Current:Home > reviewsRekubit Exchange:Rosalynn Carter, former first lady, dies at age 96 -Blueprint Money Mastery
Rekubit Exchange:Rosalynn Carter, former first lady, dies at age 96
FinLogic FinLogic Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-06 15:36:09
Former first lady Rosalynn Carter has died at the age of 96,Rekubit Exchange the Carter Center announced Sunday.
The Carter Center said she died "peacefully, with family by her side" at 2:10 p.m. ET on Sunday, Nov. 19, at her home in Plains, Georgia.
"Rosalynn was my equal partner in everything I ever accomplished," former President Jimmy Carter said in a statement. "She gave me wise guidance and encouragement when I needed it. As long as Rosalynn was in the world, I always knew somebody loved and supported me."
The former first lady had been diagnosed with dementia and continued to live at home in Plains, Georgia, with her husband, her family said in May. They said last week that she had entered home hospice care.
President Biden and first lady Jill Biden paid tribute to her for "inspiring a nation and the world." saying in a statement: "Throughout her incredible life as First Lady of Georgia and the First Lady of the United States, Rosalynn did so much to address many of society's greatest needs. She was a champion for equal rights and opportunities for women and girls; an advocate for mental health and wellness for every person; and a supporter of the often unseen and uncompensated caregivers of our children, aging loved ones, and people with disabilities."
As a close confidante and trusted adviser to her husband, Rosalynn Carter played an active role in the White House and championed causes such as research into mental health. Though she grew up as a small-town girl who never planned on a public life, she understood the power of political office and its potential to change the world.
- Rosalynn Carter: A life in photos
Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter had a partnership unlike any other known at the time for a president and first lady. Though other first ladies privately advised their husbands, the Carters' bond was deep. Rosalynn Carter was willing to speak her mind to her husband, and he valued her advice. She sat in on Cabinet meetings — a first — and took the heat for it.
"Jimmy Carter has always taught me you do the best you can and you don't worry about the criticism," she told CBS News' Bob Schieffer in October 1980. "It does not matter what you do. It does not matter. I could stay here and pour tea and be a hostess and do nothing else and I would be criticized, or I could have one project — it doesn't matter what I do, it doesn't matter what he does — we're going to be criticized. You just have to have confidence."
Born in Plains on August 18, 1927, the oldest of four children, Rosalynn Smith started dating Jimmy Carter when she was 18.
"The first time I had a date with him I came home and mother said, 'You know I like Jimmy, he has the nicest smile,'" she once told CBS News' Ed Rabel. "So he's had a nice smile a long time."
The couple married a year later, in 1946. Jimmy Carter was in the Navy, and his job allowed them to see the world. Their three sons were each born in a different place. Rosalynn Carter loved the life and didn't want to return to her small town.
"I think I was away from home and very independent and had three little babies, and I thought that if I came home I would have my mother and Jimmy's mother to tell me what to do," she told Rabel.
But when Jimmy Carter's father died in 1953, they returned to Plains to run the family peanut business. The couple had bigger plans, however, and Jimmy Carter was elected governor of Georgia in 1970. Rosalynn Carter campaigned by his side and on her own.
That continued in the 1976 presidential campaign, and she became his eyes and ears in places he wasn't able to get to. They'd meet in Plains every week and compare notes. They'd had their fourth child, Amy, by now, and she was often on the campaign trail with them.
"Every time we came home, we liked to go out to the farm and walk in the fields, and it gave us two or three hours just to talk about, to visit," Rosalynn Carter told CBS News. "We talked about the campaign and the things he saw and the things I saw and how we wanted it to go and how it was going and so forth. I could tell him about the impressions I had gotten, I had gotten about different states."
After they moved into the White House, she continued her role as a sounding board for her husband and used the power of the first lady's office to promote better understanding of the mentally ill, one of her long-term causes. She served as the honorary chairperson of the President's Commission on Mental Health.
She also continued to travel as first lady, visiting Latin America as the president's emissary, and acknowledging with a smile how unusual it was.
"I'm going to convey all this information I have to Jimmy. As a matter of fact, I look forward to consulting with him on a regular basis," she said to laughter in 1977.
After leaving Washington in 1980, the Carters set upon the next phase of their lives with characteristic zeal. They built the Carter Center in Atlanta, which promotes peace and conflict resolution. Their projects ranged from breaking ground on new homes for the poor through Habitat for Humanity in the U.S. to visiting far-flung places around the world in pursuit of peace.
President Clinton awarded the Carters the Medal of Freedom in 1999. The couple's close partnership — the longest presidential marriage in the nation's history — lasted more than three-quarters of a century. They celebrated their 77th wedding anniversary on July 7, 2023.
Rosalynn Carter spoke at the funeral of her fellow first lady and friend Betty Ford on July 12, 2011, and described her in terms that might well apply to herself: "Isn't this the most appropriate description of Betty? Someone who was willing to do things a bit differently than they had been done before? Someone who had the courage and grace to fight fear, stigma and prejudice wherever she encountered it."
- In:
- Rosalynn Carter
- Jimmy Carter
veryGood! (58)
Related
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Phoenix sees temperatures of 110 or higher for 31st straight day
- Haiti confronts challenges, solutions amid government instability
- Preppy Killer Robert Chambers released from prison after second lengthy prison term
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Announcing the 2023 Student Podcast Challenge Honorable Mentions
- Ed Sheeran serves hot dogs in Chicago as employees hurl insults: 'I loved it'
- American nurse working in Haiti and her child kidnapped near Port-au-Prince, organization says
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Wicked weather slams millions in US as storms snap heat wave on East Coast
Ranking
- Average rate on 30
- New film honors angel who saved over 200 lives during Russian occupation of Bucha
- SEC football coach rankings: Kirby Smart passes Nick Saban; where's Josh Heupel?
- First American nuclear reactor built from scratch in decades enters commercial operation in Georgia
- 'Most Whopper
- Pee-wee Herman actor Paul Reubens dies from cancer at 70
- Lori Vallow Daybell to be sentenced for murders of her 2 youngest children
- Robert Chambers, NYC’s ‘Preppy Killer,’ is released after 15 years in prison on drug charges
Recommendation
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
New Jersey’s acting governor taken to hospital for undisclosed medical care
Appellate court rules that Missouri man with schizophrenia can be executed after all
Philadelphia Eagles unveil kelly green alternate uniforms, helmets
2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
As work begins on the largest US dam removal project, tribes look to a future of growth
Wisconsin judge dismisses lawsuit over military voting lists
Kentucky education commissioner leaving for job at Western Michigan University