The Sad Marriage of Jackie Kennedy: From Royalty to Most Famous Widow ht

 

There is a photograph taken on November   22nd, 1963   that almost no one can look at for very   long.   It shows a woman in a pink wool suit   standing inside Air Force One, her   clothes still stained from the hours   before.   She is not crying.   She is not looking at the camera.   She is somewhere else entirely.   Somewhere none of the people around her   can follow.

 

  Behind every carefully composed image of   her life was a marriage that very few   people understood.   And that Jackie herself rarely spoke   about directly.   A marriage full of adoration and   betrayal. Of public glamour and private   grief.   This is that story.   And it is far more complicated than the   photographs suggest.

 

  The girl before the myth.   Jacqueline Lee Bouvier was born on July   28th, 1929 in Southampton, New York into   a world of old money, horse stables, and   careful appearances.   Her father, John “Black Jack” Bouvier,   was charming, handsome, and deeply   unreliable.   A man who drank too much and spent more   than he had and still somehow managed to   be the most magnetic person in any room.

 

  Her mother, Janet Norton Lee, was sharp,   ambitious, and deeply concerned with   status.   Between the two of them, Jackie learned   very early what the world expected from   a beautiful woman. And how much of   yourself you had to manage in order to   meet those expectations.   Her parents divorced when she was 11.

 

  A rupture that landed quietly in public,   but that Jackie would carry for the rest   of her life.   She adored her father despite   everything.   His unreliability, his drinking, the way   he let her down again and again.   She understood him in a way that others   didn’t or wouldn’t.   That capacity to love someone deeply   while simultaneously recognizing their   flaws would become one of the defining   features of her adult life.

 

  She was educated at Miss Porter’s School   in Connecticut, then at Vassar College,   then at the Sorbonne in Paris,   where she spent a year studying French   literature and history.   That year in Paris was formative in ways   that went beyond language. She fell in   love with European art and architecture.   With the idea that culture was something   worth protecting and celebrating.

 

  She came back to the United States with   a refined sensibility and a slightly   impatient relationship with American   superficiality.   A quality that would eventually make her   both celebrated and, in certain circles,   quietly resented.   After graduating from George Washington   University in 1951,   she took a job as the inquiring camera   girl at the Washington Times Herald.

 

  A position that required her to walk up   to strangers on the street and ask them   questions for a column she photographed   herself.   It was low-paying and not particularly   prestigious,   but it gave her something important.   Practice at approaching people, reading   them quickly, and finding the most   interesting angle in any situation.

 

  Those instincts would serve her well in   the years to come.   It was at a dinner party in Georgetown   in May 1951   that she first met John Fitzgerald   Kennedy.   He was a congressman from Massachusetts,   10 years older than her, already known   for his intelligence, his ambition, and   his restless eye.   By most accounts, the attraction was   immediate on both sides.

 

  But Kennedy was not, at that point in   his life, a man who moved quickly toward   commitment. He was a man who moved   quickly toward everything else.   What happened next would take two years.   A deliberate courtship and a marriage   proposal delivered by telegram.   And that was just the beginning of the   complications.

 A courtship built on   distance.   The two years between that Georgetown   dinner party and their engagement were   not, by any ordinary definition, a   courtship.   Kennedy was often traveling.   He was in the Senate by 1953,   which kept him busy in Washington. But   his social life moved at a speed that   left very little room for a single   relationship.

 

  Jackie knew his reputation.   Everyone in their circle knew it.   And yet, she stayed interested.   Curious about him in the way she had   been curious about difficult things her   whole life.   Their connection deepened through   letters more than through time spent   together.   Kennedy was not a particularly   demonstrative man in person.

 

  He was warm and funny and genuinely   engaged, but emotional intimacy was not   something he sought or offered easily.   In writing, he was different.   And Jackie, who had grown up reading   French literature, and who understood   the power of language better than almost   anyone around her, responded to that.   They wrote to each other across the   months of his travel.

