Sept. 13, 2009
Kennedy's Son Reflects On Dad's Legacy
Ted Kennedy Jr. Speaks to 60 Minutes About His Late Father's Life and Forthcoming Biography
-
Play CBS Video Video Big Teddy His son, Ted Kennedy, Jr., and the editor/publisher he collaborated closely with on his memoir, Jonathan Karp, reflect on the life and legacy of the late Sen. Ted Kennedy. Lesley Stahl reports.
-
Video Ted Kennedy: Four Brothers Historian Doris Kearns Goodwin on the special family dynamic.
-
Video Ted Kennedy: Did He Want To Be President? "We had to let him have that chance."
-
Sen. Ted Kennedy, in April 2009. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)
But Senator Kennedy was determined to tell his own story in his own words before he died. So over the last two years, through his illness, he wrote the only memoir ever written by anyone in the Kennedy family. The result is a revealing, emotional account of "Big Teddy," as he called himself, and the life he led.
The book, called "True Compass," starts with a harsh diagnosis of his brain tumor, and the doctor telling him somberly that he was about to die.
More from CBSNews.com:
Photo Gallery: Kennedy Remembered
Photo Gallery: Funeral Honors Kennedy's Legacy
Blockbuster Week For Publishing
Senator Kennedy went on camera to talk about the book five months before he passed away.
It was an interview he gave for his publisher, while he was on chemo.
"What I've tried to do in the United States Senate is to be true to the things which have been important in my life," Sen. Kennedy said.
Stahl asked his son, Ted Jr., about the book.
"Even though he really felt he needed to hold it together throughout some really incredibly emotionally difficult experiences, he was kind of able to let it out in this book," Kennedy said.
60 Minutes went to the Kennedy compound in Hyannis Port to talk to Ted Jr., who recently bought Jack Kennedy's old house.
"It was actually right here where he held his press conferences when he was president. He learned that he became President of the United States. He woke up in this house," Kennedy explained.
His father's house, as well as Bobby and Ethel Kennedy's house, is located nearby.
He said one of the things that surprised him when he read the book was how personal and intimate it was.
"I think one of the things that comes out of this book is just what a humble man he is. His letter to the Pope, you know, just a few short weeks ago. You know, every time I read that letter, I cry. Because he's asking for forgiveness," Kennedy told Stahl. "And he says that he's fallen short in his life. But you know, he's never tried, never stopped trying to make right in everything he did. And that's a lesson we can all learn."
Redemption is a theme in the book; another is how hard it was for Ted Sr. to be the baby in the Kennedy family. "I was always catching up," he writes, "I was the ninth of nine."
"He was sitting there going, 'How the hell am I ever going to compete against these brothers of mine, who are just these, outstanding individuals?'" the senator's son explained.
"He felt a sense of inadequacy till he was quite old," Stahl remarked.
"I think that that's true," Kennedy replied.
There was a notion that Teddy was a mama's boy, but it turns out it was daddy who was the doting, loving parent. Joe Sr., the family patriarch, as Teddy writes it, taught them not to flaunt their wealth and imparted lessons about persevering and contributing.
"I had a sit-down with my dad. He said, 'Now Teddy, you have to make up your mind whether you want to have a constructive and positive attitude and influence on your time. And if you're not interested, I just want you to know I have other children that intend to have a purposeful and constructive life. And so you have to make up your mind about which direction you're going to go,'" Sen. Kennedy remembered during his videotaped interview several months ago.
"If you decide to have a non-serious life," his father went on, "I won't have much time for you."
Produced by Rich Bonin
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Recent Segments
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Add a Comment
- Since, the late Senator Kennedy had a Funeral Mass, it must mean that he repented of his sin of supporting willful abortions--killing the unborn before he died. Maybe, his son should do so also instead of waiting for his deathbed confession of sins.
Just a thought! - Reply to this comment
- Thank you to all of the Kennedy family, for your treasured memories, your thoughts, and stories, and for all of the public intrusions you have learned to accept as 'your own form of normal' over the years. The bumps, & hurdles, & sorrows, & lessons, & losses that you have had to endure are not something that many could even begin to imagine. Thank you for allowing us into your lives. Though we should not look at this as an 'ending', our hearts are sad, & it is hard not to. We all fall short in our lives in one way or another, but might we each in our own individual way, set our own compass & try to chart our own course in such a way as Ted Kennedy & the Kennedy family has. Be happy.
- Reply to this comment
- Peter Kennedy Lawford also wrote his - Symptoms of Withdrawal. Very well written.
- Reply to this comment
- Leslie Stahl stated that Ted Kennedy is the first Kennedy to write his memoirs which is NOT true - Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy (Ted's mother) wrote her's in the 1970s.
- Reply to this comment

