The Tragic Story of Joan Kennedy: Forgotten Casualty of American Royalty – HT

 

 

 

There is a photograph taken in the early 1960s. Joan Kennedy standing beside her husband at some glittering Washington event draped in pearls, luminous, smiling. And yet, if you study it long enough, something unsettling surfaces. Because that smile never quite reaches her eyes. Everyone knows the Kennedy name, the tragedies, the glamour, the myth.

But buried underneath all of it is a woman whose story almost nobody tells. One who paid a price that almost nobody in that family ever had to pay. Her name was Joan Bennett Kennedy. And this is her story. The girl before the Kennedy name. Virginia Joan Bennett was born on September 2nd, 1936 in Bronxville, New York.

 A quiet, prosperous suburb just north of New York City. Her father, Harry Wiggin Bennett, Jr. worked in advertising. Her mother, Virginia Jones Stead, was a woman who placed enormous importance on appearances, on doing things properly, on presenting the world with a version of yourself that was polished and controlled.

It was the kind of household where feelings were managed, not expressed. Joan grew up beautiful. That was never in question. She was tall and blonde with the kind of striking natural looks that made her stand out in a crowd without any effort at all. She was gentle, too. Sensitive in a way that sometimes felt at odds with the world she’d been raised to perform for.

She loved music deeply. Piano in particular. She was genuinely gifted. And in another life, in a quieter, more private life, it might have been the thing she was known for. She attended the Manhattanville College of the Sacred Heart in Purchase, New York, which, as it happened, was the same school that had produced several Kennedy women, including Ethel, who married Bobby Kennedy.

It was a small Catholic women’s college and it shaped its students in a particular way. Toward grace, toward composure, toward a version of womanhood that was deeply intertwined with duty and presentation. Joan was popular there, warm. She was elected to the homecoming court, involved in campus life, the kind of young woman who made friends easily and kept them.

She was not naive, exactly, but she carried with her a certain openness, a readiness to trust the world that would, in the years ahead, be tested in ways she could never have anticipated. It was during her senior year, in October 1957, that she met Ted Kennedy for the first time. The introduction came through Ted’s sister, Jean Kennedy Smith, at a campus dedication ceremony for a new gymnasium at Manhattanville.

The kind of occasion that, when you look back on it later, seems either like fate or like cruelty dressed up as fate. Ted was handsome, charming, full of energy. And he carried the Kennedy name like a torch that lit up whatever room he entered. Joan was dazzled. She was 21 years old. He was 25. By all accounts, he pursued her with the full force of that Kennedy charm.

Confident, relentless, impossible to ignore. Her parents approved enthusiastically. The Kennedys were Catholic, wealthy, politically powerful, and socially prominent. From the outside, it looked like the best possible future a young woman of her background could hope for. They were married on November 29th, 1958 at St.

 Joseph’s Roman Catholic Church in Bronxville. The wedding was elegant and proper and covered in the press as the kind of event it was, a Kennedy union complete with all the theater that implied. Joan wore a gown with a long, flowing train. She looked, as everyone said at the time, absolutely radiant. She had no idea. She couldn’t have known what she was walking into.

And the story of what came next is not simply a story about a difficult marriage. It is a story about a woman being slowly, systematically erased. But before we get to what happened inside that marriage, there’s something crucial you need to understand about the world Joan had just entered. Something that would shape everything that followed. Camelot from the inside.

By the time Joan married Ted Kennedy in November of 1958, the Kennedy family was already on its way to becoming something more than a family. It was becoming a brand, a myth, a force in American life that had its own gravitational pull, its own rules, its own internal logic that didn’t always map cleanly onto the ordinary world.

Joseph Kennedy, Sr., the patriarch, Ted’s father, had spent decades building that myth deliberately and with tremendous calculation. He was a man of towering ambition and iron will, and he had decided early on that his sons were destined for greatness. He poured money, strategy, and relentless pressure into that vision.

And in the process, he created a family culture that was, in many ways, extraordinary. And in other ways, quietly brutal. Within the Kennedy household, strength was the only currency that mattered. Weakness, vulnerability, difficulty, these things were not discussed. They were managed, concealed, or simply not acknowledged.

The women in the family were expected to be beautiful, presentable, supportive, and above all, silent about anything that might cast shadow on the Kennedy image. They were partners in the project of Kennedy greatness, but they were not partners in any equal sense. Jack Kennedy was elected to the Senate in 1952.

