Vice President JD Vance may be one of the most powerful men in American politics, but his journey to the White House began in the middle of chaos, heartbreak, and survival. Still in his early 40s, Vance became the youngest U.S. vice president since 1857 — but his path was anything but ordinary.
A Childhood Marked by Addiction and Instability
Born James Donald Bowman, Vance’s early years were marred by instability. His father, Donald Bowman, left when he was just one year old, and his parents’ divorce wasn’t finalized until he was six. It was then his mother, Beverly Aikins, delivered the devastating news — he would never see his father again.
“It was the saddest I had ever felt,” Vance wrote in his 2016 memoir Hillbilly Elegy.
Aikins, a nurse, struggled with alcohol, heroin, and prescription drug addiction — even stealing morphine from the hospital where she worked. “I sold drugs from the hospital… I stole morphine,” she admitted in a 2024 interview.
By the time Vance was 12, his mother’s arrest brought him a sense of relief — a telling sign of the chaos he had endured.
A Revolving Door of Father Figures
Throughout his youth, Vance witnessed a string of five marriages and a dizzying shuffle of step- and half-siblings.
“I had many stepbrothers and stepsisters by one measure, but only two if you limited the tally to the offspring of Mom’s husband of the moment,” he recalled.
At one point, Vance and his sister Lindsay Ratliff didn’t even realize they were half-siblings. His mother’s third husband, Bob Hamel, adopted him, changing his name from James Donald Bowman to James David Hamel — before yet another divorce unraveled the family.
Finding Stability and a New Name
Vance eventually adopted the last name of his maternal grandparents — the people who stepped in when his mother could not care for him. This act marked the start of a new chapter that would lead him from a turbulent Appalachian childhood to Yale Law School and eventually the Vice Presidency.