Former President Jimmy Carter will step out of hospice Tuesday with his heirs and every living presidential spouse to honor Rosalyn Carter, the nation’s first lady from 1977 to 1981. The Carter Center reported.
Mr. who turned 99 last month. Carter, who has rarely been seen in public since entering a hospice facility in February, traveled 140 miles from the couple’s home in Plains, Ga., to pay her respects at Glenn Memorial United Methodist Church. at Emory University. President Biden, former President Bill Clinton and five living first ladies will also be in attendance.
“He’s coming to an end, he’s physically very diminished,” Jason Carter, one of the former president’s grandsons and chairman of the Carter Center board, said in an interview before the service. “But I think he was proud and happy that he was there for her until the end, and he wasn’t going to miss this for anything.”
Even so, Grandfather could hear the worry in Mr. Carter’s voice now that his wife was gone. “She was his rock,” he said. “He’s been this moral rock for a lot of people, but she’s really been that rock for him. He’s glad he’s not going to lose that, but we’re all worried about him.
Mrs. Suffering from Dementia. Carter died last week at age 96 at the family’s modest farm home on the Plains, just months after she and her husband celebrated their 77th wedding anniversary. American history. Frail but alert and smiling, the two were last seen in public in September when they were driven around the Plains Peanut Festival.
Born in her family’s home in Plains, where she lived most of her life, Eleanor Rosalyn Smith as a young woman might have been surprised by the star-studded arrival expected to greet her at the end. Her father drove a school bus, owned an auto repair shop, and ran a farm, while her mother sold milk from a cow, worked in a school lunchroom, and later joined the post office.
Rosalyn Carter, as she became known after marrying her childhood friend’s older brother, never forgot her humble roots as she moved to the White House, traveled the world representing her country, improved mental health services and transformed her role. First lady. Mr. After Carter lost re-election, the two returned to the small house they had built in 1961 and spent the past four decades focusing on philanthropy.
His grandson said his work to promote understanding of mental illness was his proudest achievement. “His fight against the age-old stigma surrounding mental illness is a very lasting legacy,” said Jason Carter. “Even my kids can see how far we’ve come in the last five years, and then you think how far we’ve come in the last 50 years. He was way ahead of his time on that issue.”
Mr. Biden and Mr. In addition to Clinton, attendees at Tuesday’s service included Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff; Jill Biden, current first lady; former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton; Three other former first ladies, Laura Bush, Michelle Obama and Melania Trump; Governor Brian Kemp and Georgia’s First Lady, Marty Kemp; and Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens.
No high-profile attendees are scheduled to speak. This ceremony Mrs. Carter’s exudes simple elegance over modern glitz. His grandchildren will serve as honorary pallbearers, with comments or readings from his son James Earl Carter III, known as Chip; his daughter, Amy Carter; one of her grandsons; and her three great-grandchildren.
Rev. Glenn Memorial’s pastor. Mark Westmoreland and Mr. and Mrs. Carter’s personal pastor, Tony Lowden, will address, and Jason Carter will give tributes; Catherine Gate, Mrs. Carter’s longtime aide and friend; and Judy Woodruff, former anchor of “PBS Newshour.”
Musical selections will be provided by members of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, David Osborne, Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood.
Mrs. Carter will then be flown to Plains, where she will be laid to rest at the Carter Home and Gardens, part of the Jimmy Carter National Historical Park, after a funeral Wednesday at Maranatha Baptist Church. Mr. Carter plans to rest by her side when the time comes.