Kennedy Wives: Triumph and Tragedy in America's Most Public Family (32 page)

BOOK: Kennedy Wives: Triumph and Tragedy in America's Most Public Family
10.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

37.
“The mere feel of his coat . . . he was really there” . . . “elf” was home safe:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p.174.

37.
“As far as I’m concerned, I’ll gamble”:
Nasaw,
Patriarch
, ch. 29.

37.
Rose wrote in her diary that:
ibid.

37.
She made herself so sick:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 176.

37.
“Religion is everything to us”:
Nasaw,
Patriarch,
ch. 29.

37.
“The power of silence is”:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 177.

37.
Billy Hartington was called into active . . . missions for the invading Allies:
Nasaw,
Patriarch
, ch. 29.

38.
“However, that is all over now”:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 178.

38.
“No doubt you are surprised”:
Nasaw,
Patriarch
, ch. 29.

38.
His mission was to get the bomber:
ibid.

38.
“Dad’s face was twisted . . . dissolution into sobs”:
Kennedy,
True Compass
, pp. 85–86.

38.
“There were no tears”:
Kennedy,
Times to Remember
, p. 301.

39.
“I realized what a wonderful man he was”:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 182.

39.
“With her supreme faith”:
Nasaw,
Patriarch
, ch. 30.

39.
“crippled and mentally deficient children”:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 184.

40.

It is beautiful here beyond words”:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p.190.

40.
Joe was the only Kennedy who attended:
ibid., pp.192–93.

40–41
.
“I heard the grandfather clock . . . suited to one another”:
Rose, diary entry, June 24, 1962, Box 4, RFKP.

8. Accolades, Weddings, Births, Victories

42.
“In spite of his age”:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 414; Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 197.

43.
Joe Kennedy, as was his wont:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 198.

43.
The fact that handsome JFK sometimes appeared:
ibid., p. 199.

43.
“Certainly I can appreciate . . . I lost one son” . . . left the stage in tears:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 423.

43.
“those damn tea parties”:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 203.

44.
“I felt rather like a man”:
Dallek,
Unfinished Life
, p. 174.

44.
Somehow Rose also found:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, pp. 204–9.

44.
they wed in April of 1954 and Pat gave:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, pp. 447–50; Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 213.

44.
The same year, Rose took the chance:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 213.

44.
Though Rose was initially unimpressed:
ibid., pp. 220–23.

45.
“Sometimes a mother finds . . . answer to that child’s problems”:
ibid., p. 212.

45.
just an effective presentation:
Dallek,
Unfinished Life
, p. 250.

45.
“They just
stared
at us”:
Kennedy,
Historic Conversations
, First Conversation.

46.
Kennedys are “all over the state . . . different places at the same time”:
Dallek,
Unfinished Life
, p. 250.

46.
By the time Jack was elected:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 508.

9. The First Mother

47.
“To Mother—With Thanks” :
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 245.

47–48
.
“After my hair had been set . . . gave a laugh and out I went”:
Rose’s diary, January 5, 1961, Box 4, RFKP.

48.
“wanted to start his four years . . . to Almighty God.” She didn’t approach . . . informal winter bundling:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 249.

48.
“we were left out of”:
ibid.

48.
More than twenty years later:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 516.

48.
“I was overwhelmed . . . approached my 71st birthday”:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 259.

48.
“He really didn’t want her . . . and he let her”:
“Billings notes, Friday April 1, 1972.” Author unknown, Box 12, RFKP.

49.
“I wonder to myself”:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 254.

49.
Afterward, she joined Joe:
ibid., p. 255.

49.
The Kennedys gathered for their:
Nasaw,
Patriarch
, ch. 39.

49.
“Jack gets a great kick out of seeing Ted dance”: Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 258.

49.
She objected to there:
Nasaw,
Patriarch
, ch. 39.

49.
He “is not at all himself”:
ibid.

49.
Others at the Thanksgiving dinner noticed:
ibid.

50.
After several weeks, he returned:
ibid.; Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, pp. 260–61.

50.
Every evening, they quietly:
Nasaw,
Patriarch
, ch. 40.

50.
“My impression . . . was very content” :
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 263.

51.
“She was awfully good . . . gone so many years ago”:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 551.

51.
“This is the way . . . so every one will understand”:
Rose to Bobby, July 10, 1962, Box 58, RFKP.

51.
“I am trying to rest”:
Rose to JBK, November 1, 1962, Box 14, RFKP.

51.
“Mrs. Kennedy changed a great deal . . . left her conscience intact”:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, pp. 555–56.

52.
She also discouraged their publicizing:
Rose to Bobby, April 29, 1963, Box 58, RFKP.

52.
Jackie left the day of:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 274.

52.
“Don’t worry . . . You’ll see.”:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 593.

10. “We All Shall Be Happy Together”

53.
She put on a coat:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 276.

53.
“We talked about Jack”:
Smith,
Grace and Power
,
p. 446.

53.
Joe sobbed:
Nasaw,
Patriarch
, ch. 40.

53.
“What do people expect . . . weep in a corner”:
Smith,
Grace and Power
,
p. 447.

54.
She flew back to Hyannis Port:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 277.

54.
“I am not going to be licked”:
ibid., p. 278.

