Ethel Kennedy, social activist and wife of Robert F. Kennedy, has died
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[October 11, 2024]
By MICHAEL CASEY and STEVE LeBLANC
BOSTON (AP) — Ethel Kennedy, the wife of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, who
raised their 11 children after he was assassinated and remained
dedicated to social causes and the family’s legacy for decades
thereafter, died on Thursday, her family said. She was 96.
“It is with our hearts full of love that we announce the passing of our
amazing grandmother,” Joe Kennedy III posted on X. “She died this
morning from complications related to a stroke suffered last week.”
“Along with a lifetime’s work in social justice and human rights, our
mother leaves behind nine children, 34 grandchildren and 24
great-great-grandchildren, along with numerous nieces and nephews, all
of whom love her dearly,” the family statement said.
President Joe Biden called her “an American icon — a matriarch of
optimism and moral courage, an emblem of resilience and service.”
“For over 50 years, Ethel traveled, marched, boycotted, and stood up for
human rights around the world with her signature iron will and grace,”
Biden said.
The Kennedy matriarch, mother to Kathleen, Joseph II, Robert Jr., David,
Courtney, Michael, Kerry, Christopher, Max, Douglas and Rory, was one of
the last remaining members of a family generation that included
President John F. Kennedy. Her family said she had recently enjoyed
seeing many of her relatives before falling ill.
A millionaire’s daughter who married the future senator and attorney
general in 1950, Ethel Kennedy had endured more death by the age of 40,
for the whole world to see, than most people would in a lifetime.
She was by Robert F. Kennedy’s side when he was fatally shot in the
kitchen of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles on June 5, 1968, just
after winning California's Democratic presidential primary. Her
brother-in-law had been assassinated in Dallas less than five years
earlier.
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Her parents were killed in a plane crash in 1955, and her brother died
in a 1966 crash. Her son David Kennedy overdosed, son Michael Kennedy
died in a skiing accident and nephew John F. Kennedy Jr. in a plane
crash. Another nephew, Michael Skakel, was found guilty of murder before
the Connecticut Supreme Court ultimately vacated his conviction. And in
2019, her granddaughter Saoirse Kennedy Hill died of an apparent
overdose.
“One wonders how much this family must be expected to absorb,” family
friend Philip Johnson, founder of the Robert F. Kennedy Foundation, told
the Boston Herald after Michael Kennedy’s death.
Ethel Kennedy sustained herself through faith and devotion to family.
“She was a devout Catholic and a daily communicant, and we are comforted
in knowing she is reunited with the love of her life, our father, Robert
F. Kennedy; her children David and Michael; her daughter-in-law Mary;
her grandchildren Maeve and Saoirse and her great-grandchildren Gideon
and Josie. Please keep our mother in your hearts and prayers,” the
family statement said.
Ethel's mother-in-law, Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy, initially wondered how
she would handle so much tragedy.
“I knew how difficult it was going to be for her to raise that big
family without the guiding role and influence that Bobby would have
provided,” Rose recalled in her memoir, “Times to Remember.” “And, of
course, she realized this too, fully and keenly. Yet she did not give
way.”
Ethel Kennedy founded the Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human
Rights soon after her husband’s death and advocated for causes including
gun control and human rights. She rarely spoke about her husband’s
assassination. When her filmmaker daughter Rory brought it up in the
2012 HBO documentary, “Ethel,” she couldn't share her grief.
“When we lost Daddy ...” she began, then teared up and asked that her
youngest daughter “talk about something else.”
Many of her progeny became well known. Daughter Kathleen became
lieutenant governor of Maryland; Joseph represented Massachusetts in
Congress; Courtney married Paul Hill, who had been wrongfully convicted
of an Irish Republican Army bombing; Kerry became a human rights
activist and president of the RFK center; Christopher ran for Illinois
governor; Max served as a prosecutor in Philadelphia and Douglas
reported for Fox News Channel.
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Her son Robert F. Kennedy Jr. also became a national figure — first as
an environmental lawyer and more recently as a conspiracy theorist
spreading false theories about vaccines. He ran for president as an
independent after briefly challenging Biden, and his name remained on
ballots in multiple states after he suspended his campaign and endorsed
Donald Trump.
Ethel Kennedy did not comment publicly on her son's actions, although
several other family members denounced him.
Decades earlier, she seemed to thrive on her in-laws’ rising power,
enthusiastically backing the 1960 campaign and hosting some of the era’s
most well-attended parties at their Hickory Hill estate in McLean,
Virginia, including one where historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. was
pushed fully clothed into the swimming pool. In the Kennedy spirit, she
also was a highly competitive tennis player.
