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Wikipedia

Caroline Kennedy

Caroline Bouvier Kennedy[1][2] (born November 27, 1957)[3] is an American author, attorney, and diplomat serving in President Joe Biden's administration as the United States Ambassador to Australia since 2022. She previously served in the Obama administration as the United States Ambassador to Japan from 2013 to 2017.[4] A prominent member of the Kennedy family, she is the only surviving child of former U.S. president John F. Kennedy (JFK) and former first lady Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy.

Caroline Kennedy
Kennedy in 2022
United States Ambassador to Australia
Assumed office
July 25, 2022
PresidentJoe Biden
Preceded byArthur B. Culvahouse Jr.
United States Ambassador to Japan
In office
November 19, 2013 – January 18, 2017
PresidentBarack Obama
Preceded byJohn Roos
Succeeded byBill Hagerty
Personal details
Born
Caroline Bouvier Kennedy

(1957-11-27) November 27, 1957 (age 65)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse
(m. 1986)
Children
Parents
RelativesKennedy family
EducationHarvard University (AB)
Columbia University (JD)

JFK won the 1960 presidential election when Caroline was two years old. Spending her early childhood years in the White House during the Kennedy Administration, she was almost six when he was assassinated on November 22, 1963. The following year, she and her brother John F. Kennedy Jr. moved with their mother Jacqueline to the Upper East Side of Manhattan, where Caroline attended grade school.

Kennedy graduated from Harvard University and worked at Manhattan's Metropolitan Museum of Art, where she met her future husband, exhibit designer Edwin Schlossberg. She later earned a J.D. degree from Columbia Law School. Most of Kennedy's professional life has been in law, politics, education reform, and charitable work. She has also acted as a spokesperson for her family's legacy, especially that of her father, and co-authored two books with Ellen Alderman on civil liberties.

Early in the primary race for the 2008 presidential election, Kennedy and her uncle, Ted Kennedy, endorsed Democratic candidate Barack Obama. She later stumped for him in Florida, Indiana, and Ohio, served as co-chair of his Vice Presidential Search Committee, and addressed the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver.[5]

After Obama selected United States senator Hillary Clinton to serve as secretary of state, Kennedy expressed interest in being appointed to Clinton's vacant Senate seat from New York, but later withdrew from consideration for personal reasons. In 2013, President Obama appointed Kennedy as the United States ambassador to Japan.[6] Eight years later, Biden appointed Kennedy as United States ambassador to Australia and she took office following her confirmation on June 10, 2022.[7]

Early life

White House years

 
Caroline with her father aboard the yacht Honey Fitz off the coast of Hyannis, Massachusetts at age five, August 25, 1963.

Caroline Bouvier Kennedy was born by caesarean section on November 27, 1957, at New York Hospital in Manhattan's Upper East Side to John Fitzgerald Kennedy (then a U.S. senator from Massachusetts) and Jacqueline Lee Bouvier Kennedy. A year before Caroline's birth, her parents had a stillborn daughter. Caroline had a younger brother, John Jr., who was born just before her third birthday in 1960. Another brother, Patrick, died two days after his premature birth in 1963. Caroline lived with her parents in Georgetown, Washington, D.C. during the first three years of her life.[8] When Caroline was three years old, the family moved to the White House after her father was sworn in as the president of the United States.[8]

Caroline frequently attended kindergarten in classes that were organized by her mother, and she was often photographed riding her pony "Macaroni" around the White House grounds. One such photo in a news article inspired singer-songwriter Neil Diamond to write his Top Ten hit song, "Sweet Caroline", which he revealed when he performed it for Caroline's 50th birthday.[9] As a small child, Caroline received numerous gifts from dignitaries, including a puppy from Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev and a Yucatán pony from Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson.[10] Historians described Caroline's childhood personality as "a trifle remote and a bit shy at times" yet "remarkably unspoiled."[11] "She's too young to realize all these luxuries", her paternal grandmother, Rose Kennedy, said of her. "She probably thinks it's natural for children to go off in their own airplanes. But she is with her cousins, and some of them dance and swim better than she. They do not allow her to take special precedence. Little children accept things".[12]

On the day of JFK's assassination on November 22, 1963, nanny Maud Shaw took Caroline and John Jr. away from the White House to the home of their maternal grandmother, Janet Bouvier Auchincloss, who insisted that Shaw would be the one to tell Caroline that her father was assassinated. That evening, Caroline and John Jr. returned to the White House, and while Caroline was sleeping in her bed, Shaw broke the news to her.[13] Shaw soon found out that Jacqueline had wanted to be the one to tell the two children; this caused a rift between Shaw and Jacqueline.[13] On December 6, two weeks after the assassination, Jacqueline, Caroline, and John Jr. moved out of the White House and returned to Georgetown.[14] However, their new home soon became a popular tourist attraction. The family left Georgetown the following year and later moved to a penthouse apartment at 1040 Fifth Avenue on the Upper East Side.[8]

Later childhood years

In 1967, Caroline christened the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy in a widely publicized ceremony in Newport News, Virginia.[15][16] Over that summer, Jacqueline took the children on a six-week "sentimental journey" to Ireland, where they met President Éamon de Valera and visited the Kennedy ancestral home at Dunganstown. In the midst of the trip, Caroline and John were surrounded by a large number of press photographers while playing in a pond. The incident caused their mother to telephone Ireland's Department of External Affairs and request the issuing of a statement that she and the children wanted to be left in peace. As a result of the request, further attempts by press photographers to photograph the threesome ended with arrests by local police and the photographers being jailed.[17]

Robert F. Kennedy became a major presence in the lives of Caroline and John Jr. following their father's assassination, and Caroline saw her uncle as a surrogate father. However, when Bobby Kennedy was assassinated in 1968, Jacqueline sought a means of protecting her children, stating: "I hate this country. I despise America and I don't want my children to live here anymore. If they're killing Kennedys, my kids are the number one targets. I have the two main targets. I want to get out of this country".[18] Jacqueline Kennedy married Greek shipping tycoon Aristotle Onassis several months later and she and the children moved to Skorpios, his Greek island. The next year, 11-year-old Caroline attended the funeral of her grandfather, Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr. Her cousin, David, asked her about her feelings towards her mother's new husband and she replied, "I don't like him".[19]

In 1970, Jacqueline wrote her brother-in-law Ted Kennedy a letter stating that Caroline had been without a godfather since Robert Kennedy's death and would like Ted to assume the role. Ted began making regular trips from Washington to New York to see Caroline, where she was in school.[20] In 1971, Caroline returned to the White House for the first time since her father's assassination when she was invited by President Richard Nixon to view the official portrait of her father.[21]

Onassis died in March 1975, and Caroline returned to Skorpios for his funeral. A few days later she and her mother and brother attended the presentation by French president Valéry Giscard d'Estaing of the Legion of Honor award to her aunt, Eunice Kennedy Shriver.[22] Later that year, Caroline was visiting London to complete a year-long art course at the Sotheby's auction house, when an IRA car bomb placed under the car of her hosts, Conservative MP Sir Hugh Fraser and his wife, Antonia, exploded shortly before she and the Frasers were due to leave for their daily drive to Sotheby's. Caroline had not yet left the house, but a neighbor, oncologist Professor Gordon Hamilton Fairley, was passing by when he was walking his dog and was killed by the explosion.[23]