 

 And in those   letters, something real formed, even if   it was not quite the thing either of   them would have named as romance in a   conventional sense.   By the spring of 1953,   Kennedy was being pushed by his father,   Joseph P. Kennedy Sr., to settle down.   Joseph Kennedy was a man who understood   optics with ruthless precision.

 

  His son was positioning himself for a   Senate seat and eventually for something   larger, and a suitable marriage was part   of the architecture of that ambition.   Jackie Bouvier, beautiful, educated,   photogenic, possessed of genuine   cultural sophistication, was, from   Joseph Kennedy’s perspective, an   excellent choice.

 

  Jackie was aware of this calculation.   She was not naive about the way the   Kennedy family operated or about the   role she was being invited to play.   She accepted the proposal anyway.   Whether that decision came from love,   from ambition of her own,   from the influence of her socially   conscious mother,   or from some combination of all three,   is something only she ever knew for   certain.

 

  What is clear is that she went into the   marriage with her eyes at least   partially open.   The wedding took place on September   12th, 1953   in Newport, Rhode Island at St. Mary’s   Church.   It was enormous.   Over 700 guests at the reception at   Hammersmith Farm, the Auchincloss   estate, where Jackie had grown up after   her mother’s remarriage.

 

  The press covered it extensively. The   photographs were beautiful.   Jackie wore a gown of ivory silk taffeta   designed by Ann Lowe, a black designer   whose contribution would go largely   unacknowledged in the coverage at the   time.   The day looked, from the outside, like   the beginning of a fairy tale.   From the inside, the complications were   already present.

 

  Kennedy’s health was a serious concern   from the very beginning of the marriage.   He suffered from Addison’s disease, a   disorder affecting the adrenal glands,   and from severe chronic back pain that   had plagued him since his naval service   during World War II.   He had undergone multiple back surgeries   and had come close to dying in 1954   during a particularly dangerous   procedure.

  Jackie sat with him through the   recovery, which lasted months.   She read to him, kept him company during   the long days of convalescence,   helped him work on the book he was   writing,   the one that would be published in 1956   as Profiles in Courage and would win the   Pulitzer Prize the following year.   The degree to which she contributed to   that book has been debated by historians   ever since.

 

  But there is substantial evidence that   her role was significant.   And then there was the other matter.   The one that everyone in their social   circle was aware of, but that was never   discussed in print until long after the   fact.   Kennedy’s fidelity, or rather the   absence of it, began causing pain very   early in the marriage.

 

  The details were not publicly known   during their lifetimes,   but Jackie was not insulated from the   reality.   She was living with it.   What she did with that knowledge, how   she processed it, and what she decided   it meant about her marriage and her   life,   is one of the more quietly devastating   threads in her story.

 

  She did not leave.   And what happened next, the   miscarriages, the Senate years, the long   stretches of loneliness,   would test her in ways that the wedding   photographs could not have predicted.   The losses nobody talked about.   In the years between the wedding in 1953   and the 1960 presidential campaign,   Jackie Kennedy experienced a series of   losses that were reported, when they   were reported at all, in the blandest   possible language.

 

  A miscarriage in 1955,   a stillborn daughter in August 1956,   while Kennedy was on a sailing trip in   the Mediterranean and could not be   reached, or chose not to interrupt the   trip to come home, depending on whose   account you trust.   Jackie named the baby Arabella.   She buried her without her husband   present.

 

  The stillbirth of Arabella is one of the   moments in Jackie’s story that tends to   stop people cold when they encounter it   for the first time.   The isolation of that experience, the   physical difficulty, the grief, the   absence of her husband,   is almost impossible to absorb.   And yet, it was largely passed over in   the public narrative of her life.

 

  The Kennedy machine was very good at   keeping certain things out of the light.   The press of the 1950s operated under a   different set of conventions than we   might expect today.   Personal suffering, particularly for   women in public life, was not considered   news.   It was considered private.   And so, it remained private, even as   Jackie lived with it in ways that left   real marks.

