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December 6, 2018

Rosemary Kennedy: A Life Stolen by Mental Illness and Her Family

When Rosemary Kennedy was enrolled into Kindergarten in 1924, her teachers labeled her as “deficient.” Rose and Joe Kennedy, her parents of high status and education, heard this and were taken aback. You see, the Kennedys had five children and one on the way, and not once had this term been brought up before. For years, little Rosemary struggled to keep up with her classmates. Each day after school, her mother would subject her to several additional hours of study in the hopes of giving her the most opportunity for achievement. However, Rosemary was still held back from progressing to the next grade level at least three times during her education.1

After moving Rosemary from school to school, her mother felt defeated. In her growing years, the 1920s through the 1930s, the education system was not advanced enough to have a standardized curriculum or specialized teaching styles for those with learning deficits.2 Each school taught what they were comfortable with, and if the students could not conform, they had little chance to ever be successful. As Rose saw her daughter struggle, she decided to visit the best doctors available to her.

During one particular consultation, Rose was asked to remember the day of Rosemary’s birth. The pregnancy itself was not out of the ordinary, as Rose had two children before. However, when it came time to give birth, the obstetrician who was to deliver the baby was several hours late. It was during the height of the flu season, and before he could make the house call, he had several other patients to tend to. During those excruciating hours, Rose’s nurse was forced to hold the baby’s head in the birthing canal, which meant that the baby was receiving little to no oxygen. The reason the nurse had to prevent the baby from coming out is that her license only allowed her to help the doctor deliver, and do nothing if a doctor was not present. She also could not offer Rose any form of anesthetic. The effects of that night was the most obvious reason for Rosemary’s hardships.3

Rosemary at 15 years old | Courtesy of Bancroft Press

In the 1930s, Joe Kennedy and his family caught the public’s eye more frequently than ever, their social lives often making debuts in the front pages of national and international newspapers. Joe had a successful political career, and Rose always made motherhood seem effortless.4 Rose’s modern interpretation of being a hardworking mother of eight children made them celebrities. In 1938, Joe was given the role of United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom. He presented Rosemary and her younger sister Kathleen to King George VI and Queen Elizabeth. Rosemary, finally allowed in the limelight, overshadowed her sister in beauty, and men began to take notice of her. According to the papers, her body was voluptuous and her face projected a happy and innocent light. She seemed like a young girl who was primed and prepped for marriage, and the most eligible bachelorette of the Kennedy daughters.

Even though Rosemary was handicapped, puberty and teen angst made her parents extremely uneasy. She would lash out in anger towards her family when she didn’t get her way, and she would sneak out of her boarding school in the middle of the night. Her inability to communicate her frustrations efficiently led her to do things that her family simply could not approve of, especially because everything would eventually make its way into the papers. Rose would try her best to watch Rosemary with a keen eye, but Joe was uneasy that the public would find out about Rosemary’s disability. Even close family friends had no idea that Rosemary had learning deficits.5 They hid her away as much as possible, claiming that she was a home-body, and extremely shy. Her own siblings didn’t fully understand the extent of her disability either.

It goes without saying that the times were not understanding of disabilities of any kind. There was a lack of research, little empathy, and no opportunities for the disabled, and Joe was not about to lose grip of his success. If the public were to find out about Rosemary, they might think lowly of him and of his own ability to perform as a person of political power. Without consulting Rose, he started to ask for help from surgeons in the area. Two particular neurosurgeons, James W. Watts and his partner Walter Freeman, advised Joe Kennedy that the only chance for Rosemary to act accordingly was for them to perform a lobotomy on her. Both doctors were advocates for this new form of psychosurgery, because they were the ones to standardize and popularize it in the US.6

Example of a Lobotomy. Courtesy of New England Journal of Medicine.

The method in which a lobotomy is performed starts by making an incision in the skull while the patient is awake, then one inserts a tool into the frontal lobe of the brain and move it in several directions, only stopping when the patient became unresponsive. The intended result is to help the mentally ill become easier to control.7 They would have less self-awareness, slower responses, and dull emotional range. Even though the surgery often resulted in effects much worse than this, the lobotomy was popular for almost twenty years.

