Rose Kennedy was the mother of the U.S
@Philanthropists, Birthday and Childhood
Rose Kennedy was the mother of the U.S
Rose Kennedy born at
She married Joseph Kennedy after seven years of courtship in 1914. They couple had nine children over the course of their 55 year marriage. She stood by her husband’s side in spite of his numerous affairs.
She suffered a stroke in 1984 and had to use a wheelchair for the rest of her life. She died in 1995 at the age of 104. She was the proud matriarch of a large family consisting of her five surviving children, and several grandchildren and great grandchildren at the time of her death.
She was the daughter of Boston Mayor John Francis Fitzgerald and Mary Josephine Hannon. She was their eldest daughter and had five younger siblings.
She received her primary education from the Girl’s Latin School in Massachusetts before moving on to a convent school in Netherlands. She graduated from Dorchester High School in 1906.
She also received piano lessons from the New England Conservatory. Her father was a well-to-do man who gave her a comfortable upbringing.
She wished to attend Wellesley College but her father forbade her. So she went to the Manhattanville College of the Sacred Heart instead.
Since her father was a politician, she was well aware of the political scenario and also accompanied her father on his tour of Europe in 1908.
She began dating Joseph Patrick Kennedy, the son of businessman and politician Patrick Kennedy. Her father did not approve of this relationship as Patrick Kennedy was a political rival of his.
After seven years of courtship, she married Kennedy in 1914 despite her father’s opposition. The couple went on to have nine children. Her husband prospered over the years and became a multi-millionaire.
Joseph became the youngest bank president in the history of U.S. and was financially very successful. But he failed to be a good husband, and ignored the family. He also had numerous affairs with other women.
It was a very difficult time for Rose as the responsibility of caring for her children fell entirely on her shoulders. Tired of her husband’s habits, she once left him to live with her parents, but returned soon after.
She became addicted to prescription drugs in order to cope with the stress of her marital problems. In spite of this, she remained a devoted mother to her nine children and motivated them to rise high in life.
A socialite and philanthropist, she rose to the status of a celebrity when her son John became the president of the U.S. Known for her quiet dignity and youthful glamour she was passionately involved in various charities and led the Grandparents’ Parade at the Special Olympics.