15 Weird Facts About JFK and Jackie’s Hidden Relationship Secrets HT

 

 

 

He did not speak to her for 5 months after they first slept together. She had already given up on him entirely before he changed his mind  and decided he wanted her after all. He told a mistress that their marriage was fine, not great, but okay. And then when asked if he had grown to love his wife,  he paused and said he did not know that he loved anything.

 She privately described her marriage as a deep black hole and said she knew that if she ever looked down into it,  she would fall. He told a close friend there were no other women and that he had never told any other woman he loved her. She told a family member that she loved Jack and she knew he loved her and that she had to ignore the rest of it.

She installed a spy inside his office so she would know about the suspicious phone calls before they reached her. And when Marilyn Monroe called Jackie at home and told her that JFK had promised to marry her, Jackie did not get angry. She told Monroe exactly what the job would look like and said she was welcome to it.

 Here are 15 weird facts about JFK and Jackie’s hidden relationship secrets. Fact one, JFK treated their first night together like a one night stand and vanished for 5 months. In July of 1952, Jacqueline Bouvier joined John Kennedy at the Kennedy family compound in Hyannisport  to celebrate the 4th of July weekend. She had been introduced to him at a Washington dinner party a few months earlier and the relationship had been progressing slowly.

 That weekend they slept together for the first time and then according to Jay Randy Tabarelli’s biography JFK public private secret he essentially disappeared. Tabarelli wrote that because Kennedy was so busy with his Senate campaign that autumn he would not see Jackie for 2 months. He felt a little bad about it especially after having had sex with her in Hyannisport.

But it had been the equivalent of a one night stand for him. Both of them were uninspired by each other at that point. When he was with Jackie, it was fine. When he was not, that was fine, too. By November of 1952, 5 months had passed and Jackie had not heard from him. She had pretty much given up.

 Terra Burelli wrote, “She was hurt.  It was as if he had gotten what he wanted from her and then ditched her.” Kennedy then won his Senate seat and had a change of heart. He suddenly wanted her at his side at major political events, and she was excited. Their engagement followed a few months later.

 The marriage that would be photographed and celebrated and mourned by an entire country had started with a one- night stand and 5 months of silence.  And it was Jackie who had been left wondering what had happened. Fact two, Jackie overheard the Kennedy men discussing her as a political asset, not a person. As Jackie Bouvier moved deeper into the Kennedy family orbit in the early months of 1953, she began to understand something about how the people around JFK viewed her. It was not flattering.

 According to biographer Carl Farata Anthony, drawing on research published in his book Camera Girl, Jackie  told Gore Vidal that she had once overheard Joe Kennedy, Bobby Kennedy, and others from the inner circle discussing her directly. She told Vidal that they spoke of her as if she were not a person, just  a thing, just a sort of asset like Rhode Island.

She had intuited from early in the courtship that Kennedy viewed marriage in political terms, having written in a letter to Father Leonard that she sensed he saw it as a tool for his larger public ambitions.  Over hearing it spoken about in those specific terms with her reduced to a geographic metaphor for a reliable electoral resource, confirmed what she had suspected and made it something she had to consciously choose to accept.

 She accepted it. She married him but the knowledge was always there and it shaped how she thought about what she was doing in the relationship. She was not simply a wife. She was a participant in a political enterprise and she had entered it with her eyes open enough to understand that her value to the Kennedy family was partly strategic.

 What she decided to do with that understanding, how she converted it into something she could live with, was one of the more significant and least documented emotional negotiations in the Kennedy marriage. Fact three, JFK fell in love with a Swedish woman the week before his wedding and tried to end the marriage before it began.

 In the summer of 1953, just weeks before his scheduled September wedding to Jackie, John Kennedy traveled to Europe with his friend and Harvard roommate Torbert Macdonald. During the trip, he met a young Swedish aristocrat named Gineia von Post at a party in the south of France. He was immediately taken with her.

  According to the book Gonia later wrote about their relationship titled Love Jack and according to the letters he wrote to her that were eventually sold at auction for over $88,000. Kennedy fell genuinely and seriously in love with her. The letters  described in detail by auction house records showed Kennedy expressing deep feeling for Gonia and writing that he was anxious to see her again, calling her wonderful.

 According to the account that emerged from her book and from the auction records, Kennedy called his father from Europe and said he wanted to break off the engagement to Jackie and be with Gonia instead. Joe Kennedy told him in no uncertain terms that such a scandal would destroy his political career.

