Kennedy Wives: Triumph and Tragedy in America's Most Public Family (38 page)

BOOK: Kennedy Wives: Triumph and Tragedy in America's Most Public Family
6.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

217.
“I definitely wanted to see”:
Kennedy,
True Compass
, p. 117.

2. Marrying the Kennedys

218.
While she’d had many:
Chellis,
Living with the Kennedys
, p. 25.

218.
“I just took no interest . . . never even heard of the Kennedys”:
David, Joan,
The Reluctant Kennedy
, p. 50.

218.
“I had to be chaperoned . . . if you were a Manhattanville girl”:
Klein,
Ted Kennedy
, p. 35.

218.
He had a well-known:
Leamer,
Kennedy Men
, ch. 18.

219.
“She asked me about Bronxville . . . mostly our piano”:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 471.

219.
Rose, still protective of her youngest child, called Manhattanville:
Clymer,
Edward M. Kennedy: A Biography
, p. 23.

219.
They decided to turn it:
Clymer, papers.

219.
“I was keen to join my brothers . . . to be a family man”:
Kennedy,
True Compass
, p. 183.

220.
“Apparently, he had brought other girls home”:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 471.

220.

It was too good to be true”:
ibid.

220.
“What do you think . . . What do we do next?”:
Leamer,
Kennedy Men
, ch. 18.

220.
“Do you love my son? . . . make you feel at ease”:
ibid., ch. 18.

220.
“She came home and told me . . . manner to which she was accustomed”:
Sadler, Christine,
McCall’s
, “Coming of Age of Joan Kennedy,” February 1965.

221.
“I had no idea what I was getting into”:
Chellis,
Living with the Kennedys
, pp.26–27.

221.
“That was my introduction”:
Kennedy,
Joy of Classical Music
, ch. 3.

221.
The only other time the:
Leamer,
Kennedy Men
, ch. 18.

221.
Ted finally brought Joan:
Clymer,
Edward M. Kennedy: A Biography
, p. 23.

221.
He didn’t make time to:
Leamer,
Kennedy Men
, ch. 18.

221.
“My parents thought”:
Clymer papers.

222.
“a place of Champagne bubbles”:
“Chateau in the Sky,”
New York Times
, December 3, 2006. www.nytimes.com/2006/12/03/nyregion/thecity/03pier.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0.

222.
PLEASE HAVE THE PIANO:
Joseph P. Kennedy Personal Papers, JFK Library.

222.
Joan had wanted to be married:
Chellis,
Living with the Kennedys
, p. 27.

223.
“wanted to invite every political”:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 477.

223.
Before the ceremony, Jack and Ted seemed:
Clymer,
Edward M. Kennedy: A Biography
, p. 24.

223.
Ted’s law-school schedule:
Kennedy,
True Compass
, p. 126.

223.
“The truth is that Joan and I . . . definitely not standout cuisine”:
ibid., p. 126.

223.
“We were dumped there . . . it was a nightmare”:
Leamer,
Kennedy Men
, ch. 18.

223.
“I had to clean house”:
ibid., ch. 18.

224.
“She grew adept in an . . . inns that had no heat”:
Kennedy,
True Compass
, p. 127.

224.
“every state was critical”:
ibid., p. 127.

224.
“Politics took over our lives almost”:
Chellis,
Living with the Kennedys
, p. 27.

3. Campaigning with the Kennedys

225.
Joan gave birth to the couple’s first child:
Associated Press, October 22, 1962.

225.
“I have never seen Ted . . . two new words—my daughter”:
Leamer,
Kennedy Men
, ch. 19.

225.
“He wants nine . . . I wouldn’t have him”:
David,
Joan, The Reluctant Kennedy
, p. 88.

225.
Joan later described it as a whirl:
Kennedy,
Joy of Classical Music
, ch. 3.

225.
“I felt rather like a tourist”:
ibid.

226.
“I never felt any anger of being . . . lot to talk about”:
Peters, William, “Teddy Kennedy,”
Redbook
, June 1962.