 

  Friends who knew her during this period   described a woman who could go very   quiet after a loss.   Not visibly broken, but somehow removed,   as if she had retreated somewhere   interior that she did not invite others   to follow.   She had a capacity for solitude that   some people mistook for coldness, and   that others recognized as a form of   self-protection built up over years of   practice.

 

  She had been protecting herself from the   time she was 11 years old, from the   fallout of her parents’ divorce,   from the emotional unreliability of her   father.   She knew how to absorb a blow without   letting it show.   Caroline was born in November 1957,   a healthy and much-celebrated arrival.   John Jr.

 

 followed in November 1960,   just weeks after his father was elected   president of the United States.   Another child, Patrick Bouvier Kennedy,   was born prematurely in August 1963,   and lived only 2 days.   That loss happened just a few months   before Dallas,   and it is one of the details that makes   the full weight of 1963 almost   impossible to hold in mind at once.

 

  Through all of this, Jackie maintained   the public composure that had become her   signature.   She gave very few interviews.   She did not discuss her private life.   She was photographed constantly, but   revealed remarkably little.   The image she projected, serene,   stylish, effortlessly graceful,   was real in the sense that those   qualities genuinely belonged to her.

 

  But, it was also a performance,   or at least a careful selection.   The interior life she protected behind   it was considerably more turbulent.   The Senate years, from 1953 to 1960,   were difficult for a different reason   than the losses.   Kennedy was good at his job, genuinely   engaged by policy and by the machinery   of American politics.

 

  But, he was an absent husband in the   most literal sense,   frequently traveling, frequently   occupied with the business of building   his national profile,   frequently in the company of people   Jackie had no interest in, and who had   no particular interest in her.   She spent long stretches of time alone   in Washington or at Glen Ora,   the Virginia estate they rented, riding   horses and reading and managing the   isolation as best she could.

 

 She made a   friend during this period who would   remain important to her for the rest of   her life.   The journalist and writer William   Walton, who shared her interest in art   and architecture,   and who never required anything from her   beyond good conversation.   These kinds of friendships, with people   who engaged her mind without demanding   anything from her public persona,   were the ones she valued most deeply and   protected most carefully.

 

  They were also, by necessity, the   smaller part of her social world.   Most of the people around her, most of   the time,   wanted something from the image.   The ones who wanted nothing from it were   rare,   and she recognized them quickly and held   on to them.   There was something else happening   during those Senate years that is worth   understanding,   because it shaped the texture of   Jackie’s daily life in ways that are   easy to underestimate.

 

  She was, by inclination and training,   an intellectual.   She read widely and seriously, history,   biography, poetry, French literature.   She spoke French and Spanish fluently.   She had opinions about architecture and   painting and landscape design that were   not decorative opinions, but informed   ones built from years of study and   genuine attention.

 

  And she was living inside a world, the   world of mid-century American political   society,   that had no particular use for those   qualities in a wife.   The role expected of a senator’s wife in   the 1950s   was largely ceremonial and supportive.   You appeared when required.   You were charming and pleasant, and did   not express views that might complicate   your husband’s position.

 

  You managed the household and the social   calendar, and deferred, publicly at   least, to the demands of the career.   Jackie did all of this,   and she did it with more grace than   most.   But, she was doing it at a cost that was   invisible to the people watching the   performance.   She was a woman of genuine intellectual   seriousness living inside a role that   had no place for intellectual   seriousness.

 

  The gap between what she was and what   the role required was something she   navigated every day, quietly and without   complaint,   for years.   By the time the 1960 campaign began in   earnest, Jackie was pregnant with John   Jr. and largely absent from the trail.   She wrote a campaign column that   appeared in newspapers,   a gentle and stylistically accomplished   piece of political communication that   received far less credit than it   deserved.

 

  Kennedy won the election by a margin so   narrow that the outcome was not clear   for hours.   And then,   almost immediately,   the world changed around both of them in   ways that made the difficulties of the   Senate years look, in retrospect,   relatively manageable.   The White House would bring Jackie the   greatest stage she ever occupied,   and the least privacy she had ever   known.

