How a botched lobotomy on a member of the Kennedy family may have led to the creation of the Special

Publish date: 2024-08-09
2023-08-27T13:51:00Z

After the first-ever Special Olympics, Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley said to Eunice Shriver, "Eunice, the world will never be the same after this."

That was what she had hoped for. Shriver (née Kennedy) had been pushing for acceptance and better treatment for the disabled for over a decade. She was one of the key parties behind the Special Olympics and would carry on campaigning for decades to come. 

Shriver had also volunteered to host a summer camp in her home for local disabled children. In an era where some families kept their disabled relatives hidden away, Shriver saw how physical activity and being out in the open could help.

In 1941, Joseph P. Kennedy, the ambitious patriarch of the Kennedy family, made the decision that his 23-year-old daughter Rosemary would have a lobotomy.

Joseph and Rose Kennedy with their nine children in 1938. ullstein bild/Getty Images

Rosemary had been slower learn to crawl, walk, and speak than her siblings — including John, Robert, Ted, and Eunice — and suffered from seizures. In her early 20s, her condition had deteriorated. She had also become prone to mood swings.

Sources: Guardian, HuffPost, Insider

The prefrontal lobotomy, which involved two holes being cut into her head as she lay awake on an operating table, left Rosemary permanently brain damaged. Her mental capacity regressed to that of a 2 year old.

Rosemary Kennedy and her father Joseph P. Kennedy. Bettmann/Getty Images

It was an era when intellectual disabilities were often seen as shameful and families would sometimes even hide their disabled relatives away.  

At one point, Shriver said Rosemary's condition was comparable to syphilis: "No one mentioned it in polite company."

Joseph Sr. was conscious of how mental disability would reflect on the rest of the family, especially since he had huge ambitions for his children. Soon after, Rosemary was institutionalized and was barely acknowledged by her family for almost 20 years.

Sources: Guardian, HuffPost, Insider, LARBSmithsonian Magazine, History

Shriver had always looked out for Rosemary.

Eunice and Rosemary Kennedy are pictured just before they sailed aboard the SS Manhattan. Bettmann/Getty Images

"It always seemed that Eunice reached out to make sure that Rosemary was included in all activities — whether it was dodgeball or duck-duck-goose," Ted Kennedy told the Los Angeles Times in 1987.

"Eunice was the one who ensured that Rosemary would have her fair share of successes," he added.

Source: Los Angeles Times

In 1957, Shriver took over running the Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Foundation, which had been set up after her brother was killed in World War II.

Eunice Shriver talking to children. Reg Lancaster/Daily Express/Getty Images

Originally established for general charitable work, she narrowed its focus to intellectual disabilities. 

Her biographer Eileen McNamara who wrote "Eunice: The Kennedy Who Changed the World," told PBS she essentially "hijacked" the foundation to focus it on helping these children. 

Sources: New York Times, Special Olympics, PBS, HuffPost

In 1962, a local mother reached out to Shriver about her intellectually disabled child to ask for advice because no summer camp would take her child.

Eunice Kennedy Shriver swimming with children in a pool at a day camp for handicapped children. AP

Shriver told her the child could come to her house. She would run a camp out of her home called Timberlawn in Maryland. The first camp, called "Camp Shriver," had 34 children and 26 students monitoring them.

In the late 1950s, early research had found a link between intellectually disabled children doing better in the classroom if they exercised. Shriver watched the children, swam with some of them, and said she saw this firsthand. 

"I suppose the fact that I had seen my sister swim like a deer — in swimming races — and do very, very well just always made me think that [people with disabilities] could do everything," she once said.

Shriver's husband, Sargent, later told the Los Angeles Times part of the importance of these early camps had been for Shriver to see what the kids could do. 

"So she tried everything. She had 'em on horseback, swimming, on a trampoline, shooting bows and arrows, climbing trees, building tree houses, playing tennis," he said.

"It wasn't that she was sitting up there with a magic wand waving to everybody, 'Now do this! Now do that!' She was out there," he continued.

Sources: NPR, Special Olympics, History, Los Angeles Times

Later that year, Shriver wrote about her sister Rosemary in the Saturday Evening Post in an article titled, "Hope for the Retarded." It was the first time Rosemary's condition was ever publicly acknowledged.

Eunice Shriver seen playing ball with a child in Paris. Liaison/Stringer/Getty Images

"It fills me with sadness to think this change might not have been necessary if we knew then what we know today," she wrote, referring to her sister being institutionalized.

In the article, she didn't mention the lobotomy. Even so, her article was a big deal. It helped begin to ease some of the social stigma around disabilities.

Sources: New York Times, Special Olympics, Los Angeles Times, PBS

Shriver hosted her camp again in the following summers. As it grew more popular, she looked to increase its scope.

Eunice Shriver and her son Robert playing football. Vic Casamento/ Washington Post/AP

In 1965, she made a speech in Dallas saying it was time for "a national tournament of athletic contests among teams of mentally retarded children."

Sources: Chicago Magazine, LARB

Three years later, she met with a young teacher named Anne McGlone (later Anne Burke, a state Supreme Court justice), who asked for funding to host a Chicago-wide sports event for handicapped children.

