First, the parents are divorced
July 28, 1929, Jacqueline was born in East Hampton, Long Island, New York. Her mother, Janet Norton Lee, was born on July 28, 1929 in East Hampton, Long Island, New York. Lee (Janet Norton Lee Bouvier) is a typical upper-class woman, strict personality, the pursuit of perfection. Her father, Jack Bouvier, was a notorious womanizer. Bouvier's father, Jack Bouvier, was a notorious playboy with a penchant for pleasure, a life of debauchery, and a penchant for spending money. The couple's personalities are at odds with each other.
Jack after marriage also did not change the nature of the prodigal son. Mother and father together, always accompanied by fierce quarrels and ranting. Growing up in such a family, Jacqueline developed a rebellious character from a young age, very individualistic and fought for whatever she wanted.
She also developed the ability to read people's minds, and was able to cope with everything without being surprised, no matter how unpleasant things happened, and never showed it on her face. Jacqueline's parents separated several times before finally divorcing in 1940, and the sisters followed their mother*** to live together. Her mother remarried in 1942 to Hugh Auchincloss, heir to the prestigious Standard Oil Company. Her mother remarried in 1942 to Hugh Auchincloss, the heir to the prestigious Standard Oil Company, and the fact that her mother was happily remarried had a strong influence on Jacqueline. This, coupled with her mother's instilling in her from a young age the idea of marrying a rich man, had a huge impact on her later married life.
Second, the marriage is unfortunate
Her husband John F. Kennedy is the 35th President of the United States, he is recognized as the most philandering president in U.S. history. On the one hand, this may be related to its origin, Kennedy's father is a very successful businessman, before the age of 35 is a millionaire, the rich second generation of the birth of John was a young famous four playboy, he had countless lovers in his life, there are spies, the mafia, celebrities, actresses, call girls, and other trades and professions of the woman. On the other hand, John was said to have been a sickly child since childhood, suffering from Edison's genetic disease, a condition for which the drugs used to treat it cause magical side effects in both men and women, and which makes people unusually sexually active and aroused. This also sets the stage for John's flings.
One of his most famous affairs was with the sex goddess Marilyn Monroe. She was the one lover that scared John the most because Marilyn Monroe's ambitions went beyond being a lover, she wanted to squeeze Jacqueline out as first lady. She had called Jacqueline and said that JFK was going to marry her. But Marilyn Monroe herself suffered from mental illness and was very unstable, and in 1962, Marilyn Monroe was found dead in her bedroom at home.
After Monroe's death, Kennedy did not stop the footsteps of flirtation, he wandered in the world of flowers, lingering in the call girls and social flowers of the tender land, many times exposed to scandal, and even in the time of the death of Jacqueline's newly born daughter, he is still outside the pleasure-seeking. According to incomplete statistics, Kennedy had about 15 "confidantes" in his life, including movie star Marilyn Monroe, actress Angie Dickinson, Swedish socialite Gnella Post, White House intern Mimi Alford and so on.
In the 2014 biography of Jacqueline, "A Life Never Dreamed of," authors Danforth Prince and Darwin Porter note, "She [Jacqueline] was not happily married to John F. Kennedy and wanted a divorce before he became president. Knowing that a divorce would ruin Jack's political future, Jack's father, Joseph Kennedy, gave her a million dollars to stay." After that, Jacqueline never made another effort to work on their seeming relationship and learned to play it down until their marriage ended in tragedy on November 22, 1963, when John was assassinated in Dealey Plaza, Texas.
Later, after the assassination of Kennedy's brother Robert, Jacqueline took her own set of children and married Onassis, the Greek ship king. The two were married on October 20, 1968, in a church on the Greek island of Scorpion. Onassis was 62 years old and Jacqueline was 39.
Life after the remarriage was wonderful at first, and Onassis was extremely generous to Jacqueline, often sending her expensive jewelry. Jacqueline once said, "If I wanted the moon, he would have picked it for me." Meanwhile Onassis was also caring towards Jacqueline's children, spending as much time as he could with them ****.