226.
“I felt accepted as a little . . . greatest signs of friendliness there is”:
ibid.

226.
When Joan went to Washington:
Bradford,
America’s Queen
, pp. 126–28.

226.
“We’d chat, talk about campaigning”:
ibid, p.128.

227.
“I remember [Jackie] saying to me, ‘Stay very close to . . . she’s his sister.’ ”:
ibid., p. 128.

227.
“That night Frank is having a dinner party . . . so pissed off”:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 507.

227.
“She acted like Rose”:
Chellis,
Living with the Kennedys
, p. 33.

228.
“If Jack could win there”:
Kennedy,
Joy of Classical Music
, ch. 3.

228.

look nice and be friendly”:
ibid.

228.
“got whistled at by the miners”:
ibid.

228.
“It turned into a bit of a joke”:
ibid.

228.
Despite the Kennedys’ displeasure:
Cannelos,
Last Lion
, p. 79.

229.
“I don’t know if I’ll know”:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 506.

229.
Soon after, Ted and Joan joined:
Kennedy,
True Compass
, p. 158.

229.
Jack had been allowed to:
ibid., p. 159.

4. Catching Up

230.
But with the Massachusetts Senate:
Clymer papers.

231.

You can have a serious”:
Kennedy,
True Compass
, p. 162.

231.
“I’d worshipped my father . . . to catch up”:
ibid.

231.

Ted was the obvious choice”:
Kennedy,
Joy of Classical Music
, ch.3.

231.
“passionately . . . interested in arms control.”:
Kennedy, Edward,
True Compass,
p. 163.

231–32
.
“Yes. Go [to Africa] and see what’s . . . independence from Belgium”:
ibid.

232.
If Ted left that night, he could catch:
ibid., p. 163–64.

232.
It was a gorgeous brick building, built:
ibid.

232.
“Remember your own”:
ibid., p. 435.

232.
“This time, we were on our . . . grassroots round ourselves”:
Kennedy,
Joy of Classical Music
, ch. 3.

232.
“We went to every little town”:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 559.

232.
“If Ted was in Boston, then I tried to”:
Liston, Carol, “Joan Kennedy Too Busy to Be Shy,”
Boston Globe
, December 23, 1965.

232–33
.
“everyone is curious about what the . . . you got a crowd”:
Clymer papers.

233.
“It was just a bunch of . . . us against the world”:
ibid.

233.
“I’d get the hostess to tell me what”:
Kennedy,
Joy of Classical Music
, ch. 4.

233.
“I say we need a senator with a conscience”:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=G6H0LTyaC94.

233.
“Yes, I minded . . . but I”:
Finney, Ruth,
New York Word Telegram and Sun
, November 26, 1962.

234.
The article focused on the many:
Henshaw, Tom, Associated Press, October 22, 1962.

234.
“All the way to Brookline . . . afraid I’d mispronounce it”:
ibid.

234.
“My role, as I see it . . . about politics too”:
Peters, William, “Teddy Kennedy,”
Redbook
, June 1962.

235.
“Really, I’m quite fortunate”:
Henshaw, Tom, Associated Press, October 22, 1962.

5. The Supportive Wife

236.
“My father’s illness hit . . . almost more than I could bear”:
Kennedy,
True Compass
, p. 178.

236.
“In Boston, Mrs. Kennedy isn’t . . . elegant as the First Lady”:
Chapman, Priscilla, “At Home with Mrs. Kennedy,” 1963.

237.
“an immense mail for a freshman”:
Falacci, Frank, “The Senator’s Image Emerges,”
Boston Globe
, September 15, 1963.

237.
“He is diligently working”:
ibid.

237.
“She’s going to be the youngest Senate wife”:
Finney, Ruth,
New York World-Telegram and Sun
, November 26, 1962.

