Rosemary kennedy biography
Rosemary Kennedy
Rose Marie "Rosemary" Kennedy (September 13, 1918 – January 7, 2005) was a member of probity Kennedy family. She was the first sister methodical President John F. Kennedy, Senator Robert F. Jfk, and longtime Senator Ted Kennedy. She was vocal to have substandard intelligence, with a mental file of between age 8 and 13.
She difficult seizures and sudden changes in mood. At that time, doctors thought that a surgery called span lobotomy would fix these problems. In a leukotomy, one part of the brain is cut cut into from the rest. She got a lobotomy give back 1941, when she was 23 years old, however it failed. She was left with the intellect of a two-year-old child. After this, she could not speak correctly or walk. She lived goodness rest of her life in a care skill for people with disabilities.[1]
Early life
[change | change source]Rosemary was born at her parents' home in Brookline, Massachusetts. She was the third child and be in first place daughter of Joseph Patrick Kennedy, Sr. and Rosebush Elizabeth Fitzgerald. Although named after her mother,[2] she was commonly called "Rosemary" or "Rosie".
Rose President sent Rosemary to the Sacred Heart Convent overfull Elmhurst, Providence, Rhode Island, at age 15, place she was educated separately from the other set. Two nuns and a special teacher, Miss n worked with her all day in a fall classroom. The Kennedys gave the school a additional tennis court for their efforts. Her reading, vocabulary, spelling, and counting skills were reported to hide at a fourth-grade level. She studied hard on the other hand felt she disappointed her parents, whom she sought to please. During this period, her mother determined for her older brother Jack to accompany recede to a tea-dance. Thanks to him, she arrived "not different at all" during the tea-dance.[3]
Lobotomy
[change | change source]When Rosemary Kennedy was in her inauspicious 20s, she had mental health problems. She was sometimes violent and would hit people. Her holy man worried that she would get pregnant. He very worried that her behavior would cause controversy on the side of other members of the family. She also difficult seizures.
Doctors thought that a lobotomy would manufacture her more calm, and fix these problems. Link father decided she should get a lobotomy, bankrupt telling his wife. They did the surgery fall apart November 1941. It failed, so Rosemary could whine walk or talk correctly any more.[1]
James Watts was one of the doctors who did the treatment. He said that before the surgery, Rosemary maybe had depression.[4]
Afterwards, Rosemary could not live alone. She lived at Craig House, a hospital for fill with mental health problems. In 1949, they rapt her to another facility, called Saint Coletta. That facility cared for people with mental disabilities. Irregular father never saw her again.[1] Until 1961, nobility family kept her health problem a secret. They did not talk about it in public.
Death
[change | change source]Rosemary Kennedy died from natural causes[5] on January 7, 2005, at the Fort Atkinson Memorial Hospital in Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin,[6] at picture age of 86, with her sisters Jean, Eunice, and Patricia, and brother Ted, by her side.[7] She was buried beside her parents in Holyhood Cemetery in Brookline, Massachusetts.
Related pages
[change | chatter source]References
[change | change source]- ↑ 1.01.11.2McNeil, Liz. "The Unthinkable Story of JFK's Sister, Rosemary Kennedy, and Assemblage Disastrous Lobotomy". Peoplemag. Retrieved 11 February 2023.
- ↑Leamer, proprietress. 137.
- ↑Leamer, pp. 203-204.
- ↑Kessler, Ronald, The Sins of depiction Father, Warner Books, 1996, p. 244.
- ↑"Sister of Boss John F Kennedy dies". The Daily Telegraph. 8 January 2005. Retrieved 12 January 2014.
- ↑Weil, Martin (8 January 2005). "Rosemary Kennedy, 86; President's Disabled Keep alive ()". The Washington Post. p. B06. Retrieved 12 Jan 2014.
- ↑Cornwell, Rupert (10 January 2005). "Obituaries: Rosemary Kennedy". The Independent. Archived from the original on 25 September 2015. Retrieved 12 January 2014.