Education and personal life

Kennedy began her education with kindergarten classes in the White House organized by her mother.[24] Before the family's move to New York, she was registered at Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart.[25] She attended The Brearley School and Convent of the Sacred Heart in New York City and graduated from Concord Academy in Massachusetts in 1975.[26] She was a photographer's assistant at the 1976 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck, Austria.[27] In 1977, she worked as a summer intern at the New York Daily News, earning $156 a week ($698 in 2021 dollars), "fetching coffee for harried editors and reporters, changing typewriter ribbons and delivering messages."[28] Kennedy reportedly "sat on a bench alone for two hours the first day before other employees even said hello to her"; and, according to Richard Licata, a former News reporter, "Everyone was too scared."[27] Kennedy also wrote for Rolling Stone about visiting Graceland shortly after the death of Elvis Presley.[27]

In 1980, she earned a Bachelor of Arts from Radcliffe College at Harvard University.[29] During college, Kennedy had "considered becoming a photojournalist, but soon realized she could never make her living observing other people because they were too busy watching her."[27] After graduating, Kennedy was hired as a research assistant in the Film and Television Department of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. She later became a "liaison officer between the museum staff and outside producers and directors shooting footage at the museum", helping coordinate the Sesame Street special Don't Eat the Pictures.[30] On December 4, 1984, Caroline was threatened when a man telephoned the museum and stated his name and address while reporting that a bomb had been planted there. Three days later, he was arrested for the threat.[31] In 1988, she earned a Juris Doctor from Columbia Law School, graduating in the top ten percent of her class.[32]

Caroline was romantically linked to many famous men, including Mark Shand, the younger brother of Camilla, Queen Consort of the United Kingdom; Guillermo Vilas; Sebastian Taylor, who had previously dated Princess Elizabeth of Yugoslavia; Jonathan Guinness, the son of Jonathan Guinness, 3rd Baron Moyne.[33]

While working at the Met, Kennedy met her future husband, exhibit designer Edwin Schlossberg. They married in 1986 at Our Lady of Victory Church in Centerville, Massachusetts.[34] Kennedy's first cousin Maria Shriver served as the bride's matron of honor, and Ted later walked her down the aisle. Kennedy is sometimes incorrectly referred to as "Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg", but she did not change her name at the time she married.[1][2] Kennedy has three children: Rose Kennedy Schlossberg (born 1988), Tatiana Celia Kennedy Schlossberg (born 1990), and John Bouvier Kennedy Schlossberg, known as Jack (born 1993).

Raised in Manhattan and somewhat separated from their Hyannisport cousins,[35] Caroline and John Jr. were very close, and especially so following their mother's death in 1994.[36] After John Jr. died in a plane crash in 1999, Caroline was the only remaining survivor of President Kennedy's immediate family, and she preferred not to have a public memorial service for her brother.[37] She decided that his remains would be cremated and his ashes scattered into the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Martha's Vineyard, where he met his fate.[38] John Jr. bequeathed Caroline his half ownership of George magazine, but Caroline believed that her brother would not have wanted the magazine to continue following his death,[39] and the magazine ceased publication two years later.[40]

Kennedy owns her mother's 375-acre (152 ha) estate known as Red Gate Farm in Aquinnah (formerly Gay Head) on Martha's Vineyard.[41] The New York Daily News estimated Kennedy's net worth in 2008 at over $100 million.[42] During her 2013 nomination to serve as ambassador to Japan, financial disclosure reports showed her net worth to be between $67 million and $278 million, including family trusts, government and public authority bonds, commercial property in New York, Chicago and Washington, and holdings in the Cayman Islands.[43]

Public career: 1989–present

External video
  Booknotes interview with Ellen Alderman and Caroline Kennedy on In Our Defense, April 28, 1991, C-SPAN
 
Caroline Kennedy in 1999

Kennedy is an attorney, writer, and editor who has served on the boards of numerous non-profit organizations. With Ellen Alderman, she co-wrote the book, In Our Defense: The Bill of Rights In Action, which was published in 1991. During an interview regarding the volume, Kennedy explained that the two wanted to show why the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution was written.[44] She attended the Robin Hood Foundation annual breakfast on December 7, 1999. Her brother John had been committed to the organization, which she spoke of at the event.[45] In 2000, she supported Al Gore for the presidency and mentioned feeling a kinship with him since their fathers served together in the Senate.[46] Kennedy spoke at the 2000 Democratic National Convention which was held in Los Angeles, California, the first time since the 1960 Democratic National Convention, where her father had been nominated by the Democratic Party for the presidency.[47]

From 2002 through 2004, she worked as director of the Office of Strategic Partnerships for the New York City Department of Education, appointed by School Chancellor Joel Klein. The three-day-a-week job paid her a salary of $1 and had the goal of raising private money for the New York City public schools;[48] she helped raise more than $65 million.[3][49][50] She served as one of two vice chairs of the board of directors of The Fund for Public Schools and is currently honorary director of the fund.[51][52] She has also served on the board of trustees of Concord Academy, which she attended as a teen.[26]

Kennedy and other members of her family created the Profile in Courage Award in 1989. The award is given to a public official or officials whose actions demonstrate politically courageous leadership in the spirit of John F. Kennedy's book, Profiles in Courage.[53] In 2001, she presented the award to former president Gerald Ford for his controversial pardon of former president Richard M. Nixon almost 30 years prior.[54] She is also president of the Kennedy Library Foundation[3] and an adviser to the Harvard Institute of Politics. Kennedy is a member of the New York and Washington, D.C., bar associations. She is also a member of the boards of directors of the Commission on Presidential Debates and the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, and is an honorary chair of the American Ballet Theatre.[55] Kennedy represented her family at the funeral services of former presidents Ronald Reagan and Gerald Ford and former First Ladies Lady Bird Johnson and Barbara Bush. She also represented her family at the dedication of the Bill Clinton Presidential Center and Park in Little Rock, Arkansas, in November 2004, and at the dedication of the George H. W. Bush Presidential Library in 1997. Kennedy attended the fiftieth-anniversary ceremony of the March on Washington on August 28, 2013.[56] On December 7, 2019, Kennedy christened the new USS John F. Kennedy (CVN-79) at Newport News Shipbuilding.[57]

After her post as ambassador to Japan ended, the Boeing Company elected her in August 2017 to serve on its board of directors.[58] She resigned her position on the board of directors on January 15, 2021.[59]

2008 and 2012 presidential elections

 
 
Kennedy on the presidential campaign trail
 
Kennedy spoke during the first night of the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver, Colorado, on August 25, 2008, introducing her uncle, Senator Ted Kennedy.

