Former US first lady Rosalynn Carter to lie in repose in Georgia
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[November 27, 2023]
(Reuters) - The body of Rosalynn Carter, the former U.S. first
lady who diedon Nov. 19 at age 96, will lie in repose on Monday in
Georgia, giving Americans the chance to pay their respects to the woman
her husband, former President Jimmy Carter, called "an extension of
myself."
Carter died shortly after she entered hospice care at home in Plains,
Georgia, alongside her husband, a Democrat who gave his wife a prominent
voice during his presidency from 1977-1981 and supported her advocacy in
the cause of mental health.
Her family and current and former members of her U.S. Secret Service
security detail will join a hearse motorcade on Monday morning to the
Rosalynn Carter Health and Human Sciences Complex at Georgia
Southwestern State University in Americus, Georgia, where wreaths will
be laid. |
U.S. First Lady Rosalynn Carter poses for a half-length portrait in the
White House, February 18, 1977. Library of Congress/Official White House
Photograph/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo |
A
repose service will later be held in the lobby of the Jimmy
Carter Presidential Library and Museum in Atlanta, followed by
an opportunity for members of the public to view the casket and
pay their respects.
A tribute church service for invited guests is scheduled for
Tuesday.
On Wednesday, Carter's funeral will be held at the Maranatha
Baptist Church in Plains before an internment at the family
residence.
Carter and her husband were the longest-married U.S.
presidential couple, having wed in 1946 when he was 21 and she
was 18.
Since his single term as president ended, Jimmy Carter has lived
more post-White House years than any president before him, and
she played an instrumental role during those years, including as
work for the Carter Center nonprofit and the Habitat for
Humanity charity.
Her family disclosed in May that she had dementia. Jimmy Carter,
99, entered hospice care at home in February after deciding to
decline additional medical intervention.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen in New York; Editing by Will
Dunham)
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