Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Jacqueline Kennedy’s bloody suit
MSNBC ^ | 22-November-2003 | Pedantic_Lady

Posted on 11/21/2003 4:54:38 PM PST by Pedantic_Lady

WASHINGTON — Not long after that terrible day in Dallas — no one knows exactly when — a brown paper box arrived at the National Archives. The return address was on O Street, the Georgetown home of Jacqueline Kennedy’s mother. Packed inside was the pink Chanel suit first glimpsed Nov. 22, 1963, when the first lady joined JFK at a Fort Worth breakfast, and which, covered in his blood, she still wore the next morning to escort the slain president’s casket into the White House.

THERE IN THE Archives, the suit remains. Stored in a custom-designed corrugated board box, it rests on a gray steel shelf in a secured area of a suburban warehouse. It has never been cleaned. The wool skirt and jacket lie flat, with a suggestion of human form created by acid-free tissue paper folded inside the sleeves.

Only recently was a deed of gift obtained from the Kennedys’ sole surviving child, Caroline. But one hundred years will have to pass before the suit can again come before the American public. This condition is consistent with Mrs. Kennedy’s determination to balance her obligations to history with her family’s privacy. Archivists’ interests, moreover, are not only the past and present, but the future.

“Once it can be displayed it will really bring the ’60s to the present — whatever that present is,” said Steven Tilley, who oversees the Archives’ JFK Assassination Records Collection.

The Archives also has JFK’s jacket, shirt and tie — exhibits in the Warren Commission investigation of the shooting. But aside from the Brooks Brothers overcoat Abraham Lincoln wore to Ford’s Theater on April 14, 1865 — the lining embroidered with an American eagle and the words “One Country/One Destiny” — perhaps no clothing in American history carries the iconic power of that pink suit.

Even out of sight, it is an indelible image in public memory. The first lady made sure of that. She purposefully bore the horror and brutality of the president’s murder for a shattered nation to see. Had she changed or shielded her appearance, Americans’ experience of the assassination would have been fundamentally altered.

“Everybody remembers the pink suit,” Tilley said. Mrs. Kennedy brought nothing new to Texas, her press secretary, Pamela Turnure, recalled in Carl Sferrazza Anthony’s book, “As We Remember Her.” She took two suits, a cocktail dress and a day dress already in her wardrobe. Her clothes stole the show on foreign trips; on a domestic political trip, Turnure said, she didn’t want to deflect attention from the president.

A VISION IN PINK

The morning of Nov. 22, a crowd gathered at the president’s Fort Worth hotel. “Where’s Jackie?” admirers shouted when JFK appeared. “Mrs. Kennedy is organizing herself,” the president replied. “It takes longer. But of course she looks better than we do after she does it.”

Two-thousand Texans roared their approval when a vision in pink — JFK had picked the suit — finally walked into the Chamber of Commerce breakfast. Then it was on to Dallas. At 12:30 p.m., shots were fired at the motorcade, which then sped to Parkland Hospital. The Secret Service hurried Lady Bird Johnson out of her limousine, but not before she glanced over her shoulder. She described the scene to the Warren Commission: “I ... saw, in the president’s car, a bundle of pink, just like a drift of blossoms, lying on the back seat. I think it was Mrs. Kennedy lying over the President’s body.”

In her autobiography, Lady Bird recalled the scene aboard Air Force One while accompanying the casket to Washington: “Mrs. Kennedy’s dress was stained with blood. One leg was almost entirely covered with it and her right glove was caked, it was caked with blood — her husband’s blood. Somehow that was one of the most poignant sights — that immaculate woman exquisitely dressed, and caked in blood.”

FIRST LADY UNWAVERING

Mrs. Kennedy repeatedly rebuffed suggestions, beginning in the chaos outside Parkland’s trauma room, that she change clothes. In “The Death of a President,” William Manchester chronicled how tensions on Air Force One grew with “the feeling that something must be done about her appearance.” Mrs. Johnson tried; so, later, did Mrs. Kennedy’s own mother, Janet Auchincloss.

But she didn’t waver. Ambassador John Kenneth Galbraith had admired the first lady’s “excellent sense of theater” during a triumphant 1962 visit to India. What the fashion industry dubbed “the Jackie look,” the first lady saw as her “state wardrobe.” Through elegantly simple lines and a dazzling rainbow of strong solid colors — ice blue, leaf green, lemon yellow — she conveyed the youth, grace and style of President Kennedy’s New Frontier. Pink ran throughout, from a shell pink sequined chiffon evening gown to what Galbraith called a “radioactive pink” rajah-style coat.

