
Annette Dionne, last of the famed Canadian quintuplets, dies at 91
CBC
Annette Dionne, the last surviving Dionne quintuplet and a champion of children's rights, has died.
The Dionne Quints Home Museum in North Bay, Ont., says in a social media post that Annette died on Christmas Eve but did not provide further details.
She was 91.
"She believed it was important to maintain the Dionne Quints Museum and the history it provides for the future of all children," the museum said in the post on Friday.
"Annette was the only surviving Quints and was the last surviving sibling amongst the 14 children of the Dionne family...Rest in Peace, Annette."
The Dionne quintuplets — made up of Annette, Emilie, Yvonne, Cecile and Marie — became a global sensation after their birth on May 28, 1934, as they were the first quintuplets known to survive past infancy.
But the attention came at a personal cost.
When the quintuplets were just months old during the Depression era, the Ontario government took them away from their parents, who already had five children, and placed them under the control of a board of guardians.
More importantly, the government put them in a nursery-style exhibition that millions of tourists lined up to observe through one-way glass.
The exhibition was called "Quintland" and was Canada's biggest tourist attraction at the time.
They brought in about $500 million for the province.
Hollywood made movies about the girls, and companies such as Kellogg's and Palmolive came knocking at their doors to make them their ambassadors.
Five identical ships were also named after the sisters during the Second World War.
Over the course of the first nine years of their lives that they remained on display, their mother, Oliva Dionne, tried to regain custody from the government but was unsuccessful.

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