54.
“every place I went the French . . . floods of tears again”:
ibid., p. 280.

54.
“I think all of the Kennedys . . . getting out of hand”:
Cavanaugh, JFK Library Oral History Program, p. 20.

55.
“I guess the only reason . . . more of us than there is trouble”:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 283.

55.
The lobotomy was not revealed:
ibid., p. 268.

56.
“Well, you see the answer to that . . . a retarded child”:
ibid., p. 269.

56.
This summer camp grew throughout:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 572.

56.
The Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Foundation:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, pp. 288–89.

57.
She was, alone among the Kennedy:
ibid., pp. 293–94; Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 627.

57.
A televised news bulletin informed:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 633.

57.
The assassin, a confused, unemployed:
Thomas,
Robert Kennedy
,
ch. 21.

57.
“It’s Bobby! It’s Bobby!”:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 294.

57.
With no children present to be strong:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 295.

57.
Later that morning, a photographer saw:
Thomas,
Robert Kennedy
,
ch. 21.

58.
“It seemed impossible . . . at home or on his trips”:
“Diary Notes on Robert Kennedy,” Box 13, RFKP.

58.
“I take renewed strength and”:
“Notes on Faith,” Box 14, RFKP.

58.
“all of you who offered your prayers . . . it will strengthen and fortify”:
“Remarks to the Nation”, June 15, 1968, Box 13, RFKP.

11. On Destiny

60.
“has taken three stalwart”:
“On Destiny,” Fall 1968, Box 4, RFKP.

60.
“Our family was the perfect family”:
ibid.

61.
That Sunday, the Chappaquiddick incident got more space:
Clymer,
Edward M. Kennedy: A Biography
, p. 145.

61.
“unlike himself . . . disturbed”:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 306.

61–62
.
“Dad, I’m in some trouble”:
Canellos,
Last Lion
, p. 177.

62.
Joseph Patrick Kennedy Sr.:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, p. 308.

62.
“Several people enclosed a . . . ‘The poor . . . help them.’ ”:
“1969 Following Joseph P. Kennedy’s death,” Box 4, RFKP.

62.
“She sent a letter which quite overwhelmed me”:
“She sent a letter,” Box 4, RFKP.

63.
“Otherwise, they were more or less surrounded”:
“February 1970,” Box 4, RFKP.

63.
In July 1970 she flew:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, pp. 314–15.

63.
“one of the proudest and happiest”:
ibid., p. 313.

63.
“It seems the longer . . . ‘Skippy, Skippy!’ ”:
Sister Mary Charles to Rose, October 14, 1971, Box 57, RFKP.

63–64
.
“I try to give her little . . . with care and concern”:
Sister Mary Charles to Rose, June 21, 1973, Box 57, RFKP.

64.
“she was progressing quite . . . try to accept God’s will”:
Rose to Father Robert Kroll, May 1, 1972, Box 57, RFKP.

64.
“I do sense and I do believe . . . has been her gift”:
“Rosemary” Box 13, RFKP.

64.
Published in 1974,
Times to Remember
. . . Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Foundation:
Perry,
Rose Kennedy
, pp. 321–22.

65.
Exhausted by years:
ibid., p. 326.

65.
Only speaking with great difficulty:
ibid., p. 331.

65.
Her gravestone, fittingly simple:
ibid., p. 332.

 

Part II: Ethel

1. A Love Story, with Detours

68.
Ethel would later say it:
Kennedy,
Ethel
, HBO, 2012

69.
“soft and refined”:
Oppenheimer,
The Other Mrs. Kennedy
,
p. 142.

69.
“Ouch . . . That was a black”:
Kennedy,
Ethel
, HBO, 2012.

69.
Pat would later refuse to answer:
David
,
Ethel
, p. 40.

69.
“but he never knew . . . to talk or even think about it”:
ibid., p. 40.

69.
“She talks and talks”:
ibid., p. 69.

69.
“How can I fight God?”:
Taraborrelli,
Jackie, Ethel, Joan
,
p. 40.

2. The Rise of the Skakels

70.
She had been raised:
David,
Ethel
, p. 6.

70.
His mother, Grace Mary Jordan . . . didn’t care much for Catholics or Jews:
Oppenheimer,
The Other Mrs. Kennedy
,
p. 6.

70.
“Skakel’s temperament was volatile”:
ibid.

70.
“Though sweet, refined, petite”:
ibid.

70.
As a young man, George:
Munk, Nina, “Greenwich’s Outrageous Fortune,”
Vanity Fair
, July 2006.

71.
His wealth insulated his:
Taraborrelli,
Jackie, Ethel, Joan
,
p. 38.

71.
Ann was a tad taller than George:
ibid.

71.
As latecomers to faith tend to be”:
Oppenheimer,
The Other Mrs. Kennedy
,
p. 18.

71.
“It was a very religious . . . strong religion in her”:
ibid., p. 19.

71.
“He was rarely around”
: ibid.

Other books

Give Me Hope by Zoey Derrick
Coming Home to You by Liesel Schmidt
Tied - Part One by Ellen Callahan
Killing the Dead by Richard Murray, Richard Murray
The World in My Kitchen by Colette Rossant
Blow Me Down by Katie MacAlister
Nurse in White by Lucy Agnes Hancock