, which is marked with a headstone and a plaque in the ground commemorating the visit of 35th U.S. President
John F. Kennedy at the gravesite; her gravestone reads, "Joy she gave joy she has found". On May 13, 1948, Lady Hartington and Lord Fitzwilliam were flying from Paris to the
French Riviera for a vacation aboard a
de Havilland DH.104 Dove. At 3:30 in the afternoon, their plane took off, reaching an altitude of 10,000 feet (3,000 m). Approximately one hour into the flight, radio contact was lost with the plane when it entered the region near
Vienne, which was also close to the center of a storm. The plane's four occupants endured twenty minutes of severe turbulence which bounced their small plane up and down as much as several thousand feet at a time. When they finally cleared the clouds, they instantly discovered the plane was in a dive and moments away from impact, and they attempted to pull up. The stress of the turbulence, coupled with the sudden change of direction, tore loose one of the wings, followed by both engines, and finally the tail. The plane's
fuselage then spun into the ground seconds later, coming to rest nose-down in a ravine, after striking terrain at Plateau du Coiron, near
Saint-Bauzile, Ardèche, France. Lady Hartington was instantly killed, along with Fitzwilliam, the pilot Peter Townshend and the navigator Arthur Freeman. She was buried on the Cavendish family burial grounds at
St Peter's Churchyard, Edensor outside of
Chatsworth, Derbyshire, England. Her father was the only family member to attend the funeral, arranged by the Devonshires. Rose Kennedy had refused to attend her daughter's funeral, instead entering a hospital for medical reasons. Her brother Jack was too devastated and could not bring himself to go to the funeral as a result. ==Popular culture==