With the president dead, that sense of theater turned to a new and determined purpose. “Keeping that clothing on was completely consistent with her realization that clothing is a medium of expression, and she wanted to say something to the world,” said Wake Forest University art Professor David Lubin, author of “Shooting Kennedy: JFK and the Culture of Images.”

‘WHAT THEY HAVE DONE TO JACK’

Mrs. Johnson never forgot the essence of that message, or the fierceness in the 34-year-old widow’s voice as she refused all entreaties to change her clothes. “I want them to see what they have done to Jack,” she said.

In that suit she stood at Lyndon B. Johnson’s side as he took the oath of office on Air Force One, “a silhouette from another world,” as Manchester put it. At Andrews Air Force Base, a proposal was made to exit the plane on the starboard side to avoid news photographers. She rejected it. One of the last pictures of her in the suit is in the East Room. Her shoulders hang heavily. Smeared blood covers a leg, and her gaze is fixed on the casket being lowered onto the catafalque.

At every sight of her, the nation’s grief deepened. In the private quarters of the White House, sometime around dawn on Nov. 23, she finally shed her bloodied clothing.

It’s hard to imagine, with her acute appreciation of history, that Mrs. Kennedy made no provision for the pink suit. Her maid later told Manchester that, while Mrs. Kennedy bathed, she “packed the clothes and hid the bag.” But there is no known record in the Archives explaining who later sent the box or why. There is only the return address, and in it, one small clue: an old postal zone used before zip codes, which began that July. So archivists speculate that it came to them not long after Nov. 22, 1963.

(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.com ...


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: jfk; kennedyassassination
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-8081-88 last
To: Hillary's Lovely Legs

81 posted on 11/22/2003 10:39:00 AM PST by A.A. Cunningham
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: kylaka
I think we agree. Personally, I would like to see a Democratic Party that legitimately had the best interests of the US in mind. Unfortunately, if they were to change, it would take 50 years before anyone would believe them. After JFK, the "Great Society" was really the "Great Trashing" - plenty of money down the tube, followed by a "I'll grab mine while the grabbing is good and I don't care who I get in bed with to do it." They beat Michael Jackson to the punch!.
82 posted on 11/22/2003 2:05:13 PM PST by Henchman (I Hench, therefore I am!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 31 | View Replies]

To: strictlyaminorleaguer
Interesting to note that the FBI stepped in "We're in charge here" - and lost Kennedy's Brain! (Evidence)
83 posted on 11/22/2003 2:06:33 PM PST by Henchman (I Hench, therefore I am!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 45 | View Replies]

To: Pedantic_Lady
Went to the funeral. Remember the horse with no rider. Remember de Gaulle walking, towering over everyone else. People sitting on the curbs overcome with grief.
84 posted on 11/22/2003 3:23:06 PM PST by firebrand
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Conservababe
I remember watching that film shown over and over the same day Kennedy was killed.

They were showing film of the assassination the day he was killed? The Zapruder film?

85 posted on 11/22/2003 4:19:09 PM PST by #3Fan
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 58 | View Replies]

To: Pedantic_Lady
It is a rather horrifying thought. I played football in Central Park with John in the early 1990s. Knew this woman slightly for years. A friend of mine close to her drunkenly confessed this one night in 1993. I believe her, she had no reason to lie to me, and regretted betraying that confidence. Happened to be the last time I saw her. I sat there, feeling awfully weird.
86 posted on 11/22/2003 4:32:57 PM PST by lavrenti ("Tell your momma and your poppa, sometimes good guys don't wear white." The Standells)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 70 | View Replies]

To: #3Fan
They were showing film of the assassination the day he was killed? The Zapruder film?

Not the Zapruder film. But the television stations were covering the motorcade. The pictures were well, rather grainy looking, but it was played that day.

87 posted on 11/22/2003 8:38:42 PM PST by Conservababe
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 85 | View Replies]

To: Conservababe
Not the Zapruder film. But the television stations were covering the motorcade. The pictures were well, rather grainy looking, but it was played that day.

I wonder why we never see them, grainy or not.

88 posted on 11/23/2003 8:00:55 AM PST by #3Fan
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 87 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-8081-88 last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson