Jackie Kennedy tapes reveal personal side
CBC News
Posted: Sep 13, 2011 9:34 AM ET
Last Updated: Sep 13, 2011 5:14 PM ET
Audiotapes set to be released Wednesday offer fresh insight into the life and personality of Jacqueline Kennedy, the former president's wife who had a unique vantage point on many seminal historical events from the 1960s, including the Cuban Missile Crisis.
The eight hours of recordings were created in 1964, when Kennedy sat down with historian and former White House aide Arthur Schlesinger Jr. mere months after the assassination of her husband, John F. Kennedy, on Nov. 22, 1963.
They were set to be released 50 years after her death, but her daughter, Caroline Kennedy, decided to make them public now.
The recordings reveal a side of her only friends and family knew — funny and inquisitive, canny and cutting.
The tapes are set to be released with the new book Jacqueline Kennedy: Historic Conversations on Life With John F. Kennedy.
The book is part of a celebration of the 50th anniversary of Kennedy's first year in office. Jacqueline Kennedy died in 1994, and Schlesinger in 2007.
At the time, the former president's wife was not yet the jet-setting celebrity of the late 1960s or the literary editor of the 1970s and 1980s. But she was also nothing like the soft-spoken fashion icon of the three previous years.
She was in her mid-30s, recently widowed, but dry-eyed and determined to set down her thoughts for history.
'Please don't send me to Camp David'
During one conversation, Kennedy recounts how she was unwilling to leave her husband during the Cuban Missile Crisis, despite the danger to herself and her family.
“I said, ‘Please don’t send me away to Camp David, me and the children. Please don’t send me anywhere, if anything happens we’re all just going to stay right here with you,’” she says in the tapes.
In another exchange with Schlesinger, she describes how her style drew criticism from the press. She was fashionable; she challenged the notion of what an American housewife should be; and she spoke French, which was regarded at the time as a liability.
“I was never any different once I was in the White House than I was before, but the press made you different,” she said, adding that she was expected to “bake bread with flour up to [her] arms.”
“You know everyone thought I was a snob and hated politics,” she said. “Well Jack never made me feel like I was a liability to him, but I was.”
She also offers insight into JFK, saying he wept openly over world events, particularly the failed Bay of Pigs invasion.
Jackie Kennedy also describes some world leaders in unflattering terms.
She says Indira Gandhi, who was elected India’s prime minister in 1966, was “pushy” and “bitter.” Charles de Gaulle was an “egomaniac.” And Martin Luther King Jr. was phoney, according to Kennedy.
She was especially hard on Lyndon Johnson, who had competed bitterly with her husband for the presidency in 1960.
There are no spectacular revelations in the Schlesinger discussions and virtually nothing about JFK's assassination. Kennedy's health problems and his extramarital affairs were still years from public knowledge and from the knowledge of aides such as Schlesinger.
With files from The Associated PressShare Tools
Top News Headlines
- Kids from levelled Oklahoma schools recount deadly tornado

- Children from two Oklahoma schools levelled Monday by a powerful tornado are recounting what it was like to survive the "loud" and "scary" twister, while rescuers near the end of their search for any other remaining survivors or bodies.

more »
- Deadly Oklahoma tornado confirmed as most powerful type

- Emergency workers neared the end of their search Tuesday afternoon for survivors in Moore, Okla., following a deadly tornado that weather officials said was now classified among the most powerful type of twister. more »
- Senate debates expense audits amid greater scrutiny
- The expenses scandal dominated the first Senate session since the audits on senators Mike Duffy, Mac Harb and Patrick Brazeau were released and it was revealed Duffy's questionable expenses were repaid by a personal cheque from the prime minister's chief of staff. more »
- Only 1 set of human remains found at Millard farm, police say
- Hamilton police have confirmed that they are dealing with only a single set of human remains at the Waterloo region farm of Dellen Millard. more »
- Rob Ford faces more calls to address crack allegations
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford went back to work after a holiday weekend, but he kept his mouth shut about an alleged video that two published reports say shows him smoking what appears to be a crack pipe. more »
Must Watch
Latest World News Headlines
- Baseball fuels dreams, desperation in Dominican Republic
- The Toronto Blue Jays have a number of stars from the Dominican Republic, but in the shadow of these successful players is an equally important story about the deaths of young players and a country desperately struggling to balance hope and poverty. more »
- Guatemala overturns ex-dictator's 'historic' genocide conviction
- Guatemala's top court has overturned a conviction against former dictator Efrain Rios Montt, which just days ago was being hailed as a milestone decision. Earlier this month, the court made history by finding Rios Montt guilty of genocide and crimes against humanity. more »
- Jodi Arias asks jury to spare her life
- Jodi Arias asked jurors Tuesday to give her life in prison, arguing she "lacked perspective" when she told a local reporter in an interview after she was convicted of murder that she preferred execution to spending the rest of her days in jail. more »
- Canadian killed in Iraq violence, Baird says
- Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird says a Canadian is among the dead in a spate of sectarian violence in Iraq that has killed more than 270 people in just the past week. more »
The National
The Current
- The morning after the Oklahoma tornado May. 21, 2013 4:17 PM The rescue efforts and aftermath of yesterday's devastating tornado in Moore, Oklahoma.
- Deadly Oklahoma tornado confirmed as most powerful type
- Microsoft unveils Xbox One
- 'Very upset' Harper wants fast Senate spending reform
- Only 1 set of human remains found at Millard farm, police say
- Kids from levelled Oklahoma schools recount deadly tornado
- Rob Ford faces more calls to address crack allegations
- Mountie sues 13 ex-colleagues for sex assault, harassment
- Jodi Arias asks jury to spare her life
- Microsoft's Xbox revamp: Is the sun setting on game consoles?