 

  What she built there, and what it cost   her, is a story the cameras only partly   captured, the White House years.   On January 20th, 1961,   John F. Kennedy was inaugurated as the   35th president of the United States.   Jackie stood beside him on the steps of   the Capitol in 20° weather, wearing a   coat and pillbox hat that would be   discussed and imitated for decades.

 

  She was 31 years old.   She was the second-youngest first lady   in American history.   And from the moment she entered the   White House,   she began doing something that no one   had quite asked her to do, but that she   pursued with the focused energy of   someone who had been waiting for exactly   this kind of project.

 

  The White House, when the Kennedys   arrived, was, by Jackie’s assessment,   embarrassingly under-furnished with   genuine American historical artifacts.   Many of the rooms contained   reproductions, pieces of uncertain   provenance, and furniture that had been   donated or purchased without much regard   for historical accuracy or aesthetic   coherence.

 

  She found this unacceptable.   Within weeks of moving in, she had   established the White House Fine Arts   Committee,   and begun the process of soliciting   donations of authentic period pieces   from collectors and museums across the   country.   She hired the historian and curator   Lorraine Waxman Pearce to catalog the   existing collection.

 

  She worked closely with the designer   Sister Parish, and later with Henry   Francis du Pont, the founder of   Winterthur Museum, to guide the   restoration’s direction.   The project consumed her.   She moved through the White House’s   storage rooms and cellars looking for   pieces that had been set aside or   forgotten,   finding original furniture from the   Monroe and Lincoln periods buried under   decades of institutional indifference.

 

  She tracked down pieces that had left   the White House over the years, and   persuaded their owners to donate or lend   them back.   She treated the building not as a   residence, but as a museum in the care   of a temporary steward,   a framing that was both genuinely felt   and enormously effective at generating   public and private support.

 

  She also pushed for legislation to   protect what she was building.   In 1961, at her encouragement, Congress   passed a law declaring White House   furnishings to be the permanent property   of the building,   meaning that future administrations   could not simply remove or replace   pieces at will.   It was a practical act with a long   reach, and it is still in effect today.

 

  The White House collection that visitors   encounter now exists in the form it does   largely because Jackie insisted that it   should be treated as belonging to the   country rather than to whoever happened   to be living there.   The television special she hosted in   February 1962,   a tour of the White House with Mrs.

 

 John   F. Kennedy, was watched by approximately   80 million people.   Jackie walked through the newly restored   rooms in a calm, unhurried way,   speaking about the history of each piece   with a quiet authority that made the   whole thing feel like being guided   through a private collection by someone   who genuinely loved it.

 

  The program won her an honorary Emmy   Award.   More importantly, it demonstrated to the   American public something they had   perhaps suspected, but not quite seen   confirmed.   This was not a decorative first lady.   This was a woman with a serious interior   life and something real to offer.   The state dinners she organized during   the Kennedy administration became   benchmarks for American cultural   diplomacy.

 

  She brought writers, artists, musicians,   and scientists to the White House in a   way that had not been done before,   treating the building as a place where   intellectual and artistic life could be   celebrated alongside political life.   The cellist Pablo Casals performed there   in November 1961,   his first performance in the United   States in decades, given in protest of   American support for the Franco regime   in Spain.

 

  The Nobel Prize winners dinner in April   1962   brought together 49 laureates, prompting   Kennedy to offer one of the most quoted   remarks of his presidency,   that it was the most extraordinary   collection of talent and human knowledge   ever gathered at the White House, with   the possible exception of when Thomas   Jefferson dined alone.

 

 Internationally,   she was remarkable.   The trip to France in June 1961 produced   the moment that crystallized her effect   on the world stage.   Kennedy, after a series of engagements   where the French public and press were   visibly more captivated by his wife than   by him, stood up at a press luncheon and   announced that he was the man who had   accompanied Jacqueline Kennedy to Paris   and that he had enjoyed it.

 

  The crowd loved it.   De Gaulle, who was not a man given   easily to admiration, was reportedly   enchanted by her.   She spoke French fluently, had studied   French history and art for years, and   engaged with French cultural figures in   a way that made the whole visit feel   like a genuine exchange rather than a   diplomatic performance.

