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  1. Jan 25, 2023 · Exclusive photos of Rosemary Kennedy revealed new details about her life after her lobotomy. By. Liz McNeil. Updated on January 25, 2023 01:55PM EST. Photo: Courtesy Elizabeth...

    • Liz Mcneil
  2. Rose Marie "Rosemary" Kennedy (September 13, 1918 – January 7, 2005) was the eldest daughter born to Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy. She was a sister of President John F. Kennedy and Senators Robert F. and Ted Kennedy .

  3. Feb 19, 2018 · Hidden away at the age of 23, Rosemary Kennedy suffered from a mental disability that kept her away from the spotlight and life of accomplishment that her siblings enjoyed. Before she died in 2005, her disability unknowingly paved a way for a legacy still evident today.

    • What Was The Kennedy Curse?
    • Rosemary Kennedy's Birth: What Happened?
    • Rosemary Kennedy's Childhood and Education
    • Rosemary Kennedy’s Years in Britain
    • What Happened When Rosemary Kennedy Returned to America?
    • Why Was Rosemary Kennedy Treated with A Lobotomy?
    • What Happened to Rosemary Kennedy?

    The 'Kennedy Curse' refers to a tragic sequence of events that befell the Kennedy family – primarily the nine children of Joseph P Kennedy and Rose Kennedy – throughout the 20th century. The couple’s eldest son, Joe Jr – who had been groomed since childhood by his father for the future presidency of the United States – was killed in action in 1944 ...

    Rosemary Kennedy was born on Friday 13 September 1918. At the time of her birth, the city of Brookline, Massachusetts was in the grip of the 1918 Spanish Fluepidemic – which would kill between 20 and 50 million people worldwide – and so the doctor attending the birth was delayed with other patients. During Rose Kennedy’s labour, although the baby's...

    Her disabilities were often hidden or disguised by her family to avoid the stigma of being associated with ‘defective genes’. Despite her attendance at more than a dozen special schools in the United States and Britain, Rosemary struggled with reading and writing well into adulthood.

    Seemingly the happiest period of Rosemary's life was spent in England, in the years preceding the Second World War. After her father, Joseph, was appointed ambassador to the UK by President Franklin D Rooseveltin 1938, the Kennedy family relocated to England. The beauty and charm of the teenage Rosemary and her younger sister Kathleen attracted the...

    Rosemary’s return to America was disastrous. Taken away from the love and care that had surrounded her in England, she regressed swiftly. The progress she had made at Belmont House vanished. She reportedly had violent seizures and temper tantrums, lashing out at those around her, even her own younger siblings and the children in her charge. In one ...

    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 sexual desire]. Up to 5,000 lobotomies a year were performed in th...

    The operation had been a catastrophic failure. Rosemary could no longer walk or talk. Even after years of therapy, she could utter no more than a few words and never fully recovered the use of her limbs. Her autonomy, such as it had been, was effectively over. She was to live for the next 64 years hidden away in institutions, needing full-time care...

    • Elinor Evans
  4. Rosemary Kennedy died on January 7, 2005 at age 86. Eunice Shriver said in her eulogy that Rosemary had left a legacy that was long and deep.

  5. Jan 8, 2005 · Rosemary Kennedy, the oldest sister of President John F. Kennedy and the inspiration for the Special Olympics, died Friday. She was 86. Rosemary, top, Jean, bottom, and Robert Kennedy, right,...

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  7. Mar 2, 2022 · After learning about the tragic true story of Rosemary Kennedy and her botched lobotomy, check out these vintage photos of the Kennedy family. Then, go inside the sordid history of the lobotomy procedure.

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