Note: This blog does not take positions on social or political issues. We just tell you where to find dead people.
Karen Ann Quinlan was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania on March 29, 1954. She came to national attention in 1975 as the subject of one of America's first right-to-die cases.
It all began on April 15th, just a few weeks after her 21st birthday. Karen went to a party at a local bar in Byram, New Jersey. She had several gin and tonics with a valium chaser. The combination put her into a coma from which she'd never recover.
As her body began to shut down, Karen suffered irreversible brain damage, putting her in a persistent vegetative state. Over the next several months, she lost alot weight as well, dropping from 115 to merely 80 pounds. No longer able to breathe on her own, she was hooked up to a ventilator.
On September 12th, Quinlan's parents, Joseph and Julia, filed a suit requesting that the ventilator and extraordinary means prolonging her life be terminated. They argued it was their right and that the Garden State had no grounds to interfere. The case was appealed all the way to the New Jersey Supreme Court, which eventually granted their request.
Karen's ventilator was removed in May 1976, and to everyone's surprise, she continued breathing on her own. She was moved to a private nursing home, where she was fed by artificial nutrition. She lived an extraordinary nine years in this condition, before finally succumbing on June 11, 1985. She was just 31 years old.
Karen was laid to rest at the Gate of Heaven Cemetery and Mausoleum in East Hanover, New Jersey. When Joseph passed away in 1996, he was also buried in the family plot. As of 2026, Julia is still alive and approaching 100 years of age, but she will no doubt join her family here one day.
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| Location: Section #29, Block A, Grave 44 2A Inscription: A Precious Gift |
Rest in peace.
Trivia
- If you want to learn more about Karen Ann Quinlan, take a voyage to Amazon. Its all in books.
- In 1977, NBC produced the made-for-TV movie In the Matter of Karen Ann Quinlan, which starred Brian Keith as Joseph and Piper Laurie as Julia. You can watch the film in its entirety on YouTube.
- In 1980, Joseph and Julia opened the Karen Ann Quinlan Hospice, which now has four locations in New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
- In 1976, the band Starz released a single called Pull the Plug in tribute to Karen. Give it a listen on YouTube.
- Gate of Heaven is also the final resting place of famed mentalist The Amazing Kreskin, previously featured in this blog.























