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Pauline Robinson Bush

Pauline Robinson Bush (December 20, 1949 – October 11, 1953), commonly known as Robin Bush, was the second child and oldest daughter of the 41st President of the United States, George H. W. Bush, and his wife, First Lady Barbara Bush. After she was born in California, her family soon relocated to Texas, where Robin lived most of her life.

Pauline Robinson Bush
Robin Bush sitting on porch steps in Greenwich, Connecticut, in June 1953.[1]
Born(1949-12-20)December 20, 1949
DiedOctober 11, 1953(1953-10-11) (aged 3)
Cause of deathLeukemia
Resting place
Other namesRobin Bush
Parents
FamilyBush

At the age of 3, Robin was diagnosed with advanced leukemia. As she was given very little time to live, her parents flew her to New York City for treatment, where she spent the next six months. Despite doctors' efforts, she died two months before her fourth birthday. Her death prompted them to establish a foundation for leukemia research.

Life edit

 
Barbara Bush with Robin and George W. Bush in Texas, October 1950

Then an oil field equipment salesman for Dresser Industries, George H. W. Bush lived in various places around the United States with his wife, Barbara (née Pierce), and their young son, George W.[2] In 1949, they moved to Compton, California; by then, Barbara was pregnant with the couple's second child.[3] On September 23, 1949, Pauline Robinson Pierce, Barbara's mother, was killed in a car accident, which also injured her father, Marvin.[4][5] Since she was very late into the pregnancy, Marvin advised Barbara not to make the journey to New York, so as not to hurt the baby.[6]

On December 20, 1949, Barbara delivered a baby girl, whom she named Pauline Robinson Bush, after her late mother.[4] Initially, the child's intended name was Pauline Pierce Bush, until George H. W.'s mother pointed out that her initials would be P. P. Bush, which "would never do".[7] From birth, the little girl was referred to as Robin, so much so that, later in life, Barbara would comment that Robin's siblings probably do not even remember her real name.[8]

Robin was described as being calm and having a "sweet soul". She was "quiet and gentle, and she had lovely little blond curls."[9] Her father would later say of Robin: "She'd fight and cry and play and make her way just like the rest, but there was about her a certain softness... Her peace made me feel strong, and so very important."[10] In 1950, shortly after Robin's birth, the family relocated again, this time to Midland, Texas; the family quickly became involved in their new town.[11] In February 1953, after having moved to their third house in Midland, the Bushes had another child, John Ellis, nicknamed "Jeb".[12]

Illness and death edit

In the spring of 1953, shortly after Jeb's birth, Robin awoke one morning, listless.[13] She said she was unsure of what to do that particular morning, stating that she "may go out and lie on the grass and watch the cars go by", or just stay in bed. Barbara believed Robin had come down with what her mother had referred to as "spring fever,"[14] as, up until that point, she had been "as rowdy and healthy" as her brothers.[1] The child was taken to the family's pediatrician, Dorothy Wyvell, who took a blood sample and told Barbara to return later that afternoon with George H. W.; Barbara had not yet noticed the bruises on Robin.[13] Dr. Wyvell told George and Barbara that Robin had advanced stage leukemia. Her advice for them was to not tell anyone about the child's illness, and to take her home, "make life as easy as possible for her, and in three weeks' time, she'll be gone."[15] Neither parent had ever heard of leukemia, and, in the 1950s, not much was known of it; consequently, it was nearly always fatal.[16]

 
George H. W. Bush holding Robin, 1953

The Bushes went against both parts of the doctor's advice. Almost immediately, their friends from the country club were discussing Robin's diagnosis, and George called his uncle, John M. Walker, president of Memorial Hospital in New York City. Walker urged them to take Robin to the adjacent Sloan Kettering Institute. He told George and Barbara that "you could never live with yourselves unless you treat her."[15] The very next day, leaving George W. and Jeb with different friends, they both flew to New York and had Robin admitted into Sloan Kettering. She was tested once again, and, after the diagnosis was confirmed, she was immediately put on medication.[17] George W. was told that his sister was sick, but was never explained exactly how bad her condition was.[18] For the next six months, Barbara largely remained in New York with Robin, while George traveled back and forth, due to his job. Their two sons were cared for either by family friends or by housekeepers.[15]