On January 27, 2008, Kennedy announced in a New York Times op-ed piece entitled, "A President Like My Father," that she would endorse Barack Obama in the 2008 U.S. presidential election.[60] Her concluding lines were: "I have never had a president who inspired me the way people tell me that my father inspired them. But for the first time, I believe I have found the man who could be that president—not just for me, but for a new generation of Americans."[61][62]

Federal Election Commission records show that Kennedy contributed $2,300 to the Hillary Rodham Clinton presidential campaign committee on June 29, 2007. She previously contributed a total of $5,000 to Clinton's 2006 senatorial campaign. On September 18, 2007, she contributed $2,300 to Barack Obama's presidential campaign committee.[63]

On June 4, 2008, Obama named Kennedy, along with Jim Johnson and Eric Holder, to co-chair his Vice Presidential Search Committee.[64] (Johnson withdrew one week later.) Filmmaker Michael Moore called on Kennedy to "Pull a Cheney",[65] and name herself as Obama's vice presidential running mate (Dick Cheney headed George W. Bush's vice presidential vetting committee in 2000—Cheney himself was chosen for the job).[66] On August 23, Obama announced that Senator Joe Biden of Delaware would be his running mate. Kennedy addressed the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver, introducing a tribute film about her uncle, Senator Ted Kennedy.[67] The Topps trading card company memorialized Caroline Kennedy's involvement in the campaign by featuring her on a card in a set commemorating Obama's road to the White House.[68]

Kennedy was among the 35 national co-chairs of Obama's 2012 re-election campaign.[69] On June 27, 2012, Kennedy made appearances in Nashua and Manchester, New Hampshire, to campaign for the re-election of President Obama.[70]

There was media speculation that she might become a possible candidate for the 2020 Presidential primaries and election[71][72][73] but this did not come to pass.

United States Senate seat

In December 2008, Kennedy expressed interest in the United States Senate seat occupied by Hillary Clinton, who had been selected to become Secretary of State. This seat was to be filled through 2010 by appointment of New York Governor David Paterson.[74] This same seat was held by Kennedy's uncle Robert F. Kennedy from January 1965 until his assassination in June 1968, when he was a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination.[75] Kennedy's appointment was supported by Congresswoman Louise Slaughter,[76] State Assemblyman Vito Lopez,[77] New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg,[78] former New York City Mayor Ed Koch,[79] and the New York Post editorial page.[80]

She was criticized for not voting in a number of Democratic primaries and general elections since registering in 1988 in New York City[77] and for not providing details about her political views.[79] In response, Kennedy released a statement through a spokeswoman that outlined some of her political views including that she supported legislation legalizing same-sex marriage, was pro-choice, against the death penalty, for restoring the Federal Assault Weapons Ban, and believed the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) should be re-examined.[81][82] On foreign policy, her spokeswoman reiterated that Kennedy opposed the Iraq War from the beginning as well as that she believed that Jerusalem should be the undivided capital city of Israel.[83][84] Kennedy declined to make disclosures of her financial dealings or other personal matters to the press, stating that she would not release the information publicly unless she were selected by Governor Paterson.[85] She did complete a confidential 28-page disclosure questionnaire required of hopefuls, reported to include extensive financial information.[citation needed]

In an interview with the Associated Press, Kennedy acknowledged that she would need to prove herself. "Going into politics is something people have asked me about forever", Kennedy said. "When this opportunity came along, which was sort of unexpected, I thought, 'Well, maybe now. How about now?' [I'll have to] work twice as hard as anybody else..... I am an unconventional choice..... We're starting to see there are many ways into public life and public service".[86] In late December 2008, Kennedy drew criticism from several media outlets for lacking clarity in interviews, and for using the phrase "you know" 168 times during a 30-minute interview with NY1.[87]

Shortly before midnight on January 22, 2009, Kennedy released a statement that she was withdrawing from consideration for the seat, citing "personal reasons".[88][89][90] Kennedy declined to expand upon the reasons that led to her decision.[88][91] One day after Kennedy's withdrawal, Paterson announced his selection of Representative Kirsten Gillibrand to fill the Senate seat.[92]

United States Ambassador to Japan (2013–2017)

 
Kennedy makes her first statement after arriving at the Narita International Airport on November 15, 2013.
 
Kennedy returns from Tokyo Imperial Palace after presenting her credentials on November 19, 2013.

On July 24, 2013, President Obama announced Kennedy as his nominee to be United States Ambassador to Japan to succeed Ambassador John Roos.[93][94] The prospective nomination was first reported in February 2013[95] and, in mid-July 2013, formal diplomatic agreement to the appointment was reportedly received from the Japanese government.[96]

On September 19, 2013, Kennedy sat before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and responded to questions regarding her potential appointment. Kennedy explained that her focus would be military ties, trade, and student exchange if she was selected for the position.[97] On September 30, 2013, the committee favorably reported her nomination to the Senate floor. She was confirmed on October 16, 2013, by voice vote as the first female U.S. Ambassador to Japan[98] and was sworn in by Secretary of State John Kerry on November 12.[99] Kennedy arrived in Japan on November 15[100] and met Japanese diplomats three days later.[101] On November 19, NHK showed live coverage of Kennedy's arrival at the Imperial Palace to present her diplomatic credentials to Emperor Akihito.[102]

Tenure

 
Kennedy meets with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in 2013

In December 2013, she visited Nagasaki to meet with survivors of the 1945 atomic bombing of that city.[103] On August 5, 2014, she attended a memorial ceremony for victims of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima; she was the second U.S. ambassador to attend the annual memorial. This was her second visit to Hiroshima, having visited in 1978 with her uncle, Senator Ted Kennedy.[104][105]

In February 2014, Kennedy visited the southern Japanese island of Okinawa, the site of the large military bases of United States Forces Japan, and was received by protests against the American military presence and placards with "no base" written on them. The protesters are opposed to the American military presence citing various concerns over sexual assaults and the environmental impact of the base.[106] Kennedy subsequently met with Okinawa's governor, Hirokazu Nakaima, who was re-elected in 2010 in opposition to the base. She pledged to reduce the burden of the American military presence in Okinawa.[106]

 
Kennedy and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry in Hiroshima in April 2016

In April 2015, Kennedy visited the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, which displayed the impact from the 1945 atomic bombing. Kennedy called her visit a "solemn honor" and also planted dogwood trees on a road, participating in a U.S. project to spread 3,000 dogwood trees across Japan.[107]

On August 6, 2015, Kennedy accompanied US Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security Affairs Rose Gottemoeller to the memorial for the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan by the United States in World War II. It marked the 70th anniversary of the bombing, and Gottemoeller became the first senior American official to attend the annual memorial.[108] Kennedy was only the second US ambassador to attend. With representatives of 100 countries in attendance, Japanese prime minister Shinzō Abe reiterated Japan's official support for the abolition of nuclear weapons.[109]

Kennedy resigned as the United States Ambassador to Japan shortly before Donald Trump was sworn in as the 45th President of the United States. She formally left Japan as Ambassador on January 18, 2017.[110] In recognition of her service, Kennedy was awarded Japan's Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun in 2021.[111]

United States Ambassador to Australia

 
Kennedy and U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman at a memorial in Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands in August 2022

