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Rosemary Kennedy Biography
Political Relative
Rosemary Kennedy was the little-known sister of President John F. Kennedy whose mental problems helped inspire the creation of the Special Olympics. Rosemary was the oldest daughter of Rose and Joseph Kennedy, and the third of the nine Kennedy children. As a child she was "slower to crawl, slower to walk and to speak than her brothers, and she experienced learning difficulties when she reached school age," according to a profile in the JFK Library and Museum. Her precise disabilities have never been defined; her obituary in The Washington Post said that Rosemary Kennedy "was characterized as slow and shy-seeming from early childhood, possibly dyslexic and apparently retarded." In 1941, she was given a lobotomy, a then-new surgery that was regarded as a miracle cure for mood swings and depression. The surgery was a disaster, leaving Rosemary mentally weak and nearly unable to speak. Her father later sent her to St. Coletta’s School for Exceptional Children in Jefferson, Wisconsin, where she lived for most of the rest of her life, although she did make occasional trips to Cape Cod and other destinations. Her sister Eunice Kennedy Shriver in 1968 began the Special Olympics, inspired in part by the family's experiences with Rosemary.
Extra credit: John Kennedy was 16 months older than Rosemary; the eldest Kennedy sibling, Joe Jr., was a little more three years older than Rosemary.
Blog posts mentioning Rosemary Kennedy:
Four Good Links
JFK Library and Museum: Rosemary Kennedy
A profile from her older brother's museum
Rosemary Kennedy, 86; President's Disabled Sister
Her 2005 obituary from The Washington Post
Rosemary Kennedy Obituary
The Guardian has details on her post-lobotomy years
The Buie Knife: Rosemary Kennedy
A 2005 blog post tackles the political angles
Vital Stats
Birth
Birthplace
Death
7 January 2005
(natural causes, age 86)
Best Known As
The Kennedy sister who had a lobotomy
