Difference between revisions of "Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis"

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'''Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis''' called her daughter Caroline's husband an 'egghead' and said he was a 'boring old fogey' behind his back, according to reports. The former First Lady's name calling was a result of her mistrust of [[Ed Schlossberg]], who is 12 years older than Caroline. Her open contempt for Mr Schlossberg ended when Caroline threatened to cut Jackie off from her grandchildren.<ref>[http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2162389/Jackie-Kennedy-called-daughter-Carolines-husband-boring-old-fogey-egghead.html "Jackie Kennedy called daughter Caroline's husband a 'boring old fogey and an egghead'"]</ref>
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'''Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis''', widow of [[John F. Kennedy]], called her daughter Caroline's husband an 'egghead' and said he was a 'boring old fogey' behind his back, according to reports. The former First Lady's name calling was a result of her mistrust of [[Ed Schlossberg]], who is 12 years older than Caroline. Her open contempt for Mr Schlossberg ended when Caroline threatened to cut Jackie off from her grandchildren.<ref>''[http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2162389/Jackie-Kennedy-called-daughter-Carolines-husband-boring-old-fogey-egghead.html "Jackie Kennedy called daughter Caroline's husband a 'boring old fogey and an egghead'"]''</ref>
  
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[[Maurice Tempelsman]] had known her for more than 30 years and had been her constant companion for more than a decade, sharing everything: the daily victories, big and small, the adventures and frustrations of her complex life, and then her final months of suffering. He walked with her in the park in her last days, steadying the frail body with his hand, and he was at the bedside on 19 May 1995, the night she died. Tempelsman met Jackie Kennedy in the 1950s, when he arranged a meeting for then-Senator John F. Kennedy with [[De Beers]] South African diamond interests. After she was widowed a second time with the death of [[Aristotle Onassis]] in 1975, Tempelsman became her financial adviser. He is reported to have quadrupled her $26 million inheritance.<ref>''[http://www.nytimes.com/1994/05/24/us/death-of-a-first-lady-the-companion-quietly-at-her-side-public-at-the-end.html "DEATH OF A FIRST LADY: THE COMPANION; Quietly at Her Side, Public at the End"]''</ref>
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Revision as of 23:06, 22 August 2016

Person.png Jackie Kennedy  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Jackie Maurice Caroline.jpg
Caroline, pictured right, threatened to withhold children from her mother Jackie, left, if she didn't stop criticising her husband, Ed Schlossberg. Jackie is pictured with longtime boyfriend Maurice Tempelsman
BornJacqueline Lee Bouvier
1929-07-28
Southampton, New York, U.S.
Died1994-05-19 (Age 64)
Manhattan, New York, U.S.
Alma materVassar College, George Washington University
ReligionRoman Catholicism
Parents • John Vernou Bouvier III
• Janet Lee Bouvier
Children • Arabella
• Caroline
• John Jr.
• Patrick
Member ofKennedy family
Interest ofMaurice Tempelsman
PartyDemocratic

Employment.png First Lady of the United States

In office
January 20, 1961 - November 22, 1963

Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, widow of John F. Kennedy, called her daughter Caroline's husband an 'egghead' and said he was a 'boring old fogey' behind his back, according to reports. The former First Lady's name calling was a result of her mistrust of Ed Schlossberg, who is 12 years older than Caroline. Her open contempt for Mr Schlossberg ended when Caroline threatened to cut Jackie off from her grandchildren.[1]

Maurice Tempelsman had known her for more than 30 years and had been her constant companion for more than a decade, sharing everything: the daily victories, big and small, the adventures and frustrations of her complex life, and then her final months of suffering. He walked with her in the park in her last days, steadying the frail body with his hand, and he was at the bedside on 19 May 1995, the night she died. Tempelsman met Jackie Kennedy in the 1950s, when he arranged a meeting for then-Senator John F. Kennedy with De Beers South African diamond interests. After she was widowed a second time with the death of Aristotle Onassis in 1975, Tempelsman became her financial adviser. He is reported to have quadrupled her $26 million inheritance.[2]

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