On December 15, 2021, President Joe Biden nominated Kennedy to be the United States Ambassador to Australia.[112][113] Hearings on her nomination were held before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on April 7, 2022. The committee favorably reported her to the Senate floor on May 4, 2022. She was confirmed by the Senate on May 5, 2022, by voice vote.[114] Kennedy was officially sworn in on June 10, 2022.[115] She presented her credentials to Governor-General David Hurley on July 25, 2022.[116]

Works published

Kennedy and Ellen Alderman have written two books together on civil liberties:

  • In Our Defense: The Bill of Rights In Action (1991)[117]
  • The Right to Privacy (1995)[117]

On her own, Kennedy has edited these New York Times best-selling volumes:

  • The Best-Loved Poems of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis (2001);[117]
  • Profiles in Courage for Our Time (2002);[117]
  • A Patriot's Handbook (2003);[117]
  • A Family of Poems: My Favorite Poetry for Children (2005).[117]

She is also the author of A Family Christmas, a collection of poems, prose, and personal notes from her family history (2007, ISBN 978-1-4013-2227-4). In April 2011, a new collection of poetry, She Walks In Beauty – A Woman's Journey Through Poems, edited and introduced by Caroline Kennedy, was published. She launched the book at the John F Kennedy Library & Museum at Columbia Point, Dorchester, MA.

See also

References

Citations

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  2. ^ a b "Transcript: Larry King Interview with Caroline Kennedy". Larry King Live. CNN. May 7, 2002. Retrieved December 16, 2008.
  3. ^ a b c . John F. Kennedy Library Foundation. Archived from the original on October 3, 2006. Retrieved December 27, 2015.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on August 24, 2019. Retrieved May 7, 2017.
  5. ^ Gary Ginsberg on her campaigning for Obama; cited in MacFarquhar, Larissa (April 18, 2009). "The Kennedy Who Couldn't". The Age: Good Weekend supplement (pp. 12–16).
  6. ^ Landler, Mark (July 24, 2013). "Obama Nominates Caroline Kennedy to Be Ambassador to Japan". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved July 6, 2017.
  7. ^ "PN1661 - Nomination of Caroline Kennedy for Department of State, 117th Congress (2021-2022)". www.congress.gov. May 5, 2022.
  8. ^ a b c Joynt, Carol Ross (August 22, 2012). "5 Georgetown Locations Rich in Kennedy History". Washingtonian. Retrieved March 21, 2015.
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  11. ^ Heymann, p. 66.
  12. ^ . Time. August 3, 1962. Archived from the original on December 29, 2008.
  13. ^ a b Heymann, pp. 110–114.
  14. ^ Hunter, Marjorie (December 7, 1963). "Mrs. Kennedy is in new home; declines 3-acre Arlington plot" (PDF). The New York Times. pp. 1, 13. Retrieved April 13, 2015.
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  17. ^ Heymann, pp. 145–46.
  18. ^ Heymann, pp. 152–54.
  19. ^ Heymann, p. 167.
  20. ^ Heymann, p. 176.
  21. ^ Heymann, p. 178.
  22. ^ Heymann, p. 202.
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  34. ^ "Caroline Bouvier Kennedy to wed Edwin Schlossberg". The New York Times. March 2, 1986. The engagement of Caroline Bouvier Kennedy and Edwin Arthur Schlossberg has been announced by her mother, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis of New York. A summer wedding is planned.
  35. ^ Anderson, p. 11.
  36. ^ Anderson, p. 4.
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  70. ^ Young, Shannon. . The Boston Globe. Archived from the original on July 1, 2012. Retrieved June 28, 2012.
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Book sources

External links

  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Ms. Kennedy Regrets She's Unable to Be in the Senate Today, Larissa MacFarquhar, The New Yorker, February 2, 2009
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by United States Ambassador to Japan
2013–2017
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Ambassador to Australia
2022–present
Incumbent