Eunice Shriver and Ted Kennedy running in a fundraiser for the Kennedy Foundation. Bettmann/Getty Images

Previously, McGlone had requested funds from a local charity. 

One of the charity's representatives had told her she "should be ashamed of yourself for putting these kinds of kids on display."

In contrast, the Kennedy Foundation provided $25,000 and McGlone did the bulk of the preparation for the event.

Sources: Chicago Magazine, Washington Post

On July 20, 1968, the Special Olympics was launched. It was held at Soldier Field in Chicago, only a few weeks after Shriver's brother, Robert Kennedy, was assassinated.

Eunice Shriver marches behind banner carriers of the Maryland delegation during parade of the delegations at opening ceremonies of the International Special Olympics at Chicago's Soldier Field. Bettmann/Getty Images

In her opening address, Shriver said, "The Chicago Special Olympics prove a very fundamental fact, the fact that exceptional children with mental retardation can be exceptional athletes, the fact that through sports they can realize their potential for growth."

A teenager lit a 45-foot tall flame called the "John F. Kennedy Flame of Hope."

Sources: NPR, New York Times, Guardian, Special Olympics, Special Olympics, Chicago Magazine

The first event had 1,000 participants from 23 different states and Canada. They competed in track and field events as well as swimming and hockey.

1960 Olympic Decathlon Gold Medalist Rafer Johnson lighting the Olympic torch during the Opening Ceremonies of the 23rd Olympiad in Los Angeles. AP

Sources: NPR, New York Times, Guardian, Special Olympics, Special Olympics, Chicago Magazine

The stands only had a few hundred fans though. Back then, Shriver believed parents didn't comprehend it was OK to be proud of their kids.

Eunice Shriver along with Illinois lieutenant-Governor Paul Simon, watch the International Special Olympics in Chicago in 1970. Fred Jewell/AP

Sources: Smithsonian Magazine, USA Today, Washington Post

Afterward, Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chicago said to Shriver, "Eunice, the world will never be the same after this."

Eunice Shriver and Chicago's Mayor Richard J. Daley before the opening of 1970 Special International Olympics. Fred Jewell/AP

Source: Special Olympics

From then on, the Special Olympics was held every two years. The success of it helped change how people with disabilities were perceived.

Special Olympics Ambassador athlete Micheline Van Hees and athlete Jonathan Sacoor arrive with the Olympic flame during the opening ceremony of the Special Olympics in Belgium. John Thys/Belga Mag/AFP/Getty Images

Sources: Guardian, Chicago Magazine

Yet despite the success and the clear connection between her work and what had happened to her sister, Shriver continued to claim Rosemary had nothing to do with the Special Olympics.

Eunice Shriver is shown during a news conference. Bettmann/Getty Images

She told the Los Angeles Times, "Certainly, if you have a sister who learns slowly, you are obviously aware of certain things — insights that you wouldn't have if you never had a sister who is slow to learn. But would I have gone into this for her, and do I run around for her? No."

McNamara, her biographer, said she thought "there was some guilt that she was complicit in some way in letting Rosemary languish far from home."

Lawrence Leamer, author of several Kennedy biographies, wrote in HuffPost that after repeatedly asking her whether Rosemary had inspired her work, Shriver said, "You know maybe you're right, maybe there's something there but I just can't see it."

Sources: New York Times, Special Olympics, PBS, HuffPost, Los Angeles Times

Regardless, the Special Olympics continued to grow. In 1977, it began to include the Winter Games, and in 1988, the International Olympic Committee officially recognized the Special Olympics.

A competitor is shown during the 1977 winter Special Olympics. Ernie Leyba/The Denver Post/Getty Images

Source: Christian Science Monitor

The organization later broadened into public health after athletes kept trying to compete while dealing with medical issues. In 1995, about 15% of the athletes had teeth or vision problems so acute they had to go to straight to the ER.

A competitor swims during the 1995 Special Olympics. Rick Stewart/Allsport/Getty Images

Source: New York Times

In 2015, the Special Olympics in Los Angeles had crowds of more than 500,000 people.

Spectators watch the Special Olympics in Germany. Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images

By 2018, the Special Olympics had 5.7 million participants in almost 180 countries.

Sources: New York Times, History, Pacific Standard Magazine

Shriver died in 2009. In 2017, she was posthumously awarded the Arthur Ashe Courage Award for her work.

Eunice Shriver plays basketball with children with disabilities in New York. Marty Lederhandler/AP

Her son, Tim Shriver, who is now the Special Olympics Chairman, received the award on her behalf.  

"My mother knew one thing," he said. "She knew that the athletes of Special Olympics have the same dedication, the same commitment, the same guts, and they deserve the same glory of any other athlete."

Sources: WCVB, Guardian

"Anyone who knew my mother knew that she didn't just love to compete, she loved to win," Tim Shriver said.

Eunice Shriver playing a celebrity tennis match. AP

Source: WCVB

ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7o8HSoqWeq6Oeu7S1w56pZ5ufonyxtM6tpqxlm5q7r7HDsmSfmZ2eubp5y6iZqKyfosZuv8%2BemqKZnGK8rcXMqaCcq11nfXN%2FjHE%3D