But the two had contrasting personalities and lifestyles. Jacqueline likes to read, enjoy ballet performances, visit art galleries and museums, but Onassis is not half interested in art, although the noble billionaire, but his life is extremely monotonous and simple. Married to the king of the boat, Jacqueline began to spend money without fear, Onassis on Jacqueline's spending quite a bit of criticism, the two gradually began to produce a rift. 1975 March Onassis died in Paris, only his daughter was accompanied by the side.
Jacqueline's late love interest was Maurice Tempelsmann, a Swiss national of the same age. Tempelsmann, a Swiss national and her financial adviser. Jacqueline found peace and serenity in him, something she had not gotten from her first two marriages, but she never remarried.
Third, the child died early
Jacqueline loved children, but she had 5 births in her life, but there was a miscarriage, 2 abortions, only 2 children John Jr. and Caroline grew up healthy.
In September 1964, eight months after Kennedy's death, Jacqueline moved to an apartment at 1040 Fifth Avenue on Manhattan's East Side to start a new life with her children. Jacqueline, who had not yet gotten over the trauma of Kennedy's departure, once told a friend, "The only thing I haven't accomplished now is to take care of the children; I have to make sure they grow up healthy, and I want John to grow up happy and be a good boy."
Caroline was more understanding from a young age and always did well academically, being a calm, self-controlled girl. While Jacqueline was not patriarchal, she always had high hopes for her son John Jr. and believed that as part of the Kennedy family she should accomplish something.
John was shy and introverted when he was young, and had a strong sense of dependence. When he was only 11 years old, Jacqueline sent him to the "Camp of the Brave" to train and exercise his courageous and independent character. When John was 13, she sent him to an isolated island to learn independent living and wilderness survival skills. During the 20 days of training, they were given no food, only a gallon of water, two boxes of matches and a book on how to survive in the wilderness. As he grew up, to further strengthen John's talent for fighting in difficult situations, Jacqueline enlisted him in the Peace Corps to work in Guatemala for earthquake relief. With his mother's hard work, young John grew into a confident, positive, sensible, and understanding young man. Moreover, he is a good-looking man with excellent connections, and is considered the most promising figure in the Kennedy family.
Unfortunately, on July 16, 1999, John F. Kennedy, Jr. crashed in the Atlantic Ocean while traveling in a plane with his 33-year-old wife and her sister, 35-year-old Lauren Bessette. The cause of the plane crash is still unknown. Luckily, by this time Jacqueline had already passed away and was spared the pain of losing her son.
Fourth, the sisterly love
Jacqueline has a sister, called Lee (Lee). Sisters a married to U.S. President John F. Kennedy, a married to a Polish prince, became the Polish Crown Princess, honor to the extreme.
But the sister relationship is not harmonious, even at a very young age, their relationship has produced a rift, and later, the rift continues to grow, so that although they are biological sisters, and ultimately turned against each other, old and dead.
Jacqueline recalled that her mother put her on a horse when she was just one year old to learn how to ride, allowing her to develop a competitive personality. By the time her sister was born a few years later, Jacqueline was already a good horseback rider, having won her parents' hearts for horseback riding, and the two sisters have spent their lives comparing themselves to each other ever since.
They both studied well, but once Jacqueline suggested that her sister smoke to lose weight, which led to her developing anorexia, and from then on, the disease-plagued sister withdrew from the ranks of model students, while her sister went all the way to get a bachelor's degree in French literature.
In terms of marriage, Lee married publisher Mike Cornfield in 1953 at the age of 19, one step ahead of her sister. Sister Jacqueline married Congressman John F. Kennedy five months later, and five years later, Kennedy was making a name for himself in Congress, becoming a candidate for president with a very high probability of being elected . If Kennedy became president, Jacqueline would be the First Lady of the world, which made Lee feel a crisis. She quickly broke off her marriage to Mike and hitched a ride with Stanislas, a Polish prince 19 years older than herself, and became the Polish crown princess.
JFK was assassinated and the young Jacqueline was widowed. Shortly thereafter, Lee also ended her marriage to the Polish prince and moved on to the arms of Greek ship king Onassis.
What happened later is known to everyone, Jacqueline in the death of brother-in-law Robert, cross-over, with two children to marry his sister's lover Onassis. The sisters thus completely severed their relationship, and Lee never forgave her sister to her death.