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Craig House
- After the lobotomy, Kennedy was immediately institutionalized. She initially lived for several years at Craig House, a private psychiatric hospital 90 minutes north of New York City.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosemary_Kennedy
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After the lobotomy, Kennedy was immediately institutionalized. She initially lived for several years at Craig House, a private psychiatric hospital 90 minutes north of New York City. [26]
Mar 2, 2022 · After being reunited with her family, Rosemary Kennedy lived out the rest of her days in Saint Coletta’s, a residential care facility in Jefferson, Wisconsin, until her death in 2005. She was 86 years old when she died.
Oct 9, 2018 · But because protecting his and his family’s image was paramount, Rosemary lived in a cottage on the grounds in secrecy and seclusion, rather than being assigned a room in the former mansion...
Jan 25, 2023 · More than eight decades after JFK s troubled sister Rosemary was left disabled by a disastrous lobotomy, two books from 2015 revealed the heartbreaking details of a dynasty's darkest secret.
- Liz Mcneil
Aug 5, 2024 · Why was Rosemary Kennedy treated with a lobotomy? The lobotomy – a new 'psycho-surgical' operation that involved separation or removal of pathways between lobes of the brain – was believed to be a cure for a multitude of psychological delinquencies such as alcoholism and ‘nymphomania’ [the term given to uncontrollable and excessive ...
- Elinor Evans
Oct 3, 2015 · Rosemary was the lost Kennedy daughter; disabled from birth, she was left profoundly damaged after a lobotomy at the age of 23. But she had a lasting influence on her family's charitable projects.
When her father was appointed US Ambassador to Britain in 1938, Rosemary went to live in London and was presented at court along with her mother and sister Kathleen. But when the family returned to the United States in 1940, “Rosemary was not making progress but seemed instead to be going backward,” as her sister Eunice later wrote.