ford. 
1976 – Named by Ford as director of Central Intelligence. Credited with helping to restore morale at the agency after investigations into illegal and unauthorized activities.