 

  India and Pakistan followed in March   1962,   Greece, Venezuela, Colombia.   Everywhere the reception was the same.   Whatever Kennedy’s political standing in   a given country, Jackie produced   something beyond politics,   a personal warmth and a genuine cultural   curiosity that people responded to   directly.   She was not performing interest.

 

  She was actually interested.   That distinction, which audiences can   almost always feel, was the foundation   of her public effectiveness.   But the White House years were not the   uncomplicated triumph that the   photographs suggested.   Kennedy’s behavior did not change after   the inauguration.   If anything, the scale of what was   happening   and the risks it carried became larger.

 

  The details that emerged in later years   described a situation that was, by any   reasonable measure, deeply painful for   Jackie to navigate.   She maintained her composure publicly   with a discipline that was almost   architectural in its precision.   Privately, there were moments, recounted   by those close to her, when the   composure broke.

 

  When she said things that made clear she   understood exactly what was happening   and what it meant.   And then she would reassemble herself   and go back out into the world as the   woman the world was expecting to see.   She found ways to manage the pressure   that were entirely her own.   She rode horses whenever she could get   away from Washington,   at Glenora in Virginia, which remained a   retreat she used regularly even after   the move to the White House.

 

  She painted watercolors,   a private habit she almost never   discussed publicly.   She kept her reading life intact,   working through books in French and   English with the same seriousness she   had brought to her studies at the   Sorbonne.   These were not performances or public   gestures.   They were the things she did when no one   was watching,   and they were the things that kept her   coherent through years that would have   undone someone with less of a private   interior life to fall back on.

 

  In the summer of 1963,   Patrick was born and died within 2 days.   Kennedy, by the account of those   present, was devastated.   He and Jackie held the baby’s hand   together in the hospital.   It was one of the moments in which   people who knew them both said something   shifted,   that the loss brought them closer in a   way that the public events   of the previous years had not Texas in   November partly because of this,   a genuine effort to participate in   something that mattered to her husband’s   political future,   a sign that the distance of certain   difficult years was narrowing.   What happened in Dallas on November   22nd, 1963   is known to everyone.   What is less known is what Jackie chose   to do in the hours and days immediately   afterward,   and why those choices say as much about   her as anything that came before.

 

  Dallas and what came after.   The motorcade through Dealey Plaza on   November 22nd, 1963   was moving slowly through crowds that   were, by all accounts, warm and   enthusiastic.   It was a good day for Kennedy   politically.   The trip to Texas had been going better   than expected.   Jackie was sitting beside her husband,   leaning toward him to hear something he   said, when the first shot was fired.

 

  What happened in the next seconds and   what Jackie did in the immediate   aftermath has been documented in detail   by those present and by the film footage   that exists.   She did not leave the car.   She climbed out onto the back of the   limousine, an instinctive movement, its   precise purpose debated ever since,   and was pulled back in by a Secret   Service agent.

 

  She held her husband’s head in her lap   for the drive to Parkland Memorial   Hospital.   She was in the trauma room when doctors   worked on him.   She was present when the time of death   was called at 1:00 p.m.   She refused to change her clothes before   the swearing-in of Lyndon B. Johnson on   Air Force One that afternoon.

 

  When asked why, she said she wanted   people to see what they had done.   That single decision to remain in the   pink suit, visibly marked by what had   happened,   was both an act of witness and a piece   of communication so direct that it   required no words.   The photograph taken at that swearing-in   became one of the most analyzed images   of the 20th century.

 

  In the days that followed, Jackie   managed the state funeral with the same   focused attention she had brought to the   White House restoration.   She researched the Lincoln funeral of   1865,   determined that the ceremony should have   the weight and gravity that the moment   required.   She insisted on the riderless horse with   the reversed boots in the stirrups.

 

  She walked behind the coffin through the   streets of Washington, a decision that   Secret Service agents protested on   security grounds and that she overruled.   She lit the eternal flame at Arlington   Cemetery.   She received heads of state, prime   ministers, and royalty in the days after   the assassination,   conducting herself with a composure that   people who witnessed it described as   almost impossible to believe and that   she herself later said had felt entirely   surreal.

