Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

John F. Kennedy, Jr.

 
Who2 Biography: John F. Kennedy, Jr., Publisher / Political Relative
 
John F. Kennedy, Jr.
Source

  • Born: 25 November 1960
  • Birthplace: Washington, D.C.
  • Died: 16 July 1999 (airplane crash)
  • Best Known As: JFK's son who also died young

John F. Kennedy, Jr. was the son of president John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, and the younger brother of Caroline Kennedy. John Jr. appeared as a three-year-old in one of the most famous film clips of the 1960s, saluting his father's casket after the president was assassinated in 1963. As an adult Kennedy studied law and worked for a few years in the Manhattan District Attorney's office; later he founded the political magazine George. JFK Jr. was a famously eligible bachelor before finally marrying the former Carolyn Bessette in 1996. Kennedy, his wife and her sister were all killed in 1999 when a private plane piloted by Kennedy crashed in the Atlantic Ocean near Martha's Vineyard.

Kennedy was born after his father was elected president but before JFK's inauguration... As a boy his popular nickname was "John-John"... He died 18 months after a 1997 skiing accident killed his cousin Michael Kennedy... JFK, Jr. was played by Kristoffer Polaha in the 2003 TV movie America's Prince, with Portia de Rossi as wife Carolyn Bessette Kennedy.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Biography: John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Jr.
Top

The life and death of American publisher John F. Kennedy, Jr. (1960 - 1999) mirrored that of his presidential father and others in the influential but tragedy - stricken Kennedy family. The first flickering images involved White House play and the funeral following his father's 1963 assassination. JFK Jr. died in 1999 at age 38 when he lost control of his plane off the coast of Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts. "Kennedy," Larry McShane wrote in the "Boston Globe", "grew to manhood in the shadow of a president's legend and the glare of the public eye, remembered always as the young boy who raised his hand in a brave salute to his father's coffin. By all accounts, Camelot's heir bore the burden, and the blessing, with grace."

Early Years

Kennedy was born November 25, 1960, just 17 days after John F. Kennedy narrowly defeated Vice President Richard M. Nixon to become the 35th president of the United States. Young Kennedy became the first infant to live in the White House since the Grover Cleveland administration in the late 1800s. He, his older sister Caroline, and their youthful parents portrayed an image to the world often described as "Camelot." McShane wrote: "Americans met him as the playful boy hiding beneath dad's desk at the Oval Office." A reporter called him "John - John," and the nickname stuck. A third child, Patrick, was born in August of 1963, but died within two days.

On November 22, 1963, Kennedy faced the first tragedy of his young life when his father, President John F. Kennedy, was assassinated in Dallas, Texas. Three days later, television footage showed a young man, clad in a blue coat and shorts and on his third birthday, saluting his father's casket during the funeral procession. "The image still conjures strong emotions," Bruce Kennedy, no relation, wrote on the Cable News Network Website, CNN.com. Years later, Kennedy admitted his memory of the moment was foggy. "I think that what happens is that you see an image so many times that you begin to believe you remember the image, but I am not sure I really do," he told CNN talk show host Larry King in 1995.

Family Moved from Washington

Following the assassination, JFK's widow, Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy, moved the family to New York, to attempt to get her two children out of the Washington political media glare. While Jacqueline Kennedy married Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis, young Kennedy, wrote McShane, "grew into a quintessential New Yorker, likely to pop up shirtless with a Frisbee on the Great Lawn of Central Park, decked out for dinner in a Tribeca restaurant, casually riding a subway downtown. 'I thank my mother for doing that,' " he once said, according to McShane. "I always took the bus. I always took the subways." Kennedy was raised without the limos and hotel rooms that many pictured him living in.

Kennedy attended St. David's Catholic school in New York, then for third grade was enrolled in the nearly 400 - year - old Collegiate School; its Protestant tradition flew in the face of his family's Catholicism. "He was as charming as people remember him," says Geoffrey Worrell, a former classmate of Kennedy's at New York's Collegiate School, according to CNN's Kennedy. "But he was one of the people who could raise hell with malice towards none." Photographers, fascinated with all things Kennedy, stalked the young man outside the school building. The Collegiate School protected all of their students, keeping a special eye to make certain that Kennedy was not harassed. "[It] helped to let John as much as possible lead a normal childhood and have a normal school experience," Worrell told CNN. The Kennedy family, meanwhile, suffered more tragedy. Robert F. Kennedy, brother to the slain president and a 1968 White House aspirant, himself was gunned down by an assassin in Los Angeles after winning the California Democratic presidential primary, which was tantamount to a nomination.