238.
The final paragraph referenced:
“Joan Kennedy Loses Baby,”
Boston Globe
, May 17, 1963.

238.
The baby’s remains were flown:
“Joan Kennedy Loses Baby by Miscarriage,”
Boston Globe
, June 2, 1964.

238.
“We’ve been married four years”:
David,
Joan, The Reluctant Kennedy
, p. 88.

238.
“It was discouraging and depressing for . . . whatever of physical health”:
ibid., p. 104.

238.
The island took its name from a squaw:
“Kennedy in Court Fight Opposing Squaw Island Subdivision,”
Boston Globe
, January 26, 1973.

238–39
.
“Teddy’s away so much . . .” So she got to work . . . antiques that Joan adored:
Hoffman, Betty Hannah, “What It’s Like to Marry a Kennedy,”
Ladies Home Journal
, October 1962.

239.
“Jackie would say”:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 539.

239.
“In the summers, everybody else in”:
Bradford,
America’s Queen
, pp. 126–28.

239.
“She was very, very good . . . almost nobody knew about it”:
Leamer,
Kennedy Women
, p. 539.

239.
She was there when Jack:
Chellis,
Living with the Kennedys
, p. 34.

240.
“My first overwhelming sense . . . the president was dead”:
Kennedy,
True Compass
, p. 208.

240.
“She adored Jack”:
ibid., p. 209.

240.
She begged Candy to stay:
Manchester,
Death of a President
, ch. 6.

240.
“People kept drifting in all evening . . . shut myself upstairs in my room and cry”:
Hoffman, Betty Hannah, “Joan Kennedy’s Story,”
Ladies Home Journal
, July 1970.

240.
“Joan found the mere contemplation”:
Manchester,
Death of a President
, ch. 8.

241.
“In the end, the best way to honor”:
Kennedy, Edward,
True Compass
, p. 214.

241.
“as a knife, slicing open . . . my friend Ed Moss”:
ibid., p. 216.

241.
“I tried to get some response . . . he grabbed it”:
“Ted Half-Sitting, Half-Standing in Plane, Bayh Says,”
Boston Globe
, June 21, 1964.

241.
Ted was badly hurt:
Kennedy,
True Compass
, p. 220.

241–42
.
The Bayhs courageously helped:
“Ted Half-Sitting, Half-Standing in Plane, Bayh Says,”
Boston Globe
,

242.
“Nine cars passed them . . . Birch had pulled me from the plane”:
Kennedy,
True Compass
, p. 221.

242.
She was sped to Cooley:
Linscott, Seymour, “Kennedy’s Plane Crashes; Senator’s Condition ‘Fair,’ ”
Boston Globe
, June 20, 1964.

242.
“He’s going to”:
Taraborrelli,
Jackie, Ethel, Joan
, p. 284.

242.
“Hi, Joansie. Don’t”:
Kennedy,
True Compass
, p. 221.

242.
“Kennedy’s injuries were not”:
Linscott,“Kennedy’s Plane Crashes; Senator’s Condition ‘Fair.’ ”

242.
“My life hung in the balance”:
Kennedy,
True Compass
, p. 221.

242–43
.
“Whipping his head . . . vertebrae to heal naturally”:
ibid., p. 222.

6. The Prettiest Stand-In

244.
“A man never had”:
“Joan Launches Ted’s Campaign,”
Boston Globe
, September 15, 1964.

244.
“I am no doctor”:
ibid.

244.
“I’d hit a VFW . . . best to give it some spin”:
Kennedy,
The Joy of Classical Music
, ch. 3.

244.
Bobby, the attorney general, had given up his seat:
Negri, Gloria, “Delegate Joan Lovely, Lonely,”
Boston Globe
, August 26, 1964.

Other books

Lady Eve's Indiscretion by Grace Burrowes
Compartment No 6 by Rosa Liksom
The Executive Consultant by Mali Longwell
Chrono Virus by Aaron Crocco
Crashed by Timothy Hallinan
Las benévolas by Jonathan Littell
Texan's Baby by Barb Han
Barefoot Girls by McTiernan, Tara