And by the late 1950s, his presidential ambitions were an open secret. When he launched his campaign in 1960, the entire family mobilized around it with the discipline and coordination of a military campaign. Ted, who was still in his 20s and hadn’t yet launched his own political career, was deeply embedded in that effort.

And Joan was embedded, too. Whether she fully understood it or not, she was now a Kennedy wife. Her job, in the unspoken architecture of that family, was to look the part, support her husband, raise her children, and do all of it without complaint and without drawing attention to anything uncomfortable. She was a piece of the larger picture, a beautiful, dutiful piece.

In February 1960, Joan gave birth to the couple’s first child, Kara Anne Kennedy. She was 23 years old. In September 1961, their son, Edward Moore Kennedy, Jr. was born. In July 1967, their third child, Patrick Joseph Kennedy II, arrived. Joan embraced motherhood with genuine love and devotion. By all accounts, she was a tender, engaged, deeply caring mother.

But the demands of being a Kennedy wife, the appearances, the campaigning, the charity events, the dinners, the constant performance of a life, left little room for anything private, anything vulnerable, anything real. And it was in those early years of marriage that Joan began to understand something about Ted.

Something that the public would not fully reckon with until much later. Ted Kennedy was serially unfaithful. Throughout their marriage, he had relationships with other women. Some brief, some prolonged. Almost none of them kept particularly secret within the circles where the Kennedys moved. Joan knew.

 She was not protected from knowing. And the expectation around her, from the family, from the culture, from the world she now inhabited, was that she would absorb it and continue. The women who surrounded her, the older Kennedy wives, had, to varying degrees, done exactly that. It was simply what was done. A Kennedy man’s indiscretions were not a reason for disruption.

They were a private burden carried quietly, out of view. Joan was not built for that kind of silence. She was too sensitive, too open, too genuinely wounded by the things that wounded her. And the gap between what she felt and what she was allowed to express began to do damage, slow, cumulative, invisible damage that would take years to fully surface.

What happened next in the Kennedy family would test everyone. But for Joan, it would begin a descent that none of the people around her seemed equipped to stop. The years of grief. The 1960s were, for America and for the Kennedy family a decade of extraordinary highs and devastating losses. And Joan lived through all of it.

From the inside, up close, with no buffer between herself and the full force of what was happening. When John F. Kennedy was inaugurated as the 35th president of the United States in January 1961, Joan was there. She was 24 years old, the wife of the president’s youngest brother, standing at the edge of a moment that the country experienced as something close to magic.

The inauguration, Kennedy’s speech, the sheer electricity of it. Joan was part of that tableau, dressed beautifully, performing perfectly. And then, in November 1963, President Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas. For most Americans, that moment was a national trauma, something watched on television, grieved from a distance.

For Joan, it was something experienced in the room. She was part of the family that had to stand at the casket and hold itself together for the entire country to see. She was 27 years old. She had three small children. And she was expected, as all the Kennedy women were expected, to bear it with a composure that had nothing to do with how she actually felt.

In June 1964, Ted Kennedy was severely injured in a plane crash in Western Massachusetts. The crash killed the pilot and a Kennedy aide. Ted survived, but he was hospitalized for months with a broken back, a punctured lung, and broken ribs. While he recovered, Joan stepped in to handle his campaign appearances, keeping his Senate re-election bid alive during the months he was unable to travel.

Then, in June 1968, Robert Kennedy was assassinated in Los Angeles moments after winning the California Democratic presidential primary. Another Kennedy, another public murder, another period of national mourning that the family was expected to lead and to embody. Joan attended Robert’s funeral. She stood in the photographs that went around the world.

She wore black, and she kept her face composed, and she did what was required of her. But inside, and people who knew her from this period have described it in various accounts, she was being ground down. The grief was real. The fear was real. The instability of living inside a family where violence and death seemed to reach in from the outside world on a regular basis, all of that was real.

And there was no structure within her marriage or within the family to help her process any of it. She had begun drinking more heavily. It didn’t happen all at once. It rarely does. It began as a way to get through difficult evenings, difficult events, difficult feelings. A glass of wine to steady herself before an appearance, a drink at the end of a particularly hard day.

