Boston public viewing, Arlington burial planned for Kennedy

ByABC News
August 27, 2009, 3:33 AM

WASHINGTON -- The final act of Sen. Edward Kennedy's half-century in the spotlight begins Thursday with a public viewing in Boston. It concludes Saturday when the patriarch of America's best-known political dynasty is laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery next to his slain brothers.

At noon ET, a private family mass will take place at the Kennedy family compound in Hyannis Port, Mass., where the senator lost a battle with brain cancer Tuesday at the age of 77. Thirty minutes later, Kennedy's body will be moved via motorcade with the family to Boston, along a route past mourners and well wishers, to the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library. The motorcade is expected to arrive at 4 p.m. Public visitation will continue until Friday afternoon. Invitations are required for other observances, beginning with a private memorial service at the library that night.

The funeral Mass will take place at 10:30 a.m. ET Saturday at Boston's Our Lady of Perpetual Help Basilica, a church where the senator prayed daily during daughter Kara's successful battle with cancer. Kennedy will be buried across the river from the Capitol he dominated.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., will be among the speakers at Friday's memorial. President Obama will be among those speaking at Saturday's funeral.

"An important chapter in our history has come to an end," Obama said on Martha's Vineyard, where he is vacationing. He described himself as "heartbroken."

McCain wistfully recalled Kennedy's "booming voice" that "will never encourage or assail or impress us again."

After John Kennedy's assassination in 1963 and the slaying of Sen. Robert Kennedy during his 1968 presidential campaign, Edward Moore Kennedy the youngest of four brothers became the family's standard-bearer.

Initially, the man known as "Teddy" foundered. A series of self-inflicted personal crises including a 1969 car crash in Chappaquiddick, Mass., that killed passenger Mary Jo Kopechne and the failure of his 1980 challenge to President Carter sent Kennedy back to the Senate to rebuild his reputation.