 Efforts to end his marriage and bring Gonia to the United States were thwarted by his father, his political ambitions, and a mutual sensitivity to the miscarriage Jackie had suffered. Kennedy married Jackie on September 12th, 1953 as scheduled. He and Gonia continued to correspond. He visited her in Sweden in 1955. The visit described in auction records as a week in which they consummated the relationship.

 He wrote her a letter saying he was sad to learn she was not coming to the United States and was instead marrying a farmer. The marriage  to Jackie had been a political decision from the beginning entered at his father’s insistence over the objection of his own feelings for someone else. That was the foundation on which 10 years and four pregnancies and the White House  were built.

 Fact four. JFK described his own marriage as  fine, not great, but okay. in the mid 1950s. During the period when Kennedy was conducting an ongoing relationship with a flight attendant named Joan Lundberg, he had a candid morning conversation with her that was later documented in Terra Barelli’s biography JFK.

 Public, private, secret,  drawing on Lunberg’s unpublished memoir and personal diaries shared by her son. The conversation took place over breakfast and  it covered his fears, his insecurities, and his marriage. According to Lunberg’s account, Kennedy told her that he and Jackie were the product of an arranged marriage.

 And as such marriages go, he said it was fine. Not great, but okay.  He then acknowledged that his family had turned against him for not being present when Jackie lost their stillborn daughter. He said the Kennedys were not the best at expressing emotion. When Lunberg told him she would bet that was the great excuse of his life, he did not argue.

 When she then asked him directly whether he had grown to love his wife, there was a pause. He said he did not know that he loved anything. She told him that could not be true. After a moment, he added that he loved politics and that he did not know how to love anything else. The statement was recorded by Lundberg and documented by Terra Burelli.

 It was made while he was in the middle of an ongoing relationship outside his marriage, about a wife who had just lost a child, partly alone because he was not there, by a man who would one day be buried next to that same wife  and next to the children they had both grieved. The honesty of it, as much as anything else about the Kennedy marriage, is what makes it hard to look away from. Fact.

Five. Jackie said her marriage was like a deep black hole. She could never look down into years after the assassination. Jaclyn Kennedy told a family member something about her marriage that  has since been quoted in multiple biographical accounts as one of the most honest things she ever said about it.

 She said she was doing her best with the card she had been dealt. She said she loved Jack and she knew he loved her. She said she had to ignore the rest of it. And then she said that her marriage was like a deep black hole and that she knew if she ever looked down into it, she would fall. The statement documented in Terra Bareelli’s research drawn from family sources was the private language of a woman who had made a choice about how to survive something.

 She was not pretending the darkness was not there.  She was describing with precision the discipline required to live alongside it without being consumed by it. looking down into the hole was not an option she allowed herself. Not because she was naive, not because she was in denial, but because she understood at  a very practical level that the alternative to not looking was falling.

 And falling was not something she was willing to do. The metaphor was consistent with how she managed everything difficult in her life with controlled awareness and a deliberate choice about how much to engage with what she could see. She knew about the affairs. She knew about the money. She knew about the arrangements her father-in-law had made around her continued presence in the marriage.

 She had installed a spy in JFK’s office precisely because she wanted to know what was happening without being surprised by it. She knew everything  and looked at none of it directly and the marriage continued for 10 years. And she called those years the best of her life  and both of those things were simultaneously true.

Fact six, she installed a spy in JFK’s office to monitor his calls. According to Jay, Randy Terabarelli’s biography, Jackie, public, private,  secret, Jacqueline Kennedy arranged for a woman she trusted to be placed in a position inside the office of JFK’s personal secretary, Evelyn Lincoln.

 The woman’s job was to keep Jackie informed of suspicious calls. The kind of calls that might indicate which women were trying to reach the president and when. Jackie had identified a specific gap in her information about what was happening in her husband’s professional and personal life and she had found a practical solution for it.

 The arrangement was described by Tara Belli as something Jackie put in place while she was still able to do so.  A phrase that suggested she understood it as a form of self-p protection rather than simply surveillance. She was not trying to catch JFK in order to  confront him. She had already made clear through her behavior that direct confrontation was not her preferred mode.

 She was trying to know what was happening so that she was never the last to find out, never caught off guard, never made to look as though she did not know what was going on in her own household. The spy  arrangement sat alongside the other strategies she had deployed to manage her position in the marriage.

 the financial negotiations with Joe Kennedy, the separate bedroom that was nonetheless configured to accommodate JFK when he chose to come over, the practice of speaking about his affairs in French to reduce the audience for her cander, and the three-page love letter she wrote him that told him precisely what she valued.