In a social world where alcohol was omnipresent and where everyone around her was drinking, it was easy for it to go unnoticed, or for people to notice and say nothing. By the late 1960s, Joan was struggling in ways that were becoming harder to conceal. She had also suffered multiple miscarriages during this period, heartbreaking losses that she largely endured without public acknowledgement or family support structures that were equipped to meet her where she was.

And then came the summer of 1969 and Chappaquiddick. Nothing that had come before quite prepared Joan or anyone else for what that night would set in motion. Chappaquiddick and its aftermath. On the night of July 18th, 1969, Ted Kennedy attended a party on Chappaquiddick Island off the coast of Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts.

The party was a small gathering, Ted and five other men, along with six young women who had worked on Robert Kennedy’s 1968 presidential campaign. They were known as the boiler room girls, a name that came from their campaign headquarters. Late that night, Ted left the party with one of those young women, Mary Jo Kopechne, the 28-year-old from New Jersey who had been deeply devoted to Robert Kennedy’s campaign.

Ted was driving. At some point, on a dark road near a narrow wooden bridge called Dike Bridge, the car went off the bridge and plunged into the dark water below. Ted Kennedy survived. Mary Jo Kopechne did not. What happened in the hours that followed has been examined, debated, and condemned for more than five decades.

Ted did not immediately report the accident to authorities. He left the scene. He returned to the party. He went back to his hotel. Hours passed, critical hours, before a call was made. Mary Jo’s body was found in the submerged car the following morning. She had died in an air pocket, which raised the unbearable question of whether she might have survived if help had come sooner.

Ted Kennedy pleaded guilty to leaving the scene of an accident. He received a suspended sentence and a license suspension. No charges were brought in relation to Mary Jo Kopechne’s death. The Kennedy legal and political apparatus mobilized with extraordinary speed to contain the fallout. Ted gave a televised address to the people of Massachusetts in which he expressed sorrow and asked voters whether he should remain in office.

The response was largely supportive. He stayed in the Senate. Joan was not at the party that night. She had been home, confined to bed following two previous miscarriages, and pregnant again at the time. When news of the accident broke, Joan was summoned to play her part in the response. She appeared publicly with Ted in the days that followed, composed beside him, the picture of a wife who stood by her husband.

She suffered another miscarriage shortly after. But what Joan actually thought, what she felt in those private hours, in those private rooms, about the accident, about Mary Jo Kopechne, about the party and who was there and what had been happening, was something she was not permitted to say openly. She gave a few careful, scripted statements over the years.

She did not become a public critic. The Kennedy system did not create space for that. What Chappaquiddick did to Joan’s marriage, however, to whatever remained of its private architecture, was devastating. It became the thing that couldn’t be unseen. Mary Jo Kopechne was dead. A young woman with her whole life ahead of her was gone.

And Joan was expected to stand beside the man responsible for the circumstances of that death and represent family stability. The weight of that, piled on top of everything that had already accumulated, was immense. Something else deserves to be said here, because it tends to get smoothed over in the broader Kennedy narrative.

Joan had suffered multiple miscarriages throughout the 1960s, pregnancies that ended in loss and were mourned largely in private, without public acknowledgement, without the kind of community support that such losses deserve. Each one was absorbed into the larger silence that defined her emotional life within the marriage.

And now, layered onto all of that grief, came the moral and emotional burden of Chappaquiddick, an event she had no part in, but which she was required to help contain and survive alongside the man who had caused it. Her drinking worsened in the years following Chappaquiddick. She sought help more than once, treatment programs, therapy, periods of sobriety that would hold for a while and then fracture.

She was trying. That much is clear from the accounts of people who knew her during this period. But the environment she was living in, the Kennedy world, the political world, the relentless public performance of a life that bore less and less resemblance to her actual experience, made sustained recovery extraordinarily difficult.

And through all of this, she was still appearing at events, still photographed, still described in the press, when she was described at all, as Ted’s wife, beautiful, blonde, appropriately dressed, the woman beside the senator. There was one more moment still coming, a moment that would put Joan in front of the entire country in a way she had never been before.

And it would cost her more than almost anything that had come before it. The 1980 campaign and the public unraveling. By the late 1970s, Ted Kennedy had become one of the most powerful figures in the United States Senate. He had served Massachusetts for more than 15 years. He was a liberal lion, the kind of politician whose name alone carried enormous weight in Democratic politics.

