The death of Mary Richardson Kennedy is another sad event in the long
arc of the Kennedy family's story.
The estranged wife of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. died on Wednesday, sources
confirmed to ABC News. The news site Radar Online cited a source saying that
she committed suicide, though the police would not confirm that.
RFK Jr. -- Jack Kennedy's nephew, Bobby Kennedy's son -- had four
children with his wife. They filed for divorce two years ago.
"We deeply regret the death of our beloved sister Mary, whose
radiant and creative spirit will be sorely missed by those who loved her,"
Mary Richardson Kennedy's family said in a statement. "Our heart goes out
to her children who she loved without reservation. We have no further comment
at this time."
Along with political fame and power, tragedy has befallen the Kennedy
clan for decades.
Ted Kennedy's death from brain cancer, in August 2009, is still fresh in
the American memory. He was the last of four brothers -- Joe, Jack, Bobby and
Teddy, all of whom served their country. His passing almost three years ago
reminded a mourning country of Camelot's crests and troughs — ascents to the
pinnacle of American glory, assassinations, plane and car accidents,
legislative accomplishments and obstacles, and family troubles.
They began well before the brothers' ascent to political power. Joseph
Kennedy Sr. famously approved a lobotomy, then a rarely used procedure, to be
performed on his daughter, Rosemary, in 1941. The surgery was thought to help
Rosemary's violent moods. But the procedure didn't go as planned, and Rosemary
was left mentally damaged. She died in 2005.
Not long after Rosemary's surgery, Joseph Kennedy Jr. was shot down in
World War II, in 1944. Then, in 1948, Kennedy's older sister Kathleen died in a
plane crash on a trip to France.
A little over 10 years later, Jack Kennedy ran for president. His
youthful, vigorous campaign and presidency filled a nation with hope and
promise. His assassination in 1963 sent shockwaves through a country that would
take years to heal.
Just a year later, in June 1964, Ted Kennedy was in a plane crash that
killed one of his aides, Edward Moss, as Kennedy was running for reelection in
the Senate.
In 1968 Robert Kennedy brought the Kennedy charm, youth and idealism to
a campaign and captured voters' hearts and minds as he sought the Democratic
nomination for president. But in June he was assassinated in a Los Angeles
hotel after a campaign event.
The following year, the family faced tragedy and public humiliation,
when Ted Kennedy drove his car off a bridge on Chappaquiddick Island, drowning
his 28-year-old female passenger who had worked on RFK's campaign. Kennedy
didn't report the accident for almost nine hours and was later charged with a
misdemeanor for leaving the scene. He later called his decision "indefensible."
Tragedy did not bypass the next generation. In 1984, David Kennedy, the
fourth of Bobby Kennedy's 11 children, died in a drug overdose. Fifteen years
later, John Kennedy Jr., affectionately called John-John when he was a young
boy and his father was president, died while piloting a small plane; with him
was his wife, Carolyn, and his sister-in-law.
SOURCE: ABC news
No comments:
Post a Comment