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Thursday, July 11, 2013

Jackie - The Happiest Time

President JFK, Jackie, Caroline, and John Jr playing in the White House

 "It was really the happiest time of my life. It was when we were the closest-- I didn't realize the physical closeness of having his office in the same building and seeing him so many times a day."  - Jacqueline Kennedy  (Photograph by Cecil Stoughton)

On January 20, 1961, John Fitzgerald Kennedy took the oath of office to become the nation's 35th president and at age 31, Jacqueline Kennedy became the first lady. 

Shortly thereafter, Jackie began a major renovation of the White House. She wanted to make it into a real home for her family. She turned the sun porch on the third floor into a kindergarten school for Caroline and 12 to 15 other children, and added a swimming pool, a swing set, and a tree house on the White House lawn for Caroline and John Jr. 


Jackie Kennedy tour of the White House
Photo taken in early 1962 during a televised tour of the White House

Jackie also thought about what the White House represented to its many visitors and to citizens everywhere. She wanted people to have a greater appreciation of the history of America's most famous residence and its past inhabitants. She enlisted the aid of many experts, established a White House Fine Arts Committee, and created the position of White House curator. Gathering outstanding examples of American art and furniture from around the United States (including many items that had belonged to former presidents and their families), she restored all the public rooms in the White House. There was a televised tour of the newly restored White House, in which eighty million Americans watched, and it earned Jackie an honorary Emmy Award. To help defray the renovation costs, The White House: An Historic Guide was published.

Her legacy of fostering a national interest in historic preservation extended to her own "neighborhood," when she reversed a previous federal plan to destroy the historic Lafayette Square across from the White House and helped to negotiate not only a restoration of old buildings there, but a reasonable construction of new buildings with modern use.

Jackie used the White House to "showcase" the arts. She became the most prominent proponent for the establishment of the National Cultural Center in the nation's capital, and eventually it was named for her husband. She hosted performances of opera, ballet, Shakespeare and modern jazz, all performed by American companies. After her meeting with French Minister of Culture, Andre Malraux in May of 1961, she dazzled him so much that he made a loan to the U.S. from France, of the Louvre Museum's famous Mona Lisa painting, in which she presided over the unveiling.

Jackie traveled with the President, representing the US abroad. On a trip to Paris, as the President went from meeting to meeting, she maintained a schedule of her own events. Already admired for her style and beauty, she bedazzled the public with her knowledge and affinity for the French language, culture, and history.  She was a particular sensation, and the President delighted in her success. During a speech, the President introduced himself as, “I am the man who accompanied Jacqueline Kennedy to Paris, and I have enjoyed it.”

As first lady, Jackie also traveled to many foreign countries such as Italy, India, and Pakistan. Her interest in other cultures and her ability to speak several foreign languages, including French, Spanish, and Italian, brought her good will and admiration around the world.  And, on many of these trips, she forged personal friendship with world leaders, which helped to further the interests of the President and the U.S.

Jackie had an intense interest in the issues faced by the Administration and privately she was known to provide the President with her assessments of the political figures with whom he was negotiating.  She, also, subtly showed support of the Civil Rights movement by ensuring the kindergarten at the White House was racially integrated and that photographs of the group were publicly released.


JFK and Jackie arriving at Dallas, TX
JFK and Jackie arriving at Love Field, Dallas
Photo Credit: LIFE Magazine
In August 1963, Jackie prematurely gave birth to another son, Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, however, he suffered from a serious lung ailment and was rushed to the Children's Hospital in Boston, where he died two days later. While still recovering from this loss, another terrible tragedy befell her. On November 22, 1963, the President and Mrs. Kennedy were in Dallas, Texas. As their car drove slowly past cheering crowds, shots rang out. President Kennedy was killed and Jacqueline Kennedy became a widow at age 34.

While many of her outfits are considered iconic, it's the pink Chanel suit that she wore the 
day of her husband's assassination that remains in the forefront of the public's consciousness. Even as Lyndon Johnson took the oath of office, hours after the President's death, she refused to remove the suit, even though it was splattered with blood and brain matter, telling his wife Lady Bird Johnson, "I want them to see what they have done to Jack."

She planned the President's state funeral, it was broadcast around the world, and millions of people shared her grief and admired her courage and dignity.  She has since been noted as saying, “I have been through a lot and have suffered a great deal. But I have had lots of happy moments, as well. Every moment one lives is different from the other. The good, the bad, hardship, the joy, the tragedy, love, and happiness are all interwoven into one single, indescribable whole that is called life. You cannot separate the good from the bad. And perhaps there is no need to do so, either.”


Stay tuned for part three, Jackie - After the White House.




8 comments:

  1. Wow, I did not know she lost a child so close to where she lost Jack. That is such a tragedy. My parents remembered the day well when JFK was shot and I believe watched his funeral.

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  2. She was such a lady through and through. She suffered so much tragedy get was able keep moving forward and be a great mother to her kids.

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  3. My dad always tells me how he will never forget the day President Kennedy died. He was 14 and his whole class cried. We have never loved a President the same, perhaps we never will. It truly was a Camelot. I, on the other hand bc I grew up with so much 60s influence from my parents (it was their teen and young adult yrs-they were born in 1949), when John Jr passed in the summer of 1999 I was away working in a camp in CT. I think I was the only American there (there were many Europeans and Australians wking there too) who felt the impact of John Jr.'s passing. I think so many don't understand the impact the Kennedy family has had on our history.

    To me, Camelot truly ended on that day. They are all a piece of American history no matter who dislikes the Kennedy's they have served our country-dozens of Kennedy family members and have solidified a place in our history forever. Great piece. My favorite so far-I am really enjoying this. Thank you! xox

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    1. I'm so glad you enjoyed it. I am learning so many things about her that I never knew before and I look forward to sharing more with you.

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  4. Wonderful post!!
    ~xoxo, CoriLynn

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  5. Jackie has such an indomitable spirit. I admire her fortitude as much as I do her grace, sophistication and style.


    ♥ Jessica

    *PS* Speaking of lovely style, my goodness, sweet Denise, the new look of your blog is utterly gorgeous!!!

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  6. Great post....and I look forward to part 3! And lovely new blog design too! Have a fabulous mid-week!
    May x
    www.walkinginmay.com

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