And as Jimmy Carter’s presidency struggled through economic difficulty and the Iran hostage crisis, Ted Kennedy made a decision that had been discussed within the family for years. He was going to run for president. The campaign launched in late 1979. And Joan, despite everything, despite the state of their marriage, despite her own fragile health, despite the fact that by this point the marriage was in serious trouble and both parties knew it, agreed to participate.

She agreed to campaign for Ted. She has spoken about this decision in various interviews over the years, and her explanation is both simple and heartbreaking. She wanted to help. She believed in his ability to serve. She had spent so many years being part of something larger than herself that stepping away from it entirely felt, in some ways, impossible.

And there may have been another part of it, too. The hope, however faint, that the campaign might somehow restore something between them. What happened instead was one of the most painful public spectacles of Joan Kennedy’s life. The campaign was difficult from the start. Ted gave a now famous interview to journalist Roger Mudd, in which he struggled to articulate clearly why he wanted to be president, a question that for any candidate should have a ready answer.

The interview aired on CBS in November 1979, just before the official campaign launch, and it was damaging in ways that the campaign never fully recovered from. Joan campaigned actively. She gave speeches. She appeared at events across the country. She was visible in a way she hadn’t been in years, and in many ways, she was impressive, poised, well-spoken, genuinely effective on the trail.

She spoke candidly in interviews about her struggles with alcohol, framing them in terms of recovery and growth. It was a level of public honesty that was unusual for the time, particularly for a political spouse, and many people responded to it with warmth and respect. But the scrutiny was brutal. Every public appearance was analyzed, photographs were studied.

Her affect, her expression, her physical appearance, all of it was subject to commentary in ways that her husband’s never was. When she looked tired, it was noticed and noted. When she misspoke, it was amplified. The press, which had spent years largely ignoring Joan Kennedy, suddenly had an appetite for her, and not always a kind one.

There were difficult days on the trail. There were days when the exhaustion showed, when the weight of everything she was carrying was visible in a way she couldn’t fully control. And those moments became part of the campaign narrative in ways that were deeply unfair and deeply painful. Ted Kennedy did not win the 1980 Democratic presidential primary.

Jimmy Carter held on through a bruising convention fight, ultimately losing the general election to Ronald Reagan. The Kennedy campaign ended, and shortly after, so did the marriage. Joan and Ted Kennedy separated in 1978 after 20 years of marriage. They remained legally married through the campaign and formally announced plans to divorce in 1981.

The divorce was finalized in 1982. By the terms of the settlement, Joan received a substantial financial arrangement. She retained custody arrangements for the children, who were by then adults or nearly so. She moved to Boston to a condominium of her own, the first truly independent home she had ever had as an adult.

She was 45 years old. She had spent her entire adult life inside the Kennedy world. And now, she was outside of it. That might have been the end of the story. For some people, it would have been. But Joan Kennedy’s life after the marriage turned out to be something far more complicated, and in some ways, far more revealing than anything that had come before. Life after the Kennedys.

The years following the divorce were, for Joan, a period of both genuine effort and persistent difficulty. She had never lived fully on her own before. She had gone from her parents’ home to a college dormitory to a Kennedy household, and the transition into a life that was entirely her own, its rhythms, its structures, its demands, was a significant one.

She enrolled in graduate school at Lesley College in Cambridge, Massachusetts, studying music education. It was a return, in some sense, to the thing she had loved before any of the rest of it had begun. The piano, the music, the part of herself that had existed before she became a Kennedy wife. She completed her master’s degree.

It was a genuine accomplishment, pursued quietly and without fanfare. She also continued to struggle with alcohol. The sobriety she’d worked toward in the late 1970s and early 1980s did not hold consistently. She cycled through periods of recovery and relapse in a pattern that people close to her describe as heartbreaking to watch, because her desire to get better was never in question.

The difficulty was in sustaining it. It is worth pausing here to consider what recovery looks like, what it actually demands, when the person attempting it has no established sense of an independent self to anchor to. Joan had been a daughter, then a student, then a Kennedy wife, then a public figure defined almost entirely in relation to her husband.

The divorce gave her freedom, but freedom is not the same as foundation. She was building both at the same time, which is an enormously difficult thing to do, and doing it under the continued pressure of public attention and without anything resembling genuine institutional support from the world she had spent decades serving.

