Jimmy Carter, 99, makes rare public appearance at his wife Rosalynn’s memorial
Jimmy Carter, the 99-year-old former US president who entered hospice care in February, made a rare public appearance on Tuesday, looking frail as he attended a memorial service in Atlanta for his wife, Rosalynn Carter.
Key points:
- Jimmy Carter, 99, left hospice care to attend the memorial
- Children Amy and Chip spoke highly of their mother at the funeral
- More than 1,000 people attended
Using a wheelchair and dressed in a dark suit and tie, he entered the Glenn Memorial United Methodist Church and was helped to the front row near his wife’s flowered-covered casket, where he sat flanked by his children.
Folded across his lap was a blue-and-white blanket, embroidered with a smiling portrait of his wife. The couple was married for 77 years.
As first lady, Rosalynn Carter played a prominent role in his presidency from 1977 to 1981, and in his humanitarian work after the couple left the White House. She died at age 96 on November 19.
Jimmy Carter did not address mourners during the service.
His son James Earl “Chip” Carter III kissed him on the forehead after delivering a tribute to Rosalynn Carter, calling her “the glue” that held the family together.
“She had met kings and queens, presidents, others in authority, powerful corporate leaders and celebrities,” Chip said.
“She said the people that she felt the most comfortable with and the people she enjoyed being with the most were those that lived in absolute abject poverty, the ones without adequate housing, without a proper diet and without access to health care.”
President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden, the Carters’ longtime friends, joined them in the front row, along with former President Bill Clinton, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and the other living former first ladies, Melania Trump, Michelle Obama and Laura Bush.
Vice President Kamala Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff paid their respects, as did Georgia’s US senators and Governor Brian Kemp and his wife, Marty.
More than 1,000 people, including a sizeable contingent of Secret Service agents, filled the sanctuary. Former Presidents Donald Trump, Barack Obama and George W. Bush were invited but did not attend.
Jimmy Carter’s love letters
The former president has faced a number of health issues, including cancer, and decided to end medical intervention and enter hospice care at his home in Plains, Georgia, nine months ago. His wife, who had been diagnosed with dementia, joined him in hospice care only a few days before her death.
The Carters were the longest-married US presidential couple, having wed in 1946 when he was 21 and she was 18.
During the memorial, their daughter, Amy Carter, read from a letter Jimmy Carter sent to Rosalynn while he was serving in the Navy.
“My darling, every time I’ve ever been away from you, I have been thrilled when I returned to discover just how wonderful you are,” he wrote.
“When I see you, I fall in love all over again.”
Chip Carter recalled how his mum got him into rehab for drug and alcohol addiction.
“My mother was the most beautiful woman I ever met,” he said. “And pretty to look at, too.”
Jason Carter, her grandson, got laughs as he acknowledged the “remarkable sisterhood” of the first ladies in attendance, and then greeted the “lovely husbands” of Hillary Clinton and Jill Biden.
“She was so down to earth, y’all, it was amazing,” Jason Carter said as he shared family stories, including the time when his grandmother made pimento sandwiches and handed them out on a Delta flight.
“She loved people,” he said. “She was a cool grandma.”
The Carters made their last joint public appearance in September when they attended the Plains Peanut Festival in their rural hometown, both dressed in clothes bearing the logo of Habitat for Humanity, the non-profit group focused on providing affordable housing that the couple have long supported.
As late as 2019, when he was 95 years old, he worked for several days a year alongside his wife as a volunteer for Habitat.
“He’s coming to the end, and he’s very, very physically diminished,” Jason Carter, one of the former president’s grandsons, told the New York Times shortly before Tuesday’s service.
“He has been this moral rock for so many people, but she really was that rock for him.”
Reuters/AP
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