After listening to the sureness of the doctors, Joe decided that a lobotomy was the best thing that he could do for Rosemary. Of course, he didn’t understand any major risks, nor had he heard of any stories of bad results. And so without consulting his wife or even Rosemary for that matter, Joe brought Rosemary to her “appointment.”8 Rosemary never knew that one day would be her last as a free young woman, because when she came out of her surgery, Rosemary Kennedy became the poster child for a botched lobotomy. She woke up with the mental capacity of a two year old, unable to speak or care for herself. And so, the tragedy of the secret Kennedy became a tale that people forgot about, but it provides a scary truth on the treatment of the mentally ill in her time.

After the lobotomy, Rosemary spent several years in a psychiatric hospital, un-visited by family or friends.9 Her condition never improved, and she required 24/7 care to eat, bathe, go to the restroom, and walk.10 We must realize that this is the case for the daughter of an internationally known wealthy politician and socialite. What can we say about the mistreatment, misdiagnosis, and misrepresentation of all US citizens who cannot speak up for themselves?

Left to Right: Sister Kathleen, Mother Rose, Rosemary | Courtesy of Bancroft Press

Even in present time, unorthodox and unwarranted procedures such as shock-conversion therapy are legal to do harm to innocent people in the process. Mental afflictions should be treated, and they should be researched in the same way as medical afflictions. The stigma against mental illness is not only instilled by the general population, but shows just as bad in legislation as well. According to the National Center for Health Statistics in 2016, suicide is at an all time high, yet prevention is not.11

Since Rosemary’s operation, her siblings have been keen to donate time and money to foundations built to represent the disabled, and her sister Eunice founded the Special Olympics.12 Rosemary went on to live a long life and died of natural causes at the age of 86. However, her “life” ended at the tender age of 23, without her permission. Rosemary is one of millions that suffered similarly, but it is a hope that her story will be heard and not hidden for the remainder of history.

  1. Kate Larson, The Hidden Kennedy Daughter (New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2015), 176, 180,187.
  2. Kate Larson, The Hidden Kennedy Daughter (New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2015), 225.
  3. Elizabeth Koehler-Pentacoff, The Missing Kennedy: Rosemary Kennedy and the Secret Bonds of Four Women (Baltimore: Bancroft Press, 2015), section 1-11.
  4. Lisa Guardarini, Rose Kennedy: The Life and Times of a Political Matriarch (Illinois: Algonquin P.L, 2013), 87.
  5. Kate Larson, The Hidden Kennedy Daughter (New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2015), 76-80.
  6. Elizabeth Koehler-Pentacoff, The Missing Kennedy: Rosemary Kennedy and the Secret Bonds of Four Women (Baltimore: Bancroft Press, 2015), section 60-63, 68-70.
  7. Robert Whitaker, Mad in America: Bad Science, Bad Medicine, and the Enduring Mistreatment of the Mentally Ill (New York: Perseus Books Group, 2002), 107, 122, 141.
  8. U.S. Health Policy and Politics: A Documentary History, 2012, s.v. “Kennedy’s Presidential Panel on Mental Retardation,” by Kevin Hillstrom.
  9. New Catholic Encyclopedia Supplement, 2010, s.v. “Kennedy Family,” by Robert L. Fastiggi.
  10. The Gale Encyclopedia of Mental Health, 2008, s.v. “Deinstitutionalization,” by Laurie J. Fundukian.
  11. The Gale Encyclopedia of Mental Health, 2008, s.v. “Deinstitutionalization,” by Laurie J. Fundukian.
  12. “Oldest Kennedy daughter dies: OBITUARY I Mentally challenged woman inspired the Special Olympics,” The Vancouver Sun (British Columbia), January 8, 2005 Saturday. Accessed September 16, 2018. https://advance-lexis.com.blume.stmarytx.edu/api/document?collection=news&id=urn:contentItem:4F6N-5XG0-TWD4-03BB-00000-00&context=1516831.