 

  Her children were 3 years old and not   quite 1.   She was 34.   The weeks after the funeral were, by her   own later account, the hardest.   The public performance was over and   there was nothing left to organize or   manage or plan.   She was living in the White House for a   short time before the transition to the   Johnson administration,   surrounded by the rooms she had spent 2   years restoring,   by the furniture she had tracked down   and the history she had curated, and her   husband was gone.

 

  She wrote letters, hundreds of them, to   people who had written to her,   personal letters, not form responses.   Each one addressed to the specific   person who had written.   It was an extraordinary act of   discipline and also perhaps of   necessity,   a way of processing grief by turning it   outward toward others.

 

  She moved out of the White House in   December 1963   and into a house in Georgetown,   then to New York City in 1964,   to an apartment at 1040 5th Avenue,   which would remain her home for the rest   of her life.   She began building something new,   not a public role exactly, but a private   life with enough structure and purpose   to hold.

 

  She was protective of her children with   an intensity that sometimes surprised   people who encountered it.   She controlled access to them carefully,   made decisions about their education and   their daily lives with attention to   detail,   and refused to allow them to become   extensions of the Kennedy myth in ways   she could not control.

 

  What she built in those years,   and the decision she made in 1968 that   surprised and for a time baffled a   country that thought it knew her,   is the final part of a story that never   quite ended the way anyone expected. The   pattern.   Across all of it and what was left.   In October 1968,   5 years after Dallas and 4 months after   the assassination of Robert F.

 

 Kennedy,   Jacqueline Kennedy married Aristotle   Onassis on the Greek island of Skorpios.   Onassis was 62 years old, a Greek   shipping magnate,   one of the wealthiest men in the world,   and in almost every visible way the   opposite of John Kennedy.   He was not handsome by conventional   standards.   He was not a political figure.

 

  He was not American.   He was blunt, powerful, and entirely   unconcerned with the image he projected   to the American public.   The reaction in the United States was   swift and largely unkind.   A German newspaper headline called it a   betrayal of the Kennedy legacy.   American editorial pages expressed   something between bewilderment and   disappointment.

 

  The woman who had been elevated to near   mythological status as the grieving   widow of a martyred president had   apparently decided to become someone   other than a monument.   Jackie had her reasons, and she stated   them rarely and quietly   to people she trusted.   She had watched Robert Kennedy be killed   in June 1968   in a hotel kitchen in Los Angeles, and   the shock of it had layered onto   everything that had come before.

 

  She was frightened.   She had two children she was responsible   for, and a level of public visibility   that made her feel exposed in ways she   had never entirely grown used to.   Onassis offered something specific.   Wealth on a scale that meant real   security,   a private world on a private island,   and a man who was entirely unconcerned   with what the American press thought of   him.

 

  That last quality, in the context of   everything she had been through,   may have been the most appealing of all.   The marriage to Onassis was not a happy   one in the way that happiness is   ordinarily understood.   They lived largely separate lives, she   in New York, he traveling between his   various properties and business   interests.

 

  He continued a long-running relationship   with the opera singer Maria Callas that   predated his marriage to Jackie, and did   not end with it.   Jackie spent money at a rate that even   Onassis found difficult to absorb.   Her spending became one of the ongoing   tensions of the marriage, documented in   the negotiations that eventually took   place after his death.

 

  The relationship between Jackie and   Christina Onassis, Aristotle’s daughter   from his first marriage,   was cold from the beginning and never   thawed.   Christina regarded her stepmother with a   suspicion that hardened over time into   outright hostility.   She was not subtle about it.   In the social world they both moved   through,   wealthy, European, accustomed to   conducting private warfare with perfect   surface manners,   the tension between them was known and   noted by everyone who encountered them   together.