caroline, kennedy, this, article, about, president, john, kennedy, daughter, john, kennedy, wife, carolyn, bessette, kennedy, caroline, bouvier, kennedy, born, november, 1957, american, author, attorney, diplomat, serving, president, biden, administration, uni. This article is about President John F Kennedy s daughter For John F Kennedy Jr s wife see Carolyn Bessette Kennedy Caroline Bouvier Kennedy 1 2 born November 27 1957 3 is an American author attorney and diplomat serving in President Joe Biden s administration as the United States Ambassador to Australia since 2022 She previously served in the Obama administration as the United States Ambassador to Japan from 2013 to 2017 4 A prominent member of the Kennedy family she is the only surviving child of former U S president John F Kennedy JFK and former first lady Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Caroline KennedyKennedy in 2022United States Ambassador to AustraliaIncumbentAssumed office July 25 2022PresidentJoe BidenPreceded byArthur B Culvahouse Jr United States Ambassador to JapanIn office November 19 2013 January 18 2017PresidentBarack ObamaPreceded byJohn RoosSucceeded byBill HagertyPersonal detailsBornCaroline Bouvier Kennedy 1957 11 27 November 27 1957 age 65 New York City New York U S Political partyDemocraticSpouseEdwin Schlossberg m 1986 wbr ChildrenRoseTatianaJackParentsJohn F Kennedy Jacqueline KennedyRelativesKennedy familyEducationHarvard University AB Columbia University JD JFK won the 1960 presidential election when Caroline was two years old Spending her early childhood years in the White House during the Kennedy Administration she was almost six when he was assassinated on November 22 1963 The following year she and her brother John F Kennedy Jr moved with their mother Jacqueline to the Upper East Side of Manhattan where Caroline attended grade school Kennedy graduated from Harvard University and worked at Manhattan s Metropolitan Museum of Art where she met her future husband exhibit designer Edwin Schlossberg She later earned a J D degree from Columbia Law School Most of Kennedy s professional life has been in law politics education reform and charitable work She has also acted as a spokesperson for her family s legacy especially that of her father and co authored two books with Ellen Alderman on civil liberties Early in the primary race for the 2008 presidential election Kennedy and her uncle Ted Kennedy endorsed Democratic candidate Barack Obama She later stumped for him in Florida Indiana and Ohio served as co chair of his Vice Presidential Search Committee and addressed the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver 5 After Obama selected United States senator Hillary Clinton to serve as secretary of state Kennedy expressed interest in being appointed to Clinton s vacant Senate seat from New York but later withdrew from consideration for personal reasons In 2013 President Obama appointed Kennedy as the United States ambassador to Japan 6 Eight years later Biden appointed Kennedy as United States ambassador to Australia and she took office following her confirmation on June 10 2022 7 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 White House years 1 2 Later childhood years 2 Education and personal life 3 Public career 1989 present 3 1 2008 and 2012 presidential elections 3 2 United States Senate seat 3 3 United States Ambassador to Japan 2013 2017 3 3 1 Tenure 3 4 United States Ambassador to Australia 4 Works published 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarly lifeWhite House years Caroline with her father aboard the yacht Honey Fitz off the coast of Hyannis Massachusetts at age five August 25 1963 Caroline Bouvier Kennedy was born by caesarean section on November 27 1957 at New York Hospital in Manhattan s Upper East Side to John Fitzgerald Kennedy then a U S senator from Massachusetts and Jacqueline Lee Bouvier Kennedy A year before Caroline s birth her parents had a stillborn daughter Caroline had a younger brother John Jr who was born just before her third birthday in 1960 Another brother Patrick died two days after his premature birth in 1963 Caroline lived with her parents in Georgetown Washington D C during the first three years of her life 8 When Caroline was three years old the family moved to the White House after her father was sworn in as the president of the United States 8 Caroline frequently attended kindergarten in classes that were organized by her mother and she was often photographed riding her pony Macaroni around the White House grounds One such photo in a news article inspired singer songwriter Neil Diamond to write his Top Ten hit song Sweet Caroline which he revealed when he performed it for Caroline s 50th birthday 9 As a small child Caroline received numerous gifts from dignitaries including a puppy from Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev and a Yucatan pony from Vice President Lyndon B Johnson 10 Historians described Caroline s childhood personality as a trifle remote and a bit shy at times yet remarkably unspoiled 11 She s too young to realize all these luxuries her paternal grandmother Rose Kennedy said of her She probably thinks it s natural for children to go off in their own airplanes But she is with her cousins and some of them dance and swim better than she They do not allow her to take special precedence Little children accept things 12 On the day of JFK s assassination on November 22 1963 nanny Maud Shaw took Caroline and John Jr away from the White House to the home of their maternal grandmother Janet Bouvier Auchincloss who insisted that Shaw would be the one to tell Caroline that her father was assassinated That evening Caroline and John Jr returned to the White House and while Caroline was sleeping in her bed Shaw broke the news to her 13 Shaw soon found out that Jacqueline had wanted to be the one to tell the two children this caused a rift between Shaw and Jacqueline 13 On December 6 two weeks after the assassination Jacqueline Caroline and John Jr moved out of the White House and returned to Georgetown 14 However their new home soon became a popular tourist attraction The family left Georgetown the following year and later moved to a penthouse apartment at 1040 Fifth Avenue on the Upper East Side 8 Later childhood years In 1967 Caroline christened the U S Navy aircraft carrier USS John F Kennedy in a widely publicized ceremony in Newport News Virginia 15 16 Over that summer Jacqueline took the children on a six week sentimental journey to Ireland where they met President Eamon de Valera and visited the Kennedy ancestral home at Dunganstown In the midst of the trip Caroline and John were surrounded by a large number of press photographers while playing in a pond The incident caused their mother to telephone Ireland s Department of External Affairs and request the issuing of a statement that she and the children wanted to be left in peace As a result of the request further attempts by press photographers to photograph the threesome ended with arrests by local police and the photographers being jailed 17 Robert F Kennedy became a major presence in the lives of Caroline and John Jr following their father s assassination and Caroline saw her uncle as a surrogate father However when Bobby Kennedy was assassinated in 1968 Jacqueline sought a means of protecting her children stating I hate this country I despise America and I don t want my children to live here anymore If they re killing Kennedys my kids are the number one targets I have the two main targets I want to get out of this country 18 Jacqueline Kennedy married Greek shipping tycoon Aristotle Onassis several months later and she and the children moved to Skorpios his Greek island The next year 11 year old Caroline attended the funeral of her grandfather Joseph P Kennedy Sr Her cousin David asked her about her feelings towards her mother s new husband and she replied I don t like him 19 In 1970 Jacqueline wrote her brother in law Ted Kennedy a letter stating that Caroline had been without a godfather since Robert Kennedy s death and would like Ted to assume the role Ted began making regular trips from Washington to New York to see Caroline where she was in school 20 In 1971 Caroline returned to the White House for the first time since her father s assassination when she was invited by President Richard Nixon to view the official portrait of her father 21 Onassis died in March 1975 and Caroline returned to Skorpios for his funeral A few days later she and her mother and brother attended the presentation by French president Valery Giscard d Estaing of the Legion of Honor award to her aunt Eunice Kennedy Shriver 22 Later that year Caroline was visiting London to complete a year long art course at the Sotheby s auction house when an IRA car bomb placed under the car of her hosts Conservative MP Sir Hugh Fraser and his wife Antonia exploded shortly before she and the Frasers were due to leave for their daily drive to Sotheby s Caroline had not yet left the house but a neighbor oncologist Professor Gordon Hamilton Fairley was