In 1976, Kennedy entered Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, as an eleventh - grader; held back one year, he graduated in 1979. Bucking his family's tradition, he decided to attend Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, rather than Harvard. Majoring in history, he graduated from Brown in 1983. Once he had graduated, Kennedy appeared to be floundering a bit, having no particular direction in life. He tried acting in the theater, traveled a lot, and helped his mother with her urban improvement charity. He drifted, studying at the University of Delhi, working for the New York City business development office, and performing in the drama Winners.

"The Hunk Flunks"

When Kennedy entered New York University law school in 1986, many saw the move as a prelude to yet another Kennedy political career. In his mid - twenties at the time, the latest photogenic Kennedy attracted headlines labeling him a sex symbol. "His good looks and personal charisma, along with the Kennedy family aura, combined to make him one of the most eligible bachelors in America," CNN wrote. New York tabloid newspapers took to calling him merely "the Hunk." People magazine called him "the sexiest man alive," and newspaper and television gossip linked him romantically with the likes of Madonna, Sarah Jessica Parker, Brooke Shields, and Daryl Hannah. Further satiating the political media's appetite, Kennedy introduced his uncle, Senator Edward M. "Ted" Kennedy of Massachusetts, at the 1988 Democratic National Convention in Atlanta.

Kennedy himself, respectful of his family's legacy, still carved his own identity. "It's hard for me to talk about a legacy or a mystique. It's my family. It's my mother. It's my sister. It's my father; we're a family like any other," he told Vogue magazine in 1993, according to CNN's website. "We look out for one another. The fact that there have been difficulties and hardships, or obstacles, makes us closer." He stumbled in his bid for a law career. After graduating from NYU law school in 1989, he worked as a prosecutor for Robert Morgenthau, the district attorney for New York's Manhattan borough. Meanwhile, though, he failed the bar exam twice, prompting the splashy tabloid headline: "The Hunk Flunks." Those close to Kennedy said he went to law school primarily to please his mother. His heart was never really in the endeavor. Kennedy passed the bar exam on the third try. However, he resigned from the Manhattan DA's office in the mid - 1990s, having won all six cases he prosecuted.

Launched Publishing Venture, Got Married

Kennedy's mother died on May 19, 1994. John and sister Caroline spent several months after her death settling her estate, estimated at $200 million. It was a very hard time for both siblings. Meanwhile, intense political pressure to run for office included New York Democrats urging him to run for seats vacated by Rep. Ted Weiss and later, the Senate seat that Daniel Patrick Moynihan would vacate, and which former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, also a Democrat, secured in 2000. One private poll, according to the British newspaper the Guardian, had JFK Jr. sporting a 65 - percent approval rating.

But in 1995, rather than take any political action, Kennedy launched George magazine, a personality - themed political journal named after George Washington, the nation's first president. "Instead of writing about the highest - grossing film, we'll write about the best campaign ad," Kennedy was quoted as having said by the Boston Globe. For Kennedy, it meant political involvement without the downside of running for office. Interview subjects included Cuban leader Fidel Castro, former Alabama Governor George Wallace, and even boxer Mike Tyson. "An article he wrote for the magazine criticizing two of his cousins as 'poster boys for bad behavior' made headlines - and reportedly caused some hurt feelings within the Kennedy family," CNN's Kennedy wrote.

On September 21, 1996, Kennedy married his girlfriend, Carolyn Bessette, a publicist for upscale clothier and fragrance maker Calvin Klein Incorporated. Their wedding was highly secretive, taking place on Cumberland Island off the coast of Georgia. Ironically, given her romance with Kennedy and her own profession, Bessette was media shy. Bessette grew up in wealthy Greenwich, Connecticut, 45 miles northeast of New York, as a surgeon's stepdaughter. "But not even that could prepare her for life with White House invitations and family weekends in Hyannis Port, Mass.," McShane wrote. The media called her "Camelot's New Queen," and photographers and writers chased her, comparing her with Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.

Paparazzi and television cameras shot the pair, even in public spats in New York's Central Park, one of which involved Kennedy pulling the ring off her finger. "The glamorous lifestyle, while heady, came with some baggage," McShane wrote. Still, the marriage carried on. "She was totally crazy about John," said fashion stylist Joe McKenna, according to People Weekly. "That fact that she was not a public person and made herself public for John says a lot about how she felt about him." In the same People Weekly article, former Calvin Klein co - worker Lynn Tesoro said of Kennedy's wife: "I saw her the Wednesday before [she died], and I thought she never looked better or sounded more in love."