Robin was, by her mother's account, "wonderful", not questioning why she was sick. She disliked bone marrow tests, which were very painful, as were many of the blood transfusions she endured.[19] At times, the medication was so effective that Robin did not even appear to be ill. However, she never went into complete remission. According to Charlotte Tan, who treated Robin in New York, she was mature and tolerated her treatments well.[20] Barbara and George heard about a doctor in Kansas City who maintained he had found the cure for leukemia. However, their hopes were dashed when they found out the man was merely testing a new drug, and had not claimed to have the cure.[21][22] Sometimes, her parents would take Robin to the Bush house in Greenwich, Connecticut, and she was once taken to Maine for a brief period. There, she got to see her brothers, whose pictures she had taped to the headboard of her hospital bed.[19] During this visit, George W. was not allowed to wrestle with his sister like they used to;[23] his mother focused most of her attention on Robin and would "snap" at him if he tried to "horse around" with his sister.[15]

By fall, Robin's condition was worsening. She spent time in an oxygen tent, and her platelets were low enough that whenever she started bleeding it was very difficult to ascertain when it would stop.[24] Barbara allowed no crying around Robin, and made her husband leave the room if he felt like doing so. Prescott Bush, George's father, had purchased a plot for Robin to be buried in, as her situation was not improving. Eventually, due to her medication,[25] Robin developed heavy bruising, which almost entirely covered one of her legs, and "a hundred or so" stomach ulcers.[26] Barbara called George, and, by the time he arrived to his daughter's bedside, she had entered a coma. Robin died[25] on October 11, 1953, after doctors' efforts to close the ulcers in her stomach.[27] She was two months short of her fourth birthday. Two days later, on October 13,[28] a memorial service was held for Robin at the Bushes' home in Greenwich. Initially, her body was donated for research, in hopes that her death might help others survive.[29] Several days later, when the hospital released her remains, Dorothy Walker Bush, her paternal grandmother, was among those who buried her.[28] In 2000, her grave was exhumed and her remains were relocated and reburied at the George H.W. Bush Library.

Legacy edit

 
The portrait of Robin that hung in the Bushes' Texas homes

After Robin's death at age 3, Barbara cried herself to sleep many nights.[30] She stated that she "crumbled" completely, and would later say that she "fell totally apart and [George] took care of [her]."[31] George W. was told of his sister's death a few days after it happened, when his parents picked him up from school. He would later describe this as the only low point of his happy childhood,[18] remembering the sadness he felt both for his parents and for the loss of his sister.[32] He and his brother Jeb then became their mother's focal points, and she devoted her time to caring for them, as a means of overcoming her daughter's death.[33][34]

After overhearing George W. tell one of his friends that he could not go out and play, as he needed to play with his mother, Barbara decided that it was time to heal, for her family.[1] After a few months, "the grief and the awful aching hurt began to disappear."[35] "I like... to think of Robin as though she were a part, a living part, of our vital energetic and wonderful family of men and [Barbara]," George H. W. Bush would later write.[36] Barbara came to believe that she and her husband valued all people more because of the loss they suffered with Robin.[33] Barbara also attributed the premature graying of her hair to Robin's extended illness and death.[1]

Dorothy Walker Bush commissioned an oil painting of Robin, which hung in the Bushes' homes in Midland and, later, Houston.[1][34] Eventually, Barbara and George H. W. had three more children: Neil, in 1955, Marvin in 1956, and another daughter, Dorothy, known as "Doro" and born in 1959. Doro was once described by her father as "a wild dark version of Robin", noting that the two looked so much alike, her parents once mistakenly called her Robin.[37] In 2000, Robin's remains were transferred from Connecticut to the family's future burial plot at the George Bush Presidential Library in Texas. On this occasion, George H. W. stated: "It seems funny after almost 50 years since her death how dear Robin is to our hearts."[38]