passing by when he was walking his dog and was killed by the explosion 23 Education and personal lifeKennedy began her education with kindergarten classes in the White House organized by her mother 24 Before the family s move to New York she was registered at Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart 25 She attended The Brearley School and Convent of the Sacred Heart in New York City and graduated from Concord Academy in Massachusetts in 1975 26 She was a photographer s assistant at the 1976 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck Austria 27 In 1977 she worked as a summer intern at the New York Daily News earning 156 a week 698 in 2021 dollars fetching coffee for harried editors and reporters changing typewriter ribbons and delivering messages 28 Kennedy reportedly sat on a bench alone for two hours the first day before other employees even said hello to her and according to Richard Licata a former News reporter Everyone was too scared 27 Kennedy also wrote for Rolling Stone about visiting Graceland shortly after the death of Elvis Presley 27 In 1980 she earned a Bachelor of Arts from Radcliffe College at Harvard University 29 During college Kennedy had considered becoming a photojournalist but soon realized she could never make her living observing other people because they were too busy watching her 27 After graduating Kennedy was hired as a research assistant in the Film and Television Department of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York She later became a liaison officer between the museum staff and outside producers and directors shooting footage at the museum helping coordinate the Sesame Street special Don t Eat the Pictures 30 On December 4 1984 Caroline was threatened when a man telephoned the museum and stated his name and address while reporting that a bomb had been planted there Three days later he was arrested for the threat 31 In 1988 she earned a Juris Doctor from Columbia Law School graduating in the top ten percent of her class 32 Caroline was romantically linked to many famous men including Mark Shand the younger brother of Camilla Queen Consort of the United Kingdom Guillermo Vilas Sebastian Taylor who had previously dated Princess Elizabeth of Yugoslavia Jonathan Guinness the son of Jonathan Guinness 3rd Baron Moyne 33 While working at the Met Kennedy met her future husband exhibit designer Edwin Schlossberg They married in 1986 at Our Lady of Victory Church in Centerville Massachusetts 34 Kennedy s first cousin Maria Shriver served as the bride s matron of honor and Ted later walked her down the aisle Kennedy is sometimes incorrectly referred to as Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg but she did not change her name at the time she married 1 2 Kennedy has three children Rose Kennedy Schlossberg born 1988 Tatiana Celia Kennedy Schlossberg born 1990 and John Bouvier Kennedy Schlossberg known as Jack born 1993 Raised in Manhattan and somewhat separated from their Hyannisport cousins 35 Caroline and John Jr were very close and especially so following their mother s death in 1994 36 After John Jr died in a plane crash in 1999 Caroline was the only remaining survivor of President Kennedy s immediate family and she preferred not to have a public memorial service for her brother 37 She decided that his remains would be cremated and his ashes scattered into the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Martha s Vineyard where he met his fate 38 John Jr bequeathed Caroline his half ownership of George magazine but Caroline believed that her brother would not have wanted the magazine to continue following his death 39 and the magazine ceased publication two years later 40 Kennedy owns her mother s 375 acre 152 ha estate known as Red Gate Farm in Aquinnah formerly Gay Head on Martha s Vineyard 41 The New York Daily News estimated Kennedy s net worth in 2008 at over 100 million 42 During her 2013 nomination to serve as ambassador to Japan financial disclosure reports showed her net worth to be between 67 million and 278 million including family trusts government and public authority bonds commercial property in New York Chicago and Washington and holdings in the Cayman Islands 43 Public career 1989 presentExternal video Booknotes interview with Ellen Alderman and Caroline Kennedy on In Our Defense April 28 1991 C SPAN Caroline Kennedy in 1999 Kennedy is an attorney writer and editor who has served on the boards of numerous non profit organizations With Ellen Alderman she co wrote the book In Our Defense The Bill of Rights In Action which was published in 1991 During an interview regarding the volume Kennedy explained that the two wanted to show why the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution was written 44 She attended the Robin Hood Foundation annual breakfast on December 7 1999 Her brother John had been committed to the organization which she spoke of at the event 45 In 2000 she supported Al Gore for the presidency and mentioned feeling a kinship with him since their fathers served together in the Senate 46 Kennedy spoke at the 2000 Democratic National Convention which was held in Los Angeles California the first time since the 1960 Democratic National Convention where her father had been nominated by the Democratic Party for the presidency 47 From 2002 through 2004 she worked as director of the Office of Strategic Partnerships for the New York City Department of Education appointed by School Chancellor Joel Klein The three day a week job paid her a salary of 1 and had the goal of raising private money for the New York City public schools 48 she helped raise more than 65 million 3 49 50 She served as one of two vice chairs of the board of directors of The Fund for Public Schools and is currently honorary director of the fund 51 52 She has also served on the board of trustees of Concord Academy which she attended as a teen 26 Kennedy and other members of her family created the Profile in Courage Award in 1989 The award is given to a public official or officials whose actions demonstrate politically courageous leadership in the spirit of John F Kennedy s book Profiles in Courage 53 In 2001 she presented the award to former president Gerald Ford for his controversial pardon of former president Richard M Nixon almost 30 years prior 54 She is also president of the Kennedy Library Foundation 3 and an adviser to the Harvard Institute of Politics Kennedy is a member of the New York and Washington D C bar associations She is also a member of the boards of directors of the Commission on Presidential Debates and the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund and is an honorary chair of the American Ballet Theatre 55 Kennedy represented her family at the funeral services of former presidents Ronald Reagan and Gerald Ford and former First Ladies Lady Bird Johnson and Barbara Bush She also represented her family at the dedication of the Bill Clinton Presidential Center and Park in Little Rock Arkansas in November 2004 and at the dedication of the George H W Bush Presidential Library in 1997 Kennedy attended the fiftieth anniversary ceremony of the March on Washington on August 28 2013 56 On December 7 2019 Kennedy christened the new USS John F Kennedy CVN 79 at Newport News Shipbuilding 57 After her post as ambassador to Japan ended the Boeing Company elected her in August 2017 to serve on its board of directors 58 She resigned her position on the board of directors on January 15 2021 59 2008 and 2012 presidential elections 2008 United States presidential election Kennedy on the presidential campaign trail Kennedy spoke during the first night of the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver Colorado on August 25 2008 introducing her uncle Senator Ted Kennedy On January 27 2008 Kennedy announced in a New York Times op ed piece entitled A President Like My Father that she would endorse Barack Obama in the 2008 U S presidential election 60 Her concluding lines were I have never had a president who inspired me the way people tell me that my father inspired them But for the first time I believe I have found the man who could be that president not just for me but for a new generation of Americans 61 62 Federal Election Commission records show that Kennedy contributed 2 300 to the Hillary Rodham Clinton presidential campaign committee on June 29 2007 She previously contributed a total of 5 000 to Clinton s 2006 senatorial campaign On September 18 2007 she contributed 2 300 to Barack Obama s presidential campaign committee 63 On June 4 2008 Obama named Kennedy along with Jim Johnson and Eric Holder to co chair his Vice Presidential Search Committee 64 Johnson withdrew one week later Filmmaker Michael Moore called on Kennedy to Pull a Cheney 65 and name herself as Obama s vice presidential running mate Dick Cheney headed George W Bush s vice presidential vetting committee in 2000 Cheney himself was chosen for the job 66 On August 23 Obama announced that Senator Joe Biden of Delaware would be his running mate Kennedy addressed the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver introducing a tribute film about her uncle Senator Ted Kennedy 67 The Topps trading card company memorialized Caroline Kennedy s involvement in the campaign by featuring her on a card in a set commemorating Obama s road to the White House 68 Kennedy was among the 35 national co chairs of Obama s 2012 re election campaign 69 On June 27 2012 Kennedy made appearances in Nashua and Manchester New Hampshire to campaign for the re election of President Obama 70 There was media speculation that she might become a possible candidate for the 2020 Presidential primaries and election 71 72 73 but this did not come to pass United States Senate seat See also 2010 United States Senate special election in New York In December 2008 Kennedy expressed interest in the United States Senate seat occupied by Hillary Clinton who had been selected to become Secretary of State This seat was to be filled through 2010 by appointment of New York Governor David Paterson 74 This same seat was held by Kennedy s uncle Robert F Kennedy from January 1965 until his assassination in June 1968 when he was a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination 75 Kennedy s appointment was supported by Congresswoman Louise Slaughter 76 State Assemblyman Vito Lopez 77 New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg 78 former New York City Mayor Ed Koch 79 and the New York Post editorial page 80 She was criticized for not voting in a number of Democratic primaries and general elections since registering in 1988 in New York City 77 and for not providing details about her political views 79 In response Kennedy released a statement through a spokeswoman that outlined some of her political views including that she supported legislation legalizing same sex marriage was pro choice against the death penalty for restoring the Federal Assault Weapons Ban and believed the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA should be re examined 81 82 On foreign policy her spokeswoman reiterated that Kennedy opposed the Iraq War from the beginning as well as that she believed that Jerusalem should be the undivided capital city of Israel 83 84 Kennedy declined to make disclosures of her financial dealings or other personal matters to the press stating that she would not release the information publicly unless she were selected by Governor Paterson 85 She did complete a confidential 28 page disclosure questionnaire required of hopefuls reported to include extensive financial information citation needed In an interview with the Associated Press Kennedy acknowledged that she would need to prove herself Going into politics is something people have asked me about forever Kennedy said When this opportunity came along which was sort of unexpected I thought Well maybe now How about now I ll have to work twice as hard as anybody else I am an unconventional choice We re starting to see there are many ways into public life and public service 86 In late December 2008 Kennedy drew criticism from several media outlets for lacking clarity in interviews and for using the phrase you know 168 times during a 30 minute interview with NY1 87 Shortly before midnight on January 22 2009 Kennedy released a statement that she was withdrawing from consideration for the seat citing personal reasons 88 89 90 Kennedy declined to expand upon the reasons that led to her decision 88 91 One day after Kennedy s withdrawal Paterson announced his selection of Representative Kirsten Gillibrand to fill the Senate seat 92 United States Ambassador to Japan 2013 2017 Kennedy makes her first statement after arriving at the Narita International Airport on November 15 2013 Kennedy returns from Tokyo Imperial Palace after presenting her credentials on November 19 2013 On July 24 2013 President Obama announced Kennedy as his nominee to be United States Ambassador to Japan to succeed Ambassador John Roos 93 94 The prospective nomination was first reported in February 2013 95 and in mid July 2013 formal diplomatic agreement to the appointment was reportedly received from the Japanese government 96 On September 19 2013 Kennedy sat before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and responded to questions regarding her potential appointment Kennedy explained that her focus would be military ties trade and student exchange if she was selected for the position 97 On September 30 2013 the committee favorably reported her nomination to the Senate floor She was confirmed on October 16 2013 by voice vote as the first female U S Ambassador to Japan 98 and was sworn in by Secretary of State John Kerry on November 12 99 Kennedy arrived in Japan on November 15 100 and met Japanese diplomats three days later 101 On November 19 NHK showed live coverage of Kennedy s arrival at the Imperial Palace to present her diplomatic credentials to Emperor Akihito 102 Tenure Kennedy meets with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in 2013 In December 2013 she visited Nagasaki to meet with survivors of the 1945 atomic bombing of that city 103 On August 5 2014 she attended a memorial ceremony for victims of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima she was the second U S ambassador to attend the annual memorial This was her second visit to Hiroshima having visited in 1978 with her uncle Senator Ted Kennedy 104 105 In February 2014 Kennedy visited the southern Japanese island of Okinawa the site of the large military bases of United States Forces Japan and was received by protests against the American military presence and placards with no base written on them The protesters are opposed to the American military presence citing various concerns over sexual assaults and the environmental impact of the base 106 Kennedy subsequently met with Okinawa s governor Hirokazu Nakaima who was re elected in 2010 in opposition to the base She pledged to reduce the burden of the American military presence in Okinawa 106 Kennedy and U S Secretary of State John Kerry in Hiroshima in April 2016 In April 2015 Kennedy visited the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum which displayed the impact from the 1945 atomic bombing Kennedy called her visit a solemn honor and also planted dogwood trees on a road participating in a U S project to spread 3 000 dogwood trees across Japan 107 On August 6 2015 Kennedy accompanied US Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security Affairs Rose Gottemoeller to the memorial for the atomic bombing of Hiroshima Japan by the United States in World War II It marked the 70th anniversary of the bombing and Gottemoeller became the first senior American official to attend the annual memorial 108 Kennedy was only the second US ambassador to attend With representatives of 100 countries in attendance Japanese prime minister Shinzō Abe reiterated Japan s official support for the abolition of nuclear weapons 109 Kennedy resigned as the United States Ambassador to Japan shortly before Donald Trump was sworn in as the 45th President of the United States She formally left Japan as Ambassador on January 18 2017 110 In recognition of her service Kennedy was awarded Japan s Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun in 2021 111 United States Ambassador to Australia Kennedy and U S Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman at a memorial in Guadalcanal Solomon Islands in August 2022 On December 15 2021 President Joe Biden nominated Kennedy to be the United States Ambassador to Australia 112 113 Hearings on her nomination were held before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on April 7 2022 The committee favorably reported her to the Senate floor on May 4 2022 She was confirmed by the Senate on May 5 2022 by voice vote 114 Kennedy was officially sworn in on June 10 2022 115 She presented her credentials to Governor General David Hurley on July 25 2022 116 Works publishedKennedy and Ellen Alderman have written two books together on civil liberties In Our Defense The Bill of Rights In Action 1991 117 The Right to Privacy 1995 117 On her own Kennedy has edited these New York Times best selling volumes The Best Loved Poems of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis 2001 117 Profiles in Courage for Our Time 2002 117 A Patriot s Handbook 2003 117 A Family of Poems My Favorite Poetry for Children 2005 117 She is also the author of A Family Christmas a collection of poems prose and personal notes from her family history 2007 ISBN 978 1 4013 2227 4 In April 2011 a new collection of poetry She Walks In Beauty A Woman s Journey Through Poems edited and introduced by Caroline Kennedy was published She launched the book at the John F Kennedy Library amp Museum at Columbia Point Dorchester MA See alsoKennedy family treeReferencesCitations a b Sachs Andrea May 13 2002 10 Questions for Caroline Kennedy Time Archived from the original on December 27 2008 Retrieved December 16 2008 a b Transcript Larry King Interview with Caroline Kennedy Larry King Live CNN May 7 2002 Retrieved December 16 2008 a b c Caroline Kennedy President John F Kennedy Library