Current:Home > NewsRosalynn Carter set for funeral and burial in the town where she and her husband were born -TrueNorth Capital Hub
Rosalynn Carter set for funeral and burial in the town where she and her husband were born
View
Date:2025-04-18 05:44:58
PLAINS, Ga. (AP) — Rosalynn Carter will receive her final farewells Wednesday in the same tiny town where she was born and that served as a home base as she and her husband, former President Jimmy Carter, climbed to the White House and spent four decades thereafter as global humanitarians.
The former first lady, who died Nov. 19 at the age of 96, will have her hometown funeral at Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains, where she and her husband spent decades welcoming guests when they were not traveling. The service comes on the last of a three-day public tribute that began Monday in nearby Americus and continued in Atlanta.
Rosalynn Carter will be buried in a plot she will one day share with her husband, the 99-year-old former president who first met his wife of 77 years when she was a newborn, a few days after his mother delivered her.
“She was born just a few years after women got the right to vote in this small town in the South where people were still plowing their fields behind mules,” grandson Jason Carter said Tuesday during a memorial service in Atlanta.
Coming from that town of about 600 — then and now — Rosalynn Carter became a global figure whose “effort changed lives,” her grandson said. She was Jimmy Carter’s closest political adviser and a political force in her own right, and she advocated for better mental health care in America and brought attention to underappreciated caregivers in millions of U.S. households. She traveled as first lady and afterward to more than 120 countries, concentrating on the developing nations, where she fought disease, famine and abuse of women and girls.
Even so, Jason Carter said his grandmother never stopped being the small-town Southerner whose cooking repertoire leaned heavily on mayonnaise and pimento cheese.
Indeed, the Atlanta portion of the tribute schedule this week has reflected the grandest chapters of Rosalynn Carter’s life — lying in repose steps away from The Carter Center that she and her husband co-founded after leaving the White House, then a funeral filled with the music of a symphony chorus and majestic pipe organ as President Joe Biden, former President Bill Clinton and every living U.S. first lady sat in the front row with Jimmy Carter and the couple’s four children.
The proceedings Wednesday will underscore the simpler constants in Rosalynn Carter’s life. The sanctuary in Plains seats fewer people than the balcony at Glenn Memorial Church where she was honored Tuesday. Maranatha, tucked away at the edge of Plains where the town gives way to cotton fields, has no powerful organ. But there is a wooden cross that Jimmy Carter fashioned in his woodshop and offering plates that he turned on his lathe.
Church members, who are included in the invitation-only congregation, rarely talk of ”President Carter” or “Mrs. Carter.” They are supporting “Mr. Jimmy” as he grieves for “Ms. Rosalynn.”
When the motorcade leaves Maranatha, it will carry Rosalynn Carter for the last time past the old high school where she was valedictorian during World War II, through the commercial district where she became Jimmy’s indispensable partner in their peanut business, and past the old train depot where she helped run the winning 1976 presidential campaign.
Barricades are set up along the route for the public to pay their respects.
Her hearse will pass Plains Methodist Church where she married young Navy Lt. Jimmy Carter in 1946. And it will return, finally, to what locals call “the Carter compound,” property that includes the former first couple’s one-story ranch house, the pond where she fished, the security outposts for the Secret Service agents who protected her for 47 years.
She will be buried in view of the front porch of the home where the 39th American president still lives.
veryGood! (67)
Related
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- A second person has died in a weekend shooting in Lynn that injured 5 others
- Minnesota prison on emergency lockdown after about 100 inmates ‘refuse’ to return to cells
- 1st Africa Climate Summit opens as hard-hit continent of 1.3 billion demands more say and financing
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Prisoners in Ecuador take 57 guards and police hostage as car bombs rock the capital
- France’s waning influence in coup-hit Africa appears clear while few remember their former colonizer
- Week 1 college football winners and losers: TCU flops vs. Colorado; Michael Penix shines
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Bill Richardson, former New Mexico governor and renowned diplomat, dies at 75
Ranking
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- Steve Harwell, the former lead singer of Smash Mouth, has died at 56
- Grand Slam tournaments are getting hotter. US Open players and fans may feel that this week
- Secession: Why some in Oregon want to become part of Idaho
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Plans for a memorial to Queen Elizabeth II to be unveiled in 2026 to mark her 100th birthday
- Bad Bunny, John Stamos and All the Stars Who Stripped Down in NSFW Photos This Summer
- Top 5 storylines to watch in US Open's second week: Alcaraz-Djokovic final still on track
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
West Virginia University crisis looms as GOP leaders focus on economic development, jobs
How Shaun White Found a Winning Partner in Nina Dobrev
‘Equalizer 3’ cleans up, while ‘Barbie’ and ‘Oppenheimer’ score new records
Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
LSU football flops in loss to Florida State after Brian Kelly's brash prediction
Charting all the games in 2023: NFL schedule spreads to record 350 hours of TV
Biden says he went to his house in Rehoboth Beach, Del., because he can’t go ‘home home’