 She used every tool available to her simultaneously, and she used them with the consistency and the precision that characterized everything else she did. Fact seven. JFK told a close friend there were no other women and he had never told anyone else he loved her. In early 1962, John Kennedy had a candid conversation with his close friend and fellow Senator George Smathers that was later documented in Terabelli’s research.

 Smathers  asked Kennedy directly, “Do you worry Jackie will find out about the other women?” Kennedy became instantly frustrated.  He said there were no other women. He said he had never told any other woman he loved her. “There is only Jackie,” he said. He then added that besides, they could all be blown up in an atomic war tomorrow.

 The statement was made in early 1962. At that time, Kennedy was maintaining an ongoing relationship with White House intern Mimi Alfred, who had been in his life since June of  the previous year. The two secretaries, known to the Secret Service as Fiddle and Fat,  were regular companions on presidential travel.

 Judith Campbell Exner had been seeing him since 1960. The Cuban Missile Crisis, during which Smathers’s atomic war comment would acquire an uncomfortable literalism, was  still months away. Kennedy’s insistence to Smathers that there were no other women, and that Jackie was the only one he loved was either a lie told to a friend he trusted, a genuine expression of how he categorized his feelings for his wife compared to his feelings for anyone else, or some combination of both.

 Mimi Alfred later confirmed in her memoir that Kennedy was never looking for a relationship to replace his marriage. Whatever his behavior and however many women were a part of his life during those years, the marriage was not something he was trying to escape from. He was trying in his own deeply flawed and specific way to maintain it. Fact eight.

 Jackie’s response to Marilyn Monroe calling to say JFK would marry her was ice cold and perfect. The exact circumstances of the phone call between Jaclyn Kennedy and Marilyn Monroe have been recounted in slightly different forms across different biographies, but the core of the story is consistent across multiple sources, including Christopher Anderson’s biography, Jack  and Jackie, Portrait of an American Marriage.

 Monroe called Jackie and told her directly that John Kennedy had promised to marry her. Jackie’s response was one of the more celebrated examples of her capacity for devastating composure. She told Monroe, “Marilyn, you’ll marry Jack.” That’s great.  And you’ll move into the White House and you’ll assume the responsibilities of first lady and I’ll move out and you’ll have all the problems.

 The delivery was entirely calm. It contained no hysteria, no threat,  no emotional display of any kind. It was the response of a woman who had considered every dimension of the situation and  had identified with complete accuracy exactly what the alternative to her position actually involved. Monroe was not offered a fight.

  She was offered a job description. Jackie had laid out the full weight of what being married to John Kennedy actually meant in practical terms. The scrutiny, the obligation, the public performance, the management, the press, the foreign dignitaries, the state dinners, the constant exposure, the loss of privacy. All of it in two sentences  offered to Monroe as a package deal along with the man she claimed to want.

Monroe did not pursue the conversation further. Jackie had won without raising her voice, which was for anyone who paid attention to how she operated, not a surprise at all. Fact nine. Jackie’s father had modeled the exact behavior she would later experience in her marriage biographer Pamela Kio, author of Jackie Style, documented something that Jackie herself acknowledged openly.

Her father, John Vernvier III, known as Blackjack, had modeled the precise template for the marriage she eventually entered. He was a Wall Street stockbroker, a notorious philanderer,  and a charming, charismatic man whose infidelities had destroyed his marriage to Jackie’s mother. Jackie grew up watching her father and knew his  patterns intimately.

 She told people close to her that JFK and her father shared the same fundamental quality. Both loved  the chase and were bored with the conquest. After both men got married, she said they needed proof that they were still attractive  and so they flirted with other women and resented their wives for existing in a context where the chase was no longer available.

 The observation was neither excusing nor condemning. It was analytical. She had identified the mechanism, traced its origins to her own childhood, and understood exactly what she had agreed to when she married the man who embodied it. Kio and Cornelia Guest, a daughter of one of Jackie’s close friends, both described the social world Jackie came from as one in which the expectation of male infidelity was simply built into the structure of certain marriages.

 And women in those circles were pragmatic about it rather than shocked. Guest said their response was more like, “This is what is going on. Let’s go out and get the kids  and get on a horse.” Jackie had been raised in that world, had seen it in her own home, and had entered her marriage, understanding its terms.