Plane Vanished, Grief Followed

On Friday, July 16, 1999, Kennedy flew Carolyn, then 33, and her sister, 34 - year - old Lauren Bessette, from Essex County airport in Fairfield, New Jersey, to Cape Cod for a family wedding at the Kennedy compound in Hyannisport. They never made it. Kennedy's plane, a single - engine, six - seat Piper Saratoga II HP, got lost off the coast of Martha's Vineyard. "It has come to the point when Kennedy tragedy now seems to overshadow Kennedy triumph, when the passage of time is marked not by political conquests, but by soulful gatherings to grieve the loss of another young son," Brian McGrory wrote in the Boston Globe. While the Kennedys and their friends are no strangers to tragedies, this one hit hard. "It makes your heart sick just to talk about it," Kennedy confidant Paul Kirk told McGrory.

Kennedy tragedies extend beyond two assassinations. They include two family members dying in plane crashes and Ted barely surviving another; Robert Kennedy's son, David, died of a drug overdose in 1984; Joseph P. Kennedy II, who served in Congress, was in a car crash that left a woman paralyzed for life; and another Kennedy, Michael, died on a New Year's Eve when he skied into a tree. John Kennedy Jr.'s death eerily came on the 30th anniversary, and on the same July weekend, as the date that Ted Kennedy drove his car off a bridge on Chappaquiddick Island, near Martha's Vineyard. A passenger, 28 - year - old Mary Jo Kopechne, died and Kennedy drew widespread criticism for not having helped her. The controversy essentially derailed Ted Kennedy's own White House ambitions.

One year after Kennedy's death, the National Transportation Safety Board issued a 400 - page report on the JFK Jr. accident, citing "spatial disorientation" as having triggered the spiral into the water that killed all three occupants of the plane. Darkness and haze confused him, the NTSB summarized. After a year of speculation about Kennedy recklessness - he had gotten his pilot's license but a year earlier - the report appeared to vindicate him. "One impression that I get after looking at the complete file is that Kennedy was a very serious pilot," Peter Katz told People Weekly. Katz, the publisher of NTSB Reporter and Aviation Monthly, was one of the few people to see the entire document, according to People Weekly. Meanwhile, George magazine, having lost its charismatic founder and amid an advertising downturn, folded in early 2001.

JFK Jr.'s Legacy

Kennedy, one of the more visible members of his family, accepted his status but set out to do things his own way. He connected with people through celebrity and tragedy, "John follows the family tradition that the man should live this intrepid life," Laurence Leamer, who has written separate books about the Kennedy men and women, told McGrory. "He should have been a coupon clipper, a wealthy guy going to his clubs. But he wouldn't live that kind of life." What the young Kennedy could have done with his life will never be known, but it is certain that he lived a full life until his untimely death.

Periodicals

People Weekly, July 24, 2000.

Online

"America Reluctant to Deify Son Like Father," Guardian Unlimited, http://www.guardian.co.uk/kennedy/story/0,2763,206558,00.html (July 25, 1999).

"Camelot's Son, J.F.K. Jr., Presumed Dead at 38," Boston Globe, http://www.boston.com/news/packages/jfkjr/jfk - obit.htm (July 19, 1999).

"Family Overshadowed by a Litany of Tragedy," Boston Globe,http://www.boston.com/news/packages/jfkjr/mcgrory.htm (July 18, 1999).

"Jack, Jackie's Children Had Taken Mantle of Kennedy Legacy," Boston Globe, http://www.boston.com/news/packages/jfkjr/jfk - people.htm (July 18, 1999).

"John F. Kennedy Jr. Biography," JFKJr.com,http://www.jfkjr.com/bio.htm (December 7, 2004).

"John F. Kennedy Jr., in Memoriam," CNN.com,http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/1999/kennedy/ (July 18, 1999).

"Times in the Life of JFK Jr.," St. Petersburg Times Online, http://www.sptimes.com/News/71799/Worldandnation/Times - in - the - life - of - .shtml (July 17, 1999).

"Wife of John F. Kennedy Jr. Presumed dead at 33," Boston Globe, http://www.boston.com/news/packages/jfkjr/kbessette - obit.htm (July 19, 1999).