Recent Comments

79 comments

  • Isaiah Torres

    I think that the best way to help the mentally ill to to be able to take care of them without having to do dangerous surgeries on them. The best thing to do is to go to family and friends, then the community, if that doesn’t work then you would turn to the state and then the federal government. I don’t think any parent should turn to this type of saddening procedure for their children because they want them to be “easier to control.” I feel that they took the individuality of this young woman because she couldn’t be herself, regardless if other people found her stable or not.

  • Ava Rodriguez

    I watched a documentary about this a couple of months ago. It is heartbreaking to see a family choose reputation over a daughter who needed help. And for her father to even consider a surgery without telling his wife and his daughter is just so selfish. He put her through all of that, and took her life away so he could maintain power without having to worry about his daughter embarrassing him. It is so sad, she lived so long without actually getting to live.

  • Ruby Wynn

    I learned so much reading this article. It is very unfortunate that someone would sacrifice the life and freedom of his daughter to make him look better and aid his career. They should have been informed about the risks of the surgery and she should have been informed and given the choice. There should be more regulation of mental heath practices and someone should be able to represent any people with special needs to make sure that they are not mistreated because of their condition.

  • Krystal Rodriguez

    I had heard very little about this story before but this article truly went into the dephts for the true story. It is so sad to know that she was never understood and was thought to be “deficient.” I can see how her parents expected more from her but they didn’t really know the extent of her menta illness. It’s sad they submitted her through all this just to keep the Dad’s image.

  • Yazmin Garza

    This is such a sad and terrible story. I can’t believe actual doctors convinced Joe Kennedy to mutilate his own daughter like that. It sounds like something a serial killer would do, not a doctor. I am so glad that lobotomies are no longer used to “cure” mental illnesses. I have a learning disability myself, and I could not imagine going through an invasive medical procedure that would leave me handicapped to “fix” it.

  • Matthew Swaykus

    What happened to Rosemary Kennedy is simply appalling, and comes to show how we tend to view people with disabilities or special needs. Joe Kennedy sacrificed his own daughter to save his public image, because he cared more about his image than her well-being. Worse still, his mentality lives on to this day. In the 21st century, we care more about our image than we do about others. Ashamedly, I have to confess being embarrassed in the past about the disabilities of both my brothers. My older brother had been suicidal at one point in his life, so the author’s discussion about the lack of suicide preventions in this time in history.
    Overall, this article wasn’t only enlightening but stirring. Though I am biased because of my past experiences with special needs children, I believe this article did a justice to Rosemary and the beautiful life she deserved to live.

  • Averie Mendez

    I think this article really sheds a light on how far we’ve come in terms of recognizing and aiding people with mental illness. It’s still so sad how she was born with just a mere learning disability but her father exacerbated it as much as he did. And the fact that he put the image of himself and his family above the safety and well being of his daughter is the saddest of all.

  • Priscilla Reyes

    Discussing this article with one of my peers, we recalled how these processes were also performed on the LGBT community back in the day. It was obviously unmoral for Rosemary’s father to do this to her, but he did not know the implications. When comparing to the harsh treatment of the LGBT community, the acts were performed intentionally. It is a tragedy to take somebody’s life and even a bigger one to alter it completely. I do not know how Rosemary’s father lived after what he had done to his daughter and I can hope he could forgive himself.

  • Christopher Metta Bexar

    I had heard of Rosemary Kennedy , but not the unfortunate circumstances of her medical condition.That her father would do something like that does not surprise me. Joseph Kennedy Sr. is often portrayed as power hungry, a cold and self centered and distant father to all of his children.He would have of course put his image and career ahead of his wife or children.
    It is a shame that a man with all the wealth that Joseph Kennedy had and access to the best medical care would do this to his daughter. Even back then he had options.

  • Paola Arellano

    It is unbelievable that most people do not have a clue about the former president’s sister and her condition. How does a parent take such major risk and put their child through a surgery of this seriousness only because of the fear of what the public could say. The position of John, the father, made an irreversible impact on the life of Rosemary Kennedy and she lost years and experiences of her life that she never had the chance to recover from. This is when the public can realize that we really do care so much about our image that we are willing to put our loved ones at risk and that is when it gets messy. There was great description about the lobotomy surgery and I appreciate the article very much so.

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