 In 1992, she was involved in a minor car accident in Boston. In 1994, she was found outside in the cold in a residential neighborhood, confused and disoriented. These incidents attracted press attention, and the coverage was rarely kind. Joan, who had been largely out of the public eye since the divorce, was suddenly visible again, but in a context that felt invasive and reductive, framing her entirely through the lens of her struggles.

Her children were deeply concerned. Kara, Ted Jr., and Patrick, all of whom had grown into adults navigating their own complicated relationships with the Kennedy legacy, were attentive and worried. Ted Jr. in particular became an important presence in Joan’s life during difficult periods, offering support and continuity in a way that seemed to matter greatly to her.

She was also, during these years, a participant in various advocacy efforts around substance dependency, speaking occasionally about her own experiences in ways that were meant to reduce the stigma around addiction and treatment. There was a dignity in those appearances, and an honesty that some people found genuinely moving.

Joan had never been someone who sought attention for its own sake. When she spoke about her struggles, it was because she believed it might help someone else. In 1992, she published a book about classical music titled The Joy of Classical Music, A Guide for You and Your Family. It was well received, a small, warm, genuinely useful book that reflected the musical passion she had carried her whole life.

It was also, in a sense, a statement that there was a Joan Kennedy beyond the marriage, beyond the Kennedys, beyond the tragedy, a woman with interests and knowledge and something to contribute. But the challenges continued. In 2012, she suffered a fall outside her Boston home that resulted in a serious shoulder injury.

In subsequent years, there were additional health concerns, additional public moments that brought the press back to her door. Each time, the coverage tended to reduce her to the same shorthand, Ted Kennedy’s ex-wife, the troubled blonde, the woman who didn’t survive the Kennedys. It was, and remains, a profoundly incomplete picture of who she was.

Because to understand what Joan Kennedy’s story really means, what it tells us about the world she lived in and the forces that shaped her, you have to look at it from a different angle entirely. What was taken and what remained? Joan Kennedy did not fit the mold of a Kennedy woman, and that was never really a reflection on Joan.

The mold itself was rigid in ways that were not designed with women’s full humanity in mind. The Kennedy women of Joan’s generation were expected to be partners in a project, the project of Kennedy greatness, without being granted the full standing of partners. They managed households, raised children, maintained appearances, and absorbed private pain with a composure that the culture around them celebrated as strength.

And in some ways, those women were extraordinarily strong. But the strength that was demanded of them was a specific kind. The strength to disappear, to subordinate, to carry weight without showing it. Joan was not built for that particular kind of strength. She had a different kind. The kind that shows, that needs expression, that is visible in its vulnerability.

She loved music. She was warm with strangers. She felt things deeply and had difficulty hiding the fact that she felt them. In a different context, in a different marriage, in a different family, those qualities might have been cherished. In the Kennedy world, they made her conspicuous in ways that were not comfortable for anyone around her.

Her struggles with alcohol were real. There is no minimizing them, and no reason to. But they did not emerge from nowhere. They emerged from years of living inside a family structure that gave her very little permission to be honest about what she was experiencing. Years of miscarriages grieved in silence, of infidelities absorbed without acknowledgement, of grief piled on grief without adequate space to process any of it, of being asked to perform a version of herself that bore less and less resemblance to her actual

inner life. The people who knew Joan best have consistently described a woman who was warmer, funnier, more intelligent, and more self-aware than her public image ever captured. A woman who read widely, who adored her children, who could play Chopin from memory and talk about it with genuine passion. A woman who, even in the most difficult periods of her life, was trying, visibly, earnestly trying to find her footing.

She never fully disappeared into her struggles, even when the press coverage suggested otherwise. She maintained friendships. She stayed involved in her children’s lives. She attended important family events, Kennedy family gatherings, political milestones, the kinds of occasions that might, for someone in her position, have been easier to avoid.

She kept showing up. Kara Kennedy died in 2011 from a heart attack at the age of 51, a loss that devastated Joan in ways that people close to her described as profound and lasting. The death of a child, even an adult child, is something from which a parent does not simply recover. Joan carried that grief quietly, as she had carried so many things.

Ted Kennedy died in August 2009 after a battle with brain cancer. Whatever the complexities of their marriage, whatever pain had passed between them, Joan attended his memorial services. She stood, once again, among the Kennedys in the place she had occupied for so many decades. The photographs from those services show her looking older, quieter, but composed.

Patrick Kennedy, her youngest child, who had his own very public battles with substance dependency and mental health over the years, has spoken about his mother with tremendous love and with a frankness that captures something important. He has described a woman who was dealing with things that the family and the world around her was not equipped to address properly.