 What she had not fully anticipated, or perhaps had anticipated and had decided to absorb anyway,  was how much it would cost her. Fact 10. JFK privately admitted the marriage was arranged and that his family treated Jackie like an  asset. The conversation Kennedy had with Joan Lundberg in the mid 1950s documented in Terberelli’s research from her unpublished memoir included  his description of the marriage as an arranged one.

 He used that word arranged. It was he suggested fine as such marriages went, but it was not something that had grown from a place of genuine romantic origin on his part. His father had identified Jackie as the right political partner for a presidential candidate  and had made the case for the marriage in terms of her social credentials, her cultural sophistication,  and her suitability as a national figure.

 Jackie had overheard the Kennedy men discussing her in exactly those terms  as an asset like Rhode Island. She had known from the early months of the courtship that her value to the family was partly strategic. JFK’s admission to Lundberg that the marriage was arranged confirmed what Jackie had understood and had chosen to accept as the framework within which she was operating.

 She had not been deceived about the nature of the arrangement. She had made a calculation and entered it anyway because the calculation included things she genuinely valued. The intellectual partnership, the political access, the financial stability, and the chance to employ her considerable talents on a stage large enough to contain them.

 The painful part was not the arrangement itself, but the specific texture of what came with it. She had expected a husband who had affairs. She had not fully anticipated the particular quality of the neglect, the night of their stillborn daughter spent alone while he was in the Mediterranean, the management of her own grief without  him present, the long periods of emotional distance that punctuated the marriage across its 10 years.

 Those were the parts she had to ignore in order not to fall into the black hole. and she ignored them every day  for the entire 10 years. Fact 11. Jackie described herself as doing her best with the cards she had been dealt. The phrase appeared in a conversation Jackie had with a family member documented by Terra Burelli, and it was the most concise summary she ever gave of her own position in the marriage.

 She said she was doing her best with the card she had been dealt. She said she loved Jack and she knew he loved her. She said she had to ignore the rest of it. The three sentences together constituted a complete and honest  account of how she had decided to navigate something that could not be changed and could only be managed.

 The phrase was also in its quiet way a refusal of victimhood. She was not describing herself as someone to whom things were happening. She was describing herself as a player making choices with the hand available to her. The cards were imperfect. She was doing her best. The framing was active and forward-looking rather than passive and grieving, and it was entirely consistent with the woman who had installed a spy in her husband’s office, negotiated with her father-in-law about the financial terms of her continued presence,  and

responded to Marilyn Monroe’s phone call with two sentences that won the argument without raising her voice. It was also, when placed alongside everything else she said and did, one of the saddest things she ever committed to words. She loved him. She knew he loved her in the particular way he was capable of loving.

She had to ignore the rest of it in order to function. And she had been doing that every day inside a marriage that the rest of the world was watching as the most glamorous love story in American politics since the day she walked out of the hospital after losing a stillborn daughter with her husband somewhere in the Mediterranean.

 Not yet ready to come home. Fact 12. JFK told a friend the marriage would survive because it  was kinetic between them. Among the more striking things said about the Kennedy marriage by people who knew both of them was a comment attributed to a family friend in an account reported by People magazine and subsequently quoted in multiple biographical summaries.

 The family friend described the relationship in terms that cut through a great deal of the mythological and tabloid frameworks that have been applied to it over the decades.  He said at the end of the day Jack came back to Jackie and that was it. They loved each other. It was kinetic  between them. She was not trying to change him.

 The word kinetic was precise and revealing. It was not romantic in the conventional sense. It did not imply tenderness or constancy or the kind of love that sustains itself through shared daily life. It implied energy, force, a charge  between two people that pulled them back together regardless of what had separated them. Kennedy had affairs.

Kennedy was away during the still birth of their first child. Kennedy met someone else the  week before their wedding and tried to call it off. Kennedy admitted to a mistress that he did not know how to love anything and he always came back to Jackie. What kept drawing him back was not simple or easily  named.

 She was, by the account of everyone who knew her, genuinely extraordinary, intellectually formidable, aesthetically remarkable, emotionally controlled in ways that made her both fascinating  and somewhat impenetrable, and possessed of a specific quality that she and her father shared, and that attracted  people regardless of whether those people were good for her.

 JFK had always been drawn to that quality in her. And she, who had grown up with a father who embodied it and who had married a man who shared it, had always understood that the kinetic charge was real, even when everything else around it was difficult. Fact 13. Jackie once mused that the loss of baby Patrick meant she was finally getting through to him.

 After the death of their premature son, Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, in August of 1963,  those who observed the Kennedys in the weeks that followed noticed a visible change in how they were with each other in public. They held hands. They touched. They leaned toward each other in photographs in a way that had not been characteristic of their earlier public appearances.

