Happy Birthday Jackie Kennedy

Item #M5029 pictures Jackie Kennedy through the years.

Jacqueline Lee Bouvier was born on July 28, 1929, in Southampton, New York.

Jacqueline, or “Jackie” as she was popularly known, enjoyed a relatively privileged childhood, due to her father’s success as a stockbroker on Wall Street. She learned to ride a horse when she was just a year old and by age 11 had already won several national championships. A private girl from a young age, Jackie became somewhat introverted when her parents divorced. And when her mother remarried, she got three new stepsiblings.

Item #M10700 commemorates the 50th anniversary of JFK’s election.

Jackie did well in school, attending Vassar College in New York, studying history, literature, art, and French. During her college years, she spent a year in Paris, France, that was one of the happiest of her life. After graduating from George Washington University, Jackie got her first job. She worked as the “Inquiring Camera Girl” for The Washington Times-Herald newspaper. In that role Jackie wandered the city photographing and interviewing people on issues of the day.

Item #M5135A – Sheet with nine Jackie portraits.

In May 1952, Jackie attended a dinner party where she was introduced to a young U.S. representative, John Kennedy. Kennedy was in the midst of running for the U.S. Senate. After winning that election, the pair grew close quickly and announced their engagement in June 1953.

The Kennedy’s September 1953 wedding was the social event of the season, with some 700 guests witnessing the ceremony and even more attending the reception. Following a honeymoon in San Ysidro Ranch, Santa Barbara, CA, the Kennedys returned to their busy life in Washington. John Kennedy suffered chronic back problems from football and wartime service and had to undergo two surgeries. Jackie encouraged him to remain busy during his recovery time, resulting in his 1957 Pulitzer Prize-winning book, Profiles in Courage. That same year Jackie gave birth to their first child, Caroline.

Item #M10701 pictures the Kennedy’s on the first anniversary of JFK’s inauguration.

In January 1960, Kennedy launched his presidential campaign. Jackie traveled the country by his side until she found out she was pregnant and was instructed to stay at home. She did so, but used the time to answer hundreds of campaign letters, tape TV commercials, deliver interviews, and write a weekly newspaper column. That November, Kennedy narrowly won the election. The Kennedys enjoyed another celebration a few weeks later – the birth of their second child, John Jr.

While Jackie was happy for her husband’s success, and committed to fulfill her role as hostess, she made it clear from the beginning that her first priority was to be a good wife and mother. Incorporating the importance of family with her duties as First Lady, Jackie’s first project was restoring the White House. She turned the sun porch into an integrated kindergarten for Caroline and 15 other children.

Jackie also enriched the experience of visitors and established a White House Fine Arts Committee and curator. She tirelessly collected art and furniture from around the country, specifically those that had belonged to former presidents, and restored every public room in the White House. When she was done, Jackie hosted a televised tour of the White House that made her a celebrity and her fashions copied around the country.

Item #M10775 pictures the Kennedy family.

Another issue close to Jackie’s heart was promoting the arts. She frequently held parties where artists, writers, scientists, poets, and musicians discussed issues with politicians, diplomats, and statesmen. Jackie was one of the driving forces behind the creation of the National Cultural Center in Washington, D.C. (which was eventually named for her husband). Her ideas and commitment to arts also laid the groundwork for several national arts foundations, including the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Arts.

Though she did not frequently speak out on political issues, Jackie was known to share her stern opinions with her husband when they were alone. She did make occasional statements, most notably, an address in Spanish aimed at Cuban fighters following the Bay of Pigs Invasion. Jackie showed her support for the growing Civil Rights Movement by releasing pictures of her racially integrated kindergarten at the White House. She also went on more international trips than any First Lady before her. She traveled both with and without her husband, established friendships with world leaders, and gained support for U.S. interests.

Item #M10774 pictures the Kennedy’s at JFKs inauguration.

The Kennedy’s time in the White House is often referred to as the Camelot era, as it was a time of positivity and success. Yet it came to an abrupt end following tragedy. First, in August 1963, Jackie gave birth to a child who died two days later. Still recovering from the loss, Jackie sat beside her husband that November when he was assassinated in Texas. She was a widow at 34, a single mother of two, and became the face of the grieving nation.

Shortly after her husband’s death, Jackie began work on the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum. In 1968 she remarried, but would be widowed again seven years later. With her children grown up, Jackie embarked on a new career as an editor, first at Viking Press, then at Doubleday. She enjoyed her job and spending time with her children until her death on May 19, 1994.

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9 Comments

  1. What a well-written article. I am the same age (born on September 1929) and admired Jackie for years. Now, future generations will be able to know her story.

  2. As a stamp collector, I was surprised to realize that we have never had a U.S. stamp of Jacqueline Kennedy. She was a lovely and gracious lady. Thank you, Mystic.

      1. Do you think the traditions of the First Lady will change once there’s a First Gentleman? In my opinion, the concept of an elected official’s spouse also getting power, or a budget to spend, seems contrary to our democratic ideas. Am I the odd duck on this one?

  3. Jacqueline Bouvier was so educated and well versed that her father, “Black Jack” Bouvier was afraid she would intimidate men with her intelligence. He coached her with her speaking voice so that the rhythm of her conversation would exhibit a degree of “ditz”. This becomes quite evident in recordings of her tours of the White House where she reveals that a painting once belonged to President Monroe. In a double irony the sequence sounds like Marilyn Monroe reading the presentation.

  4. This is a well-written story about Jackie, but it has been cleansed of the sordidness of a Presidential ego and sex drive larger than life, one large enough to have been, at times, a danger to national security. Thank you for the story, but history includes more than the Camelot moments.

    1. Dear Jim,

      Does everything have to be dark? Is everything in your your life so miserable it make you have to dump on everything else? Can’t we enjoy an uplifting story just once in a while?

      Thank you Mystic, once again a great story with elements I didn’t know, even though I thought I was paying attention. Good job!

  5. Getting in late on this one. I grew up to experience the entire spectrum of this family with all the joys and all the tragedies. Power does strange things to people and this family was no different.What happened to that family can’t be change. It can’t be righted but we can be thankful it did not happen to us and we can stand as tall as them for all we did to make this a great country. Thank you Mystic for the bright side on collecting.

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