Where is jacqueline kennedy pink suit
Jackie wore it several times before that tragic day in November, and President Kennedy thought she looked "smashing" in it. He reportedly asked her to wear the suit in Dallas. And after he was shot, she refused to take it off, not at the hospital and not on the flight back to Washington, even though it was caked with his blood. But even in her grief she knew it needed to be preserved.
At the White House the garments were put into a bag, presumably by her personal maid, Providencia Paredes. The only thing missing? By showing up in her bloody outfit, she reminded everyone there, and everyone who would later see photos from the ceremony, of the slain president.
Air Force One soon took off for Washington, D. Jackie went to sit near her husband's casket, still in her bloody outfit. I want them to see what they have done. Right-wing opponents abhorred the fact that Kennedy was Catholic, disliked his proposal for Medicare and hated his support for integration. Given this, much of the nation initially assumed that a far-right component must have been responsible for his assassination.
Jackie likely shared this belief, as she'd seen for herself how disliked her husband was by some. These political enemies may have been the intended recipients for Jackie's message of "I want them to see what they've done. It's — it had to be some silly little Communist. John F. Kennedy and wife Jackie greeting the crowd at Love Field upon arrival for campaign tour on the day of his assassination on November 22, Jackie's refusal to change her clothes wasn't solely about projecting an image.
After accompanying Kennedy's body to Maryland's Bethesda Naval Hospital for a required autopsy, she was no longer on public display. She also had time to change out of her blood-soaked outfit while waiting in the on-site presidential suite.
Yet she continued to refuse to do so. Instead, at Bethesda Jackie began to relive the trauma she'd experienced. She'd already told Robert Kennedy , who'd joined her after Air Force One landed, what had happened in Dallas in that limousine and afterward. Now she repeated the story, over and over, to the friends and family who'd gathered around her. She also recalled another recent loss: the death of her premature son, Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, less than four months earlier.
Cecil W. Stoughton Wikimedia Commons. Walt Cisco Wikimedia Commons. Stoughton Getty Images. Art Rickerby Getty Images. Related Stories. This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano. Advertisement - Continue Reading Below. So it was more than a little awkward when Parade Magazine called in with a question from a reader asking what became of the pink suit.
Kennedy had been dead for two years, her mother for seven. He called everyone he could find in a position to know. No one could recall the box arriving. The single-digit postal code on the address was the only clue that it had been mailed sometime before July , when the nation switched to five-digit ZIP Codes.
He suspects Mrs. The first lady herself exchanged letters with the head archivist in the weeks after the assassination, but there was never any mention of her suit. In the mids, the suit was moved to a new, second archives building here. In , a deed of gift was secured from Caroline Kennedy, by then the sole surviving heir. She stipulated the suit not be displayed for the life of the deed — years. When it runs out in , the right to display it can be renegotiated by the family, Tilley said.
And the hat? Agent Hill, 79, who famously lunged onto the back of the limousine that day to protect the first lady, had the answer. Gallagher, 83, and Paredes, the maid who boxed up the clothes, together have posted for Internet auction a long list of items that once belonged to Mrs. Kennedy was a closet smoker. No one at the National Archives has ever searched for the hat because it legally belongs to Caroline Kennedy.
0コメント