 

  Jackie characteristically did not   discuss it publicly.   She absorbed it as she had absorbed   other difficulties in her life,   with a composure that gave nothing away   and cost more than it appeared to.   Onassis died in March 1975   after a prolonged illness.   The settlement Jackie received from his   estate was negotiated by her lawyer,   and the terms, when they became public,   were substantially less than what she   had originally been entitled to under   the marriage agreement.

 

  A reduction that resulted from the legal   maneuvering of Christina,   who used the period after her father’s   death to limit Jackie’s inheritance as   much as the law allowed.   Jackie accepted the settlement and did   not fight it further.   She was done with that world,   and she moved forward in the way she had   always moved forward,   by finding something worth doing and   turning her attention to it entirely.

 

  She was 45 years old, widowed for the   second time, and done, it seemed, with   marriages.   What she turned to instead was work.   In 1975,   she began as a consulting editor at   Viking Press, working with authors on   projects that interested her.   In 1978,   she moved to Doubleday,   where she would spend the rest of her   working life.

 

  She was a serious editor,   engaged, demanding in the best way,   genuinely invested in the projects she   took on.   She worked on books about archaeology,   about the performing arts, about history   and biography and design.   The authors she worked with consistently   described her as someone who understood   what a book was trying to do,   and who pushed them to do it better.

 

  The job was not a vanity project.   It was the thing she showed up for every   day, the structure around which the rest   of her life in New York was organized.   She was also, during these years, one of   the most effective private citizens in   the effort to preserve New York City’s   architectural heritage.   In 1975,   when Grand Central Terminal was   threatened with demolition,   its owners wanted to build a skyscraper   above it.

 

  Jackie became one of the most visible   faces of the campaign to save it.   She testified before a city commission.   She wrote letters.   She used her name and her access and her   genuine love of architecture to draw   attention to something she believed   mattered.   In 1978,   the Supreme Court ruled in favor of   preservation.

 

  Grand Central still stands, in part   because of that campaign and in part   because of her.   In the 1980s, she began a relationship   with the diamond merchant and financier   Maurice Tempelsman, who became her   companion for the last decade of her   life.   Tempelsman was quiet,   intellectually serious, devoted to her   in a way that people who knew them said   was entirely uncomplicated and entirely   genuine.

 

  He did not require anything from her   public persona.   He was simply there.   For someone who had spent so much of her   adult life surrounded by people who   wanted something from her image, that   quality was, by all accounts, deeply   restful.   She was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s   lymphoma in January 1994.   She handled the illness the way she had   handled most things,   without public drama,   without a prolonged negotiation with the   press about what would and would not be   disclosed.

 

  She worked for as long as she was able.   She spent time with her children and her   grandchildren.   She died on May 19th, 1994   at her apartment on Fifth Avenue   with her children and Tempelsman beside   her.   She was 64 years old.   She was buried at Arlington Cemetery   beside John Kennedy and beside the two   children who had not survived, Arabella,   the stillborn daughter from 1956,   and Patrick, the son who had lived two   days in August 1963.

 

  The grave was marked simply with her   name and dates next to the eternal flame   she had lit 30 years before.   What the full story of her life shows,   looked at from a distance,   is something that does not reduce easily   to a single conclusion.   She was a woman of extraordinary   capability who operated inside   structures that were not built for   someone like her.

 

  The marriage to Kennedy gave her a stage   she used brilliantly, and a private   situation that was, by any honest   accounting, deeply painful.   She endured it with a discipline that   was sometimes called coldness by people   who did not understand the difference   between composure and the absence of   feeling.

 

  She made choices to stay,   to rebuild,   to work,   to protect her children,   to eventually marry again.   That reflected a consistent underlying   logic.   She would not be only what other people   needed her to be.   She would also be herself.   The culture of her time did not always   know what to do with that insistence.

 

  It wanted the myth more than the woman.   Jackie, over the course of her life,   gave the myth what it required and   protected the woman as best she could.   That the woman was more interesting than   the myth is something that becomes   clearer the further we get from the   photographs.   If you enjoyed this video, please like   and subscribe to our channel so you   never miss out on more fascinating   stories.

 

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