 The Atlantic described their time together as unsullied by domestic drudgery and enriched by their shared love of reading and gossip. And the grief of Patrick’s death appeared to have broken through something that years of marriage had not. Jackie’s response to the change was documented  in a phrase she used that has been quoted in multiple biograph sources, including the National Archives Foundation’s overview of her life.

 She mused with a quiet and almost disbelieving hope that maybe now she was getting through to him. The phrase was not triumphant.  It was tentative, even surprised. After 10 years of marriage, after the still birth and the affairs and the long periods of emotional distance and the black hole she could not look into,  the death of their son had produced something she had apparently not been entirely sure was possible.

 A visible public tenderness from a man who by his own admission to at least one other woman did not know how to love anything. She did not know when she  said it that there were less than 4 months left. The trip to Texas was already being planned. The motorcade route through Dallas was already being arranged.

 The closeness she was feeling in those September and October weeks of 1963. The sense of possibly getting through to him, the marriage becoming something more open and more mutual than it had been before  would last exactly until November 22nd. And then it would become the foundation of the myth she built the following week in a servants room at Hyana Sport with Theodore White and a tape recorder and the closing lines of a Broadway musical about a kingdom that did not last long enough. Fact 14.

 Jackie told a family member she could not have survived without her children after JFK’s death. The depth of Jackie Kennedy’s grief in the months after the assassination was something she discussed with very few people and it very few contexts. But one statement she made to a family  member was documented in Terabarelli’s research and has been repeated in multiple accounts of that period.

 She said that if not for her children, she would have killed herself. She was so miserable. The account noted that the only thing preventing the worst possible outcome was her commitment to Caroline and John Jr. The statement was consistent with what her sister Lee Radza will observe during those months. the late night phone calls, the conversations about wanting to take pills and vodka and not wake up, the removal of anything that could be used for that purpose from Jackie’s apartment after at least one alarming call. Lee

had rushed to be with her on multiple occasions. The grief was not performative or managed for an audience. It was total  and it was dark and it very nearly consumed her that she survived it, went into therapy, built a new life in New York, raised  two children who became genuinely remarkable adults, went on to have a second marriage and a decadesl long relationship with Maurice Templesman, built a career as a book editor and died surrounded by the people she loved in May of 1994 is the part of the story

that the Camelot mythology does not have a framework for. The myth ends in Dallas. The life  kept going through the darkness and out the other side of it because of two children who needed their mother to stay. Fact 15. Their stepbrother said there was a lot of laughter and  they genuinely had fun together within all the darkness of the Kennedy marriage.

  Within the arranged beginning and the financial negotiations and the black hole and the affairs and the grief  and the spy in the office and the Marilyn Monroe phone call, there was something else that deserves to be recorded clearly. Hugh Aenclaus, Jackie’s stepbrother from her mother’s second marriage, gave an account of what the marriage was like from the inside that sits alongside all of the other evidence and refuses to be dismissed.

 He said that they had a very close, very romantic relationship. He said that technically they had separate bedrooms, but they slept together. And then he said something that does not appear in most of the biographical summaries of the Kennedy marriage. There was a lot of laughter. They enjoyed each other. They had fun. The Atlantic’s  Caitlyn Flanigan, summarizing the marriage in a 2013 piece, wrote that their time together was unsullied by domestic drudgery, enriched by their shared love of reading and gossip, made meaningful by the joy of raising two

children, and the sorrow of losing two others. The laughter was real. The fun was real. The intellectual connection over Lord Byron and Vietnam  and books propped on bureaus and the shared humor that produced a joke about Jackie being slow to get ready on the last morning of his life was real.

 So was the black hole. So was the deep specific sustained pain of being the woman who loved that man inside that marriage under those conditions for 10 years. All of it was true at once. And none of it cancels any of the rest. That is in the end what made it a marriage rather than a myth and what has kept people trying to understand it for more than 60 years.

He vanished for 5 months after their first night together. She overheard his family describe her as an asset like Rhode Island. He tried to call off the wedding the week before it happened for someone else entirely. He told a mistress he did not know how to love anything. She described the marriage as a black hole she could never look  down into.

 And yet there was laughter, there was fun, there was a real and specific intellectual connection that biographers spent decades  trying to describe accurately. There was the morning in Fort Worth, the joke about being slow to get ready, and the way he looked at her when she walked out. And there were four months of finally getting through to him that ended  before they had a chance to become anything else.

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