 
Quotes By: John F. Kennedy Jr.
Top

Quotes:

"Once you run for office, you're in it -- sort of like going into the military. You'd better be damned sure it is what you want to do and that the rest of your life is set up to accommodate that. It takes a certain toll on your personality and on your family life. I've seen it personally."

 
Wikipedia: John F. Kennedy, Jr.
Top
John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Jr.

John F. Kennedy Jr. greets invited guests at the HBO and Imagine Entertainment premiere held at Kennedy Space Center
Born John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Jr.
November 25, 1960(1960-11-25)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Died July 16, 1999 (aged 38)
Atlantic Ocean, off the coast of Martha's Vineyard
Alma mater Brown University
NYU School of Law
Occupation lawyer and journalist
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Carolyn Jeanne Bessette (1996–1999)
Children none
Parents John F. Kennedy (May 29, 1917–November 22, 1963)
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis (July 28, 1929–May 19, 1994)
John F. Kennedy, Jr. with his father, John F. Kennedy, at the White House in 1963.
John Jr. plays under the desk of his father, President John F. Kennedy.

John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Jr. (November 25, 1960 – July 16, 1999), often referred to as John F. Kennedy, Jr., JFK Jr., John Jr., John Kennedy or John-John, was an American journalist, lawyer, pilot, and socialite. He was the son of U.S. President John F. Kennedy and First Lady Jacqueline Lee Bouvier Kennedy Onassis, and was known as the "American Son"[1] because he was one of the few presidential children to actually be raised in the White House. He was killed in a plane crash along with his wife and sister-in-law in 1999.

Contents

Early life and education

Born at Georgetown University Hospital sixteen days after his father was elected to the presidency, Kennedy was in the public spotlight from his father's inauguration as President of the United States in 1961 until his death in 1999. For most of the first three years of his life he lived in the White House. His nickname "John-John" came from a reporter mishearing JFK calling him ("John" spoken twice in quick succession). Though he was often referred to publicly as "John-John", members of his family themselves did not use the nickname. [2]

His father was assassinated on November 22, 1963, and three days later, on his third birthday, the funeral procession was held. In a moment that became an emotional and iconic image of the 1960s, young JFK, Jr. stepped forward and rendered a final salute as the flag-draped casket was carried out from St. Matthew's Cathedral.[3] Following his father's assassination, Kennedy grew up on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in New York City, and in 1968, his mother married Greek shipping tycoon Aristotle Onassis, whom she had met in the early 1960s. Their marriage lasted eight years until Onassis' death in 1975, when John, Jr. was fourteen years old.

Generally considered exceptionally handsome and athletic, "Sexiest Man Alive" in 1988 at the age of 27. He is the only person so named who was not a working actor and is the only one who is now deceased.

Kennedy attended the Collegiate School in New York City for the third through tenth grades, and later graduated from Phillips Academy (also known as Andover). Foregoing his family legacy of attending Harvard University, Kennedy opted to attend another Ivy League school, and graduated from Brown University in 1983 with a bachelor's degree in History. While at Brown, Kennedy was a member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity.

After Brown, he took a working break, traveling to India and spending some time at the University of Delhi where he met Mother Teresa. He also worked with some of the Kennedy special interest projects, including the East Harlem School at Exodus House and Reaching Up. From 1984-1986 he worked for the New York City Office of Business Development. He served as deputy director of the 42nd Street Development Corporation in 1986. He also did a bit of acting during that time, which had been one of his passions, having appeared in many plays while at Brown.

In 1989, he earned a J.D. degree from the New York University School of Law. He failed the New York bar exam twice before passing on the third try. According to Robert Littell's book after the second failing he drove his GMC Typhoon to a motel in Lake George and spent the weekend drinking and listening to self help tapes[4]. He hired a tutor and arranged for special accommodation for his third try, wherein he took the examination alone (as the sole examinee) in a private room, accompanied by a proctor and looser time restrictions.[citation needed]

Public career

In 1995, he founded George, a glossy politics-as-lifestyle monthly which sometimes took editorial aim even at members of his own family. He controlled 1 per cent of the company's shares. After Kennedy's death, the magazine was bought out by Hachette Filipacchi Magazines[5] his partners in George and continued for over a year. With falling advertising sales,[5] the magazine folded in early 2001.[6] Before Kennedy was killed in a plane crash, however, he had conceded that he "might have to wind it up by the end of the year"[7] When he died the magazine had been in negotiations. His backers at Hachette had threatened to pull out and he was having trouble raising funding for the magazine. He had planned to turn George into an internet project and was set to have a meeting in Hyannis Port the night he died.