Following Robin's death, the Bush family created a charity to raise awareness and money for leukemia research called the Bright Star Foundation.[33] The impact of the Bright Star Foundation was acknowledged by the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in 2004, when it opened the Robin Bush Child and Adolescent Clinic.[39] Barbara later became honorary chairwoman of the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society and honorary national chairperson of Donor Awareness Week.[40]

Following Barbara's death in April 2018, a cartoon by Marshall Ramsey, of The Clarion-Ledger, was widely circulated, showing Robin greeting Barbara upon the latter's entry to heaven. The cartoon was shared by various people and relatives of the family, including George W.'s daughter, Jenna Bush Hager.[41] Following her father's death in November of that same year, Robin would be featured again in another Ramsey cartoon, where she and Barbara greeted George H. W. after the latter landing a TBM Avenger (the type of airplane he flew in the Navy during World War II) in heaven.[42]

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Hendrix, Steve (April 18, 2018). "'One last time': Barbara Bush had already faced a death more painful than her own". Washington Post. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
  2. ^ "George Bush Collection". George Bush Presidential Library and Museum. Retrieved July 30, 2016.
  3. ^ Bush 2015, p. 35.
  4. ^ a b Mitchell 2003, p. 25.
  5. ^ "Cup Of Coffee Causes Crash In Which Native Ohioan Dies". The Cincinnati Enquirer. September 24, 1949. p. 8. Retrieved August 26, 2018.
  6. ^ Bush 2015, p. 36.
  7. ^ Bush 2015, p. 37.
  8. ^ Bush 2004, p. ix.
  9. ^ Bush Hager, Jenna (November 20, 2012). "'Barbara Bush: Child lost to cancer is 'an angel to me'". Today. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
  10. ^ Green 2000, p. 39.
  11. ^ Gutin 2008, p. 13.
  12. ^ Bush 2015, pp. 37–38.
  13. ^ a b Mitchell 2003, p. 32.
  14. ^ Bush 2015, p. 39.
  15. ^ a b c d Mitchell 2003, p. 33.
  16. ^ Blue & Naden 1991, p. 52.
  17. ^ Bush 2015, p. 40.
  18. ^ a b Marquez 2006, p. 15.
  19. ^ a b Bush 2015, p. 43.
  20. ^ Kilian 2003, p. 92.
  21. ^ Bush 2015, p. 42.
  22. ^ Kilian 2003, p. 93.
  23. ^ Gormley 2000, p. 10.
  24. ^ Mitchell 2003, p. 34.
  25. ^ a b Bush 2015, p. 44.
  26. ^ Kilian 2003, p. 94.
  27. ^ Mitchell 2003, p. 35.
  28. ^ a b Bush 2015, p. 45.
  29. ^ Meacham 2015, p. 100.
  30. ^ Gutin 2008, p. 15.
  31. ^ Sosa & Chase 2018, p. 112.
  32. ^ "Bush – The Making of a Candidate". www.washingtonpost.com. 1999. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
  33. ^ a b c Bush 2015, p. 47.
  34. ^ a b Sosa & Chase 2018, p. 114.
  35. ^ Bush 2013, p. 592.
  36. ^ Meacham 2015, p. 102.
  37. ^ Parmet 2000, p. 86.
  38. ^ Meacham 2015, p. 555.
  39. ^ Villeneuve, Marina (July 16, 2013). "Bush's bald head a reminder of his own child's leukemia fight". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 17, 2018.
  40. ^ "Good-Bye to Robin". Amy Cunningham. Retrieved April 17, 2018.
  41. ^ Ramsey, Marshall (April 19, 2018). "How the Barbara Bush cartoon took on a life of its own". USA Today. Retrieved April 19, 2018.
  42. ^ Bado, Kirk A. (December 1, 2018). . USA Today. Archived from the original on December 1, 2018. Retrieved December 1, 2018.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