He has spoken about the failures of support, the ways in which her struggles were too often treated as a problem to be managed rather than a person to be helped. Joan Kennedy passed away on October 8th, 2025 at the age of 89. In her later years, she was quieter, more private. Boston was her home. Music was still her anchor.

The story that the world told about her, the sad, unstable Kennedy wife, was never the whole of who she was. It was the part that was easiest to see, the most dramatic, the most photogenic in its tragedy. The rest of her, the warmth, the music, the persistence, the real human being behind the pearls and the photographs, required more effort to find.

And most people, it has to be said, didn’t look that hard. There is one final piece to this story, one that speaks not just to Joan’s life, but to what it meant to be a woman in that world at that time, and what we choose to remember about the people who lived it. The woman history overlooked. There is a particular kind of forgetting that happens to women like Joan Kennedy.

It is not the forgetting of absence. Joan was never invisible. She was photographed constantly, written about at various points, discussed in connection to the Kennedy legacy in ways that will probably continue for as long as the Kennedy legacy is discussed. The forgetting is more specific than that. It is the forgetting of interiority, the loss of the actual person beneath the image.

What the historical record preserves about Joan Kennedy is largely defined by three things: her beauty, her marriage, and her struggles. Those three things, taken together, form a narrative that is easy to package and easy to repeat. The golden Kennedy wife who fell apart. The cautionary tale of a woman who couldn’t handle the pressure.

The blonde at the edge of every photograph who ended up, in the end, left behind. That narrative is not false, exactly. But it is profoundly incomplete. And its incompleteness says something not just about Joan, but about how the culture that surrounded her, the media, the family, the political world, understood and valued women in general.

The Kennedy women of that era were part of one of the most documented families in American history. And yet their inner lives, their actual thoughts, their actual feelings, their actual experiences of the world they inhabited, were rarely the subject of serious attention. They were assessed. They were photographed.

They were rated on the performance of their roles. But they were not, in any meaningful public sense, listened to. Joan tried at various points to be heard. She gave interviews in which she spoke carefully and honestly about her experiences, about the loneliness of the marriage, about her recovery efforts, about what it was like to be a Kennedy wife in an era when that phrase carried specific and not always comfortable expectations.

Those interviews exist. They are findable. And they reveal a woman who was considerably more thoughtful and more self-aware than her public image ever suggested. She knew what had happened to her. She understood, in ways that she sometimes struggled to articulate, but clearly felt, that the circumstances of her life had shaped her struggles in ways that were not simply personal failings.

She was not someone who placed blame easily or carelessly. But she was also not someone who pretended that everything had been fine when it clearly had not. In her later years, Joan spoke warmly of Boston, of walking along the Charles River, of the music she still played, of the life she had built for herself that was, however belatedly, genuinely her own.

There was something in those descriptions, quiet, simple, unhurried, that felt like the Joan Bennett who had existed before November 1958, before the wedding at St. Joseph’s, before the Kennedy world closed around her. She had been a girl who loved music, a young woman of remarkable natural grace who fell in love with a charming, ambitious man, and walked into a life she couldn’t fully see from the doorstep.

She had endured things that would have broken many people entirely. She had lost children to miscarriage, lost a daughter to death, lost a marriage to everything that marriage had been built on and then worn away. She had battled her own mind and body for decades in a very public way under a scrutiny that was rarely generous.

And she had kept going. That part tends to get lost in the telling. She had kept going. Joan Kennedy’s life was not a simple tragedy. It was not a cautionary tale, or at least it doesn’t deserve to be reduced to one. It was a human life, fully complicated, fully felt, full of loss and love and effort and music and children and early mornings and late nights and all the texture that a real life contains.

The tragedy was not who she was. The tragedy was how rarely the world around her made room for who she actually was. The Kennedys were called American royalty. And like actual royalty throughout history, the court around them had its casualties. People who were consumed by the machinery of the family’s ambition and image without the machinery ever pausing to acknowledge what it had consumed.

Joan Bennett Kennedy was one of those people. She deserved better from the family she married into, from the era she lived through, and from the history that recorded her story. And perhaps the least we can do, this far down the road, is tell that story a little more completely, a little more honestly, a little more like she was a real person and not just a beautiful woman standing at the edge of someone else’s photograph.

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