“Petite and peppy Ethel, who doesn’t look one bit the outdoorsy type,
considers outdoor activity so important for the children that she has
arranged her busy Cabinet-wife schedule so she can personally take them
on two daily outings,” The Washington Post reported in 1962.
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Ethel Kennedy, from the film "Ethel," poses for a portrait during
the 2012 Sundance Film Festival on Sunday, Jan. 22, 2012, in Park
City, Utah. (AP Photo/Victoria Will, File)
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Accompanying her husband on a round-the-world goodwill tour, she
said it was important for Americans to meet ordinary people
overseas.
“People have a distinct liking for Americans,” she told the Post.
“But the Communists have been so vocal, it was a surprise for some
Asians to hear America’s point of view. It is good for Americans to
travel and get our viewpoint across.”
She divided her time between homes in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts,
and Palm Beach, Florida, after Hickory Hill, which they bought from
John and Jackie Kennedy in 1957, was sold in 2009 for $8.25 million.
Born Ethel Skakel on April 11, 1928, she grew up in a 31-room
English country manor house in Greenwich, Connecticut, as the sixth
of seven children of coal magnate George and Ann Brannack Skakel.
She met Robert Kennedy through his sister Jean, her roommate at
Manhattanville College.
The newlyweds moved to Charlottesville, Virginia, where he finished
his last year of law school at the University of Virginia, and
helped expand her world view by introducing her to people like Ralph
Bunche, the first person of color to win the Nobel Peace Prize. They
decided the safest place for him to stay during his visit was in
their home.
“He was so charming and non-complaining, but they did throw things
at our house all night long. It was so unthinkable and outrageous,
but you got a little taste of what Black people in our country had
to go through at that time,” she said in the documentary.
Robert Kennedy became chief counsel to the Senate Select Committee
in 1957, and then was appointed attorney general by his brother in
1960.
She supported his successful 1964 campaign for the U.S. Senate in
New York and his subsequent presidential bid. Pregnant with their
11th child when he was gunned down by Sirhan Sirhan, her look of
shock and horror was captured in images that remained indelible
decades later.
The assassination traumatized the family, especially son David
Kennedy, just 12 years old when he watched the news in a hotel room.
He never recovered, struggling with addiction for years before
overdosing in 1984.
In 2021, she said Sirhan should not be released from prison, a view
not shared by some others in her family. Two years later, a
California panel denied him parole.
Although Ethel Kennedy was linked to several men after her husband’s
death, most notably the singer Andy Williams, she never remarried.
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On the 40th anniversary of the assassination of the Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr., she visited Indianapolis, where a monument
commemorates the speech her husband gave that night in 1968,
credited with averting rioting in the city.
“Of all the Kennedy women, she was the one I would end up admiring
the most,” Harry Belafonte would write of her. “She wasn’t
playacting. She looked at you and immediately got what you were
about. Often in the coming years, when Bobby was balking at
something we wanted him to do for the movement, I’d take my case to
Ethel. ‘We have to talk to him,’ she’d say, and she would.”
In 2008, she joined brother-in-law Ted Kennedy and niece Caroline
Kennedy in endorsing Sen. Barack Obama for president, likening him
to her late husband. She later went to the Obama White House to
receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom and meet Pope Francis.
Obama called her “a dear friend with a passion for justice, an
irrepressible spirit, and a great sense of humor.”
“She touched the lives of countless people around the world with her
generosity and grace, and was an emblem of enduring faith and hope,
even in the face of unimaginable grief,” Obama said on social media,
one of many high-profile eulogies.
Obama and former President Bill Clinton held her hands as they
climbed stairs to lay a wreath at President Kennedy’s grave site on
the 50th anniversary of his death. Clinton remembered her on
Thursday as a “fierce fighter for justice and equality" who built
“one of the most effective human rights organizations in the world.”
The center she founded still advances human rights through
litigation, advocacy, education and inspiration, giving annual
awards to journalists, authors and others who have made significant
contributions to human rights.
She also was active in the Coalition of Gun Control, Special
Olympics, and the Earth Conservation Corps. And she showed up in
person, participating in a 2016 demonstration in support of higher
pay for farmworkers in Florida and a 2018 hunger strike against the
Trump administration’s immigration policies.
“She could be found anywhere human dignity was at stake, from picket
lines to prisons, on every corner of the map," Clinton said. “She
was fearless and indefatigable, a true force of nature, guided by
the teachings of her faith that call upon all of us to serve
others.”
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