pauline, robinson, bush, confused, with, robin, bush, december, 1949, october, 1953, commonly, known, robin, bush, second, child, oldest, daughter, 41st, president, united, states, george, bush, wife, first, lady, barbara, bush, after, born, california, family. Not to be confused with Robin Bush Pauline Robinson Bush December 20 1949 October 11 1953 commonly known as Robin Bush was the second child and oldest daughter of the 41st President of the United States George H W Bush and his wife First Lady Barbara Bush After she was born in California her family soon relocated to Texas where Robin lived most of her life Pauline Robinson BushRobin Bush sitting on porch steps in Greenwich Connecticut in June 1953 1 Born 1949 12 20 December 20 1949Compton California U S DiedOctober 11 1953 1953 10 11 aged 3 New York City U S Cause of deathLeukemiaResting placePutnam Cemetery 1953 2000 George H W Bush Presidential Library and Museum since 2000 Other namesRobin BushParentsGeorge H W Bush Barbara BushFamilyBushAt the age of 3 Robin was diagnosed with advanced leukemia As she was given very little time to live her parents flew her to New York City for treatment where she spent the next six months Despite doctors efforts she died two months before her fourth birthday Her death prompted them to establish a foundation for leukemia research Contents 1 Life 2 Illness and death 3 Legacy 4 References 4 1 Notes 4 2 Bibliography 5 External linksLife edit nbsp Barbara Bush with Robin and George W Bush in Texas October 1950Then an oil field equipment salesman for Dresser Industries George H W Bush lived in various places around the United States with his wife Barbara nee Pierce and their young son George W 2 In 1949 they moved to Compton California by then Barbara was pregnant with the couple s second child 3 On September 23 1949 Pauline Robinson Pierce Barbara s mother was killed in a car accident which also injured her father Marvin 4 5 Since she was very late into the pregnancy Marvin advised Barbara not to make the journey to New York so as not to hurt the baby 6 On December 20 1949 Barbara delivered a baby girl whom she named Pauline Robinson Bush after her late mother 4 Initially the child s intended name was Pauline Pierce Bush until George H W s mother pointed out that her initials would be P P Bush which would never do 7 From birth the little girl was referred to as Robin so much so that later in life Barbara would comment that Robin s siblings probably do not even remember her real name 8 Robin was described as being calm and having a sweet soul She was quiet and gentle and she had lovely little blond curls 9 Her father would later say of Robin She d fight and cry and play and make her way just like the rest but there was about her a certain softness Her peace made me feel strong and so very important 10 In 1950 shortly after Robin s birth the family relocated again this time to Midland Texas the family quickly became involved in their new town 11 In February 1953 after having moved to their third house in Midland the Bushes had another child John Ellis nicknamed Jeb 12 Illness and death editIn the spring of 1953 shortly after Jeb s birth Robin awoke one morning listless 13 She said she was unsure of what to do that particular morning stating that she may go out and lie on the grass and watch the cars go by or just stay in bed Barbara believed Robin had come down with what her mother had referred to as spring fever 14 as up until that point she had been as rowdy and healthy as her brothers 1 The child was taken to the family s pediatrician Dorothy Wyvell who took a blood sample and told Barbara to return later that afternoon with George H W Barbara had not yet noticed the bruises on Robin 13 Dr Wyvell told George and Barbara that Robin had advanced stage leukemia Her advice for them was to not tell anyone about the child s illness and to take her home make life as easy as possible for her and in three weeks time she ll be gone 15 Neither parent had ever heard of leukemia and in the 1950s not much was known of it consequently it was nearly always fatal 16 nbsp George H W Bush holding Robin 1953The Bushes went against both parts of the doctor s advice Almost immediately their friends from the country club were discussing Robin s diagnosis and George called his uncle John M Walker president of Memorial Hospital in New York City Walker urged them to take Robin to the adjacent Sloan Kettering Institute He told George and Barbara that you could never live with yourselves unless you treat her 15 The very next day leaving George W and Jeb with different friends they both flew to