Joan Bennett Kennedy, the elegant and resilient first wife of the late Senator Ted Kennedy, has passed away peacefully in her sleep at her Boston home. She was 89.
Behind the polished family portraits and public smiles, Joan’s life reflected both privilege and profound struggle. A classically trained pianist with a master’s degree in education, she once shared that music became her refuge — advice she credited to Jackie Kennedy, who told her to “turn to the piano” whenever the pressures of life within the Kennedy dynasty felt unbearable.
Born in New York City on September 2, 1936, Joan grew up in a devout Catholic family. She met Ted Kennedy in 1957 through his sister Jean while attending Manhattanville College, and the couple married a year later. Thrust into the spotlight as the youngest wife of the youngest U.S. Senator in history, Joan entered the heart of “Camelot,” where Ted was once seen as a future president.Together, they had three children: Kara, Ted Jr., and Patrick. But beneath the image of political glamour, tragedy and turbulence shadowed their marriage. Ted’s 1969 Chappaquiddick scandal, which left campaign worker Mary Jo Kopechne dead, altered their lives forever. Joan stood publicly by her husband through the ordeal, but privately, it took an enormous emotional toll.