Personal life

Through the late 1980s until his death, Kennedy was an often-seen and much-photographed personality in Manhattan. He lived at 309 West Eighty-Sixth Street (between Brown and NYU Law), a hotel apartment when he attended NYU and later famously at 20-26 N. Moore Street Apartment 9E in Tribeca[8]. He could usually be seen around Manhattan riding his bike (his bikes were constantly stolen so he had to get a new one every few months) and was famous for wearing his wallet clipped to a chain on his belt (he would absentmindedly lose it quite often).

His ex-girlfriends include Jennifer Christian (his high school sweetheart at Andover), Sally Munro (his girlfriend at Brown, they dated for 6 years), Julie Baker (a model he dated in the late '80s on and off for a few years), Christina Haag (a Brown alumna and actress he'd had a crush on while there, they started dating in 1985 for a few years), Ashley Richardson (a model and actress), Sarah Jessica Parker (they dated in 1988), Daryl Hannah (they dated on and off from 1989-1994 and lived together briefly at Hannah's Upper West Side apartment) and had a brief fling with Madonna during an off-point in his relationship with Hannah. Soon after his mother's death he met Carolyn Jeanne Bessette in late 1994. She had apparently resisted John's proposal for a year before finally accepting. When speaking of her to a friend, Kennedy was quoted as saying "she's the best shot I got" and they married on September 21, 1996 on Cumberland Island in Georgia. His sister Caroline acted as the matron of honor and his cousin Anthony Stanislas Radziwill acted as best man.

Death

On July 16, Kennedy was killed along with his wife Carolyn and sister-in-law Lauren Bessette when the aircraft he was piloting crashed into the Atlantic Ocean. He was flying a Piper Saratoga II HP from Essex County Airport in New Jersey to Martha's Vineyard. Kennedy and his wife were travelling together to the wedding of his cousin Rory in Hyannis, Massachusetts, while Lauren was to have been dropped off at Martha's Vineyard en route.

Causes

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) determined that the probable cause of the crash was: "The pilot's failure to maintain control of the airplane during a descent over water at night, which was a result of spatial disorientation."[9]. Although the weather was officially listed as VFR (Visual Flight Rules), allowing Kennedy to fly that night despite his lack of an IFR (Instrument Flight Rules) rating, the visibility was poor in Essex County, New Jersey, and at least one pilot interviewed by the NTSB in the subsequent crash investigation canceled his flight to Martha's Vineyard that night. "Based only on the current weather conditions at CDW, the fact that I could not get my friends to come with me, and the fact that I would not have to spend money on a hotel room in Martha's Vineyard, I made the decision to fly my airplane to Martha's Vineyard on Saturday." The conditions near the crash site were "Clear skies at or below 12,000 feet; visibility 10 miles"[10].

Memorial tributes and services

During a public memorial service on July 23, Kennedy's paternal uncle, Massachusetts Democratic Senator Edward "Ted" Kennedy, stated, "We dared to think, in that other Irish phrase, that this John Kennedy would live to comb gray hair, with his beloved Carolyn by his side. But, like his father, he had every gift but length of years."[11] U.S. President Bill Clinton attended the memorial service and ordered that the flag at the White House be lowered to half-staff to honor JFK, Jr.

At President Clinton's orders, warships of the United States Navy assisted in the search for the downed plane. With the permission of Secretary of Defense William Cohen, a public memorial service for the three victims was held aboard the Navy ship USS Briscoe. The cremated remains of Kennedy, his wife and sister-in-law were later scattered from the ship off the coast of Martha's Vineyard.

Wrongful-death lawsuit

A wrongful death lawsuit brought by the Bessette and Freeman families against the Kennedy estate concluded with an undisclosed out of court settlement.[12] The settlement avoided the publicity of a public trial. The A&E Biography of John Fitzgerald Kennedy Jr., narrated by Jack Peterson, quoted the settlement amount as $50 million.

See also

References

External links

Preceded by
Harry Hamlin
People magazine's
Sexiest Man Alive

1988
Succeeded by
Sean Connery
Child of John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Lee Bouvier Kennedy
Preceded by
Caroline Kennedy
Kennedy child
(by order of birth)

November 25, 1960 – July 16, 1999
Succeeded by
Patrick Bouvier Kennedy



 
 

 

Copyrights:

Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the John F. Kennedy, Jr. biography from Who2.  Read more
Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Quotes By. Copyright © 2008 QuotationsBook.com. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "John F. Kennedy, Jr." Read more