New York and had Robin admitted into Sloan Kettering She was tested once again and after the diagnosis was confirmed she was immediately put on medication 17 George W was told that his sister was sick but was never explained exactly how bad her condition was 18 For the next six months Barbara largely remained in New York with Robin while George traveled back and forth due to his job Their two sons were cared for either by family friends or by housekeepers 15 Robin was by her mother s account wonderful not questioning why she was sick She disliked bone marrow tests which were very painful as were many of the blood transfusions she endured 19 At times the medication was so effective that Robin did not even appear to be ill However she never went into complete remission According to Charlotte Tan who treated Robin in New York she was mature and tolerated her treatments well 20 Barbara and George heard about a doctor in Kansas City who maintained he had found the cure for leukemia However their hopes were dashed when they found out the man was merely testing a new drug and had not claimed to have the cure 21 22 Sometimes her parents would take Robin to the Bush house in Greenwich Connecticut and she was once taken to Maine for a brief period There she got to see her brothers whose pictures she had taped to the headboard of her hospital bed 19 During this visit George W was not allowed to wrestle with his sister like they used to 23 his mother focused most of her attention on Robin and would snap at him if he tried to horse around with his sister 15 By fall Robin s condition was worsening She spent time in an oxygen tent and her platelets were low enough that whenever she started bleeding it was very difficult to ascertain when it would stop 24 Barbara allowed no crying around Robin and made her husband leave the room if he felt like doing so Prescott Bush George s father had purchased a plot for Robin to be buried in as her situation was not improving Eventually due to her medication 25 Robin developed heavy bruising which almost entirely covered one of her legs and a hundred or so stomach ulcers 26 Barbara called George and by the time he arrived to his daughter s bedside she had entered a coma Robin died 25 on October 11 1953 after doctors efforts to close the ulcers in her stomach 27 She was two months short of her fourth birthday Two days later on October 13 28 a memorial service was held for Robin at the Bushes home in Greenwich Initially her body was donated for research in hopes that her death might help others survive 29 Several days later when the hospital released her remains Dorothy Walker Bush her paternal grandmother was among those who buried her 28 In 2000 her grave was exhumed and her remains were relocated and reburied at the George H W Bush Library Legacy edit nbsp The portrait of Robin that hung in the Bushes Texas homesAfter Robin s death at age 3 Barbara cried herself to sleep many nights 30 She stated that she crumbled completely and would later say that she fell totally apart and George took care of her 31 George W was told of his sister s death a few days after it happened when his parents picked him up from school He would later describe this as the only low point of his happy childhood 18 remembering the sadness he felt both for his parents and for the loss of his sister 32 He and his brother Jeb then became their mother s focal points and she devoted her time to caring for them as a means of overcoming her daughter s death 33 34 After overhearing George W tell one of his friends that he could not go out and play as he needed to play with his mother Barbara decided that it was time to heal for her family 1 After a few months the grief and the awful aching hurt began to disappear 35 I like to think of Robin as though she were a part a living part of our vital energetic and wonderful family of men and Barbara George H W Bush would later write 36 Barbara came to believe that she and her husband valued all people more because of the loss they suffered with Robin 33 Barbara also attributed the premature graying of her hair to Robin s extended illness and death 1 Dorothy Walker Bush commissioned an oil painting of Robin which hung in the Bushes homes in Midland and later Houston 1 34 Eventually Barbara and George H W had three more children Neil in 1955 Marvin in 1956 and another daughter Dorothy known as Doro and born in 1959 Doro was once described by her father as a wild dark version of Robin noting that the two looked so much alike her parents once mistakenly called her Robin 37 In 2000 Robin s remains were transferred from Connecticut to the family s future burial plot at the George Bush Presidential Library in Texas On this occasion George H W stated It seems funny after almost 50 years since her death how dear Robin is to our hearts 38 Following Robin s death the Bush family created a charity to raise awareness and money for leukemia research called the Bright Star Foundation 33 The impact of the Bright Star Foundation was acknowledged by the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in 2004 when it opened the Robin Bush Child and Adolescent Clinic 39 Barbara later became honorary chairwoman of the Leukemia amp Lymphoma Society and honorary national chairperson of Donor Awareness Week 40 Following Barbara s death in April 2018 a cartoon by Marshall Ramsey of The Clarion Ledger was widely circulated showing Robin greeting Barbara upon the latter s entry to heaven The cartoon was shared by various people and relatives of the family including George W s daughter Jenna Bush Hager 41 Following her father s death in November of that same year Robin would be featured again in another Ramsey cartoon where she and Barbara greeted George H W after the latter landing a TBM Avenger the type of airplane he flew in the Navy during World War II in heaven 42 References editNotes edit a b c d e Hendrix Steve April 18 2018 One last time Barbara Bush had already faced a death more painful than her own Washington Post Retrieved August 27 2018 George Bush Collection George Bush Presidential Library and Museum Retrieved July 30 2016 Bush 2015 p 35 a b Mitchell 2003 p 25 Cup Of Coffee Causes Crash In Which Native Ohioan Dies The Cincinnati Enquirer September 24 1949 p 8 Retrieved August 26 2018 Bush 2015 p 36 Bush 2015 p 37 Bush 2004 p ix Bush Hager Jenna November 20 2012 Barbara Bush Child lost to cancer is an angel to me Today Retrieved August 27 2018 Green 2000 p 39 Gutin 2008 p 13 Bush 2015 pp 37 38 a b Mitchell 2003 p 32 Bush 2015 p 39 a b c d Mitchell 2003 p 33 Blue amp Naden 1991 p 52 Bush 2015 p 40 a b Marquez 2006 p 15 a b Bush 2015 p 43 Kilian 2003 p 92 Bush 2015 p 42 Kilian 2003 p 93 Gormley 2000 p 10 Mitchell 2003 p 34 a b Bush 2015 p 44 Kilian 2003 p 94 Mitchell 2003 p 35 a b Bush 2015 p 45 Meacham 2015 p 100 Gutin 2008 p 15 Sosa amp Chase 2018 p 112 Bush The Making of a Candidate www washingtonpost com 1999 Retrieved August 27 2018 a b c Bush 2015 p 47 a b Sosa amp Chase 2018 p 114 Bush 2013 p 592 Meacham 2015 p 102 Parmet 2000 p 86 Meacham 2015 p 555 Villeneuve Marina July 16 2013 Bush s bald head a reminder of his own child s leukemia fight Los Angeles Times Retrieved April 17 2018 Good Bye to Robin Amy Cunningham Retrieved April 17 2018 Ramsey Marshall April 19 2018 How the Barbara Bush cartoon took on a life of its own USA Today Retrieved April 19 2018 Bado Kirk A December 1 2018 George H W Bush cartoon Barbara and daughter Robin waiting in clouds USA Today Archived from the original on December 1 2018 Retrieved December 1 2018 Bibliography edit Blue Rose Naden Corinne J 1991 Barbara Bush First Lady New Jersey Enslow Publishers ISBN 0 89490 350 0 Bush Barbara 2004 Reflections Life After the White House New York Scribner ISBN 0 7432 2359 4 Bush George H W 2013 All the Best George Bush My Life in Letters and Other Writings New York Scribner ISBN 978 1 4767 3116 2 Bush Barbara 2015 A Memoir New York Scribner ISBN 978 1 5011 2223 1 Gormley Beatrice 2000 President George W Bush Our Forty Third President New York Aladdin Paperbacks ISBN 0 689 84410 7 Green Robert 2000 George Bush Chicago Ferguson Publishing Company ISBN 0 89434 339 4 Gutin Myra G 2008 Barbara Bush Presidential Matriarch Kansas University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0700615834 Kilian Pamela 2003 Barbara Bush Matriarch of a Dynasty New York St Martin s Griffin ISBN 0 7862 4802 5 Marquez Heron 2006 George W Bush Minneapolis Lerner Publishing Group ISBN 0 8225 2647 6 Meacham Jon 2015 Destiny and Power The American Odyssey of George Herbert Walker Bush Minneapolis Random House ISBN 978 1 4000 6765 7 Mitchell Elizabeth 2003 W Revenge of the Bush Dynasty New York Berkley ISBN 0 425 19432 9 Parmet Herbert S 2000 George Bush The Life of a Lone Star Yankee New Jersey Transaction Publishers ISBN 0 7658 0730 0 Read online at Google Books Sosa Ellie LeBlond Chase Kelly Anne 2018 George amp Barbara Bush A Great American Love Story Maine Down East Books ISBN 978 1 60893 973 2 External links editPauline Robinson Bush at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pauline Robinson Bush amp oldid 1181723828, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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