Foundation Archived from the original on October 3 2006 Retrieved December 27 2015 United States Embassy To Japan Former Ambassadors Archived from the original on August 24 2019 Retrieved May 7 2017 Gary Ginsberg on her campaigning for Obama cited in MacFarquhar Larissa April 18 2009 The Kennedy Who Couldn t The Age Good Weekend supplement pp 12 16 Landler Mark July 24 2013 Obama Nominates Caroline Kennedy to Be Ambassador to Japan The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 6 2017 PN1661 Nomination of Caroline Kennedy for Department of State 117th Congress 2021 2022 www congress gov May 5 2022 a b c Joynt Carol Ross August 22 2012 5 Georgetown Locations Rich in Kennedy History Washingtonian Retrieved March 21 2015 Neil Diamond Caroline Kennedy Inspired Sweet Caroline Fox News November 20 2007 Archived from the original on September 19 2008 Retrieved December 19 2008 Caroline Kennedy Shares White House with a Menagerie paid archive The New York Times June 26 1961 p 33 Heymann p 66 People Time August 3 1962 Archived from the original on December 29 2008 a b Heymann pp 110 114 Hunter Marjorie December 7 1963 Mrs Kennedy is in new home declines 3 acre Arlington plot PDF The New York Times pp 1 13 Retrieved April 13 2015 Hays Jakon Watts Maureen May 21 2017 May 1967 Caroline christens a carrier The Virginian Pilot Retrieved December 26 2017 John F Kennedy CVA 67 Retrieved December 19 2008 Heymann pp 145 46 Heymann pp 152 54 Heymann p 167 Heymann p 176 Heymann p 178 Heymann p 202 Weinraub Bernard October 24 1975 Bomb Kills a Doctor Near London Home of Caroline Kennedy A Narrow Escape for Miss Kennedy paid archive The New York Times p 1 Retrieved December 5 2008 Gifts From the World to the White House Caroline Kennedy s Doll Collection 1961 63 JFK Library www jfklibrary org Retrieved October 18 2020 Kennedy Move to City Sets Off School Speculation Upper East Side Offers a Variety of Institutions for Caroline and John Published 1964 The New York Times July 16 1964 Retrieved October 18 2020 a b Heymann p 203 a b c d Mitchell Greg December 13 2008 Caroline Kennedy s Journalism Days And Meeting Elvis Editor amp Publisher Irvine California Retrieved October 28 2011 Andersen p 219 UPI photo archives 1980 UPI June 5 1980 Retrieved August 3 2012 Heymann p 264 Arrest Made in Threat On Caroline Kennedy The New York Times December 8 1984 Heymann p 299 Caroline Kicks Up Her Heels in London and Mother Worries Back Home People November 24 1975 Archived from the original on January 16 2013 Retrieved January 12 2023 Caroline Bouvier Kennedy to wed Edwin Schlossberg The New York Times March 2 1986 The engagement of Caroline Bouvier Kennedy and Edwin Arthur Schlossberg has been announced by her mother Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis of New York A summer wedding is planned Anderson p 11 Anderson p 4 Allen Mike July 22 1999 Bodies From Kennedy Crash Are Found The New York Times Landau p 20 Blow p 317 CNN Transcript Reliable Sources George Folds CNN January 6 2001 Retrieved December 28 2011 Mcfadden Robert D May 20 1994 Death of a First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Dies of Cancer at 64 The New York Times p 1 Retrieved December 12 2012 Saul Michael December 24 2008 Caroline Kennedy The 100M Woman New York Daily News Retrieved December 24 2008 Salant Jonathan D August 20 2013 Caroline Kennedy Worth Up to 278 Million Records Show Bloomberg News Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Caroline Kennedy Youtube Charity Group Recalls John Kennedy Jr The New York Times December 8 1999 JFK s First Lady Caroline Kennedy Makes Her Political Debut As She Backs Gore For President Daily Mirror London August 17 2000 Archived from the original on June 10 2014 Nagourney Adam August 16 2000 The Democrats The Kennedy Factor 40 Years Later Invoking Spirit of New Frontier The New York Times Halbfinger David W December 15 2008 Resume Long on Politics but Short on Public Office The New York Times Retrieved December 16 2008 Herszenhorn David M August 20 2004 Caroline Kennedy Is Leaving Fund Raising Job for Schools The New York Times Goodnough Abby October 2 2002 Caroline Kennedy Takes Post As Fund Raiser for Schools The New York Times Board and Officers The Fund for Public Schools Fund for Public Schools Archived from the original on August 10 2014 Retrieved August 9 2014 Board of Directors Fund for Public Schools Retrieved December 17 2008 Profile in Courage Award John F Kennedy Library Foundation Retrieved December 17 2008 Clymer Adam May 22 2001 Ford Wins Kennedy Award For Courage of Nixon Pardon The New York Times American Ballet Theatre Board of Governing Trustees American Ballet Theatre Archived from the original on October 17 2013 Retrieved December 17 2008 Caroline Kennedy Lynda Bird Johnson Robb Speak At March On Washington Anniversary The Huffington Post August 28 2013 Aircraft Carrier John F Kennedy CVN 79 Christened at Newport News Shipbuilding Press release Huntington Ingalls Industries December 7 2019 Retrieved December 7 2019 Boeing Board Elects Caroline Kennedy as New Director Press release Boeing August 10 2017 Boeing Elects Lynne Doughtie to Board of Directors Following Resignation of Director Caroline Kennedy Press release Boeing January 15 2021 Kennedy Caroline January 27 2008 A President Like My Father Op Ed The New York Times Retrieved January 27 2008 Kennedy support for Obama CNN January 28 2008 Tale Margaret January 28 2008 Sen Kennedy endorses Obama for president McClatchy Federal Election Commission Finance Reports Transaction Query by Individual Contributor enter Kennedy Caroline for search Federal Election Commission Retrieved February 2 2008 Murray Mark June 4 2008 Obama Taps 3 to Lead Veep Committee First Read MSNBC Archived from the original on December 8 2008 Retrieved December 17 2008 Moore Michael August 19 2008 Caroline Pull a Cheney An Open Letter to Caroline Kennedy head of the Obama VP search team from Michael Moore michaelmoore com Archived from the original on October 6 2008 Retrieved December 17 2008 Bruni Frank June 26 2000 The 2000 Campaign The Texas Governor Bush Names Cheney Citing Integrity and Experience The New York Times Retrieved January 22 2009 Scorecard First Night Speeches Caroline Kennedy Time August 26 2008 Archived from the original on August 29 2008 Retrieved December 19 2008 President Obama Trading Card Set Sports Collectors Daily January 20 2009 Retrieved March 29 2021 Nakamura David February 22 2012 Rahm Emanuel Eva Longoria Caroline Kennedy Among Obama Campaign s National Co Chairs The Washington Post Archived from the original on February 23 2012 Young Shannon Caroline Kennedy urges voters to support Obama The Boston Globe Archived from the original on July 1 2012 Retrieved June 28 2012 Caroline Kennedy s possible political future AOL January 23 2017 Retrieved March 10 2017 Mulraney Frances January 25 2017 Could Caroline Kennedy be the next Hillary Clinton and run for president IrishCentral Retrieved January 25 2017 Oppenheimer Jerry January 22 2017 Could Caroline Kennedy be the baggage free Hillary Clinton New York Post Retrieved January 25 2017 Confessore Nicholas December 15 2008 Caroline Kennedy to Seek Clinton s Senate Seat The New York Times Retrieved December 15 2008 U S Senate Senators Home gt State Information gt New York Senate gov Retrieved on December 29 2013 Smith Ben December 16 2008 Kennedy s first endorsemen t Politico a b Einhorn Erin Saltonstall David December 19 2008 Records show Caroline Kennedy failed to cast her vote many times since 1988 New York Daily News Retrieved December 19 2008 Another Senator Kennedy WABC TV News New York Associated Press December 5 2008 Archived from the original on January 29 2009 Retrieved December 5 2008 a b Salstonstall David December 17 2008 We know Caroline Kennedy s name but not her views on the issues New York Daily News Retrieved December 20 2008 Kennedy for the Senate New York Post December 16 2008 Retrieved December 17 2008 Katz Celeste December 21 2008 Senate hopeful Caroline Kennedy talks gays war and education New York Daily News Friedman said Kennedy backed gun control and opposed the death penalty She also supports rolling back the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy but not right now due to the fragile state of the economy Confessore Nicholas December 20 2008 Kennedy Offers Hints of a Platform and a Few Surprises The New York Times Retrieved December 20 2008 Gedalyahu Tzvi Ben December 20 2008 Caroline Kennedy Jerusalem is Israel s Undivided Capital Israel National News Retrieved December 22 2008 Caroline Kennedy Is Decidedly Liberal by John Nichols The Nation reprinted by CBS News December 22 2008 Halbfinger David December 22 2008 Kennedy Declines to Make Financial Disclosure The New York Times Retrieved December 23 2008 Neumeister Larry December 26 2008 Kennedy says 9 11 Obama led her to public service Associated Press via Fox News Archived from the original on December 31 2008 Retrieved December 26 2008 Not Ready for SNL Caroline Kennedy s 168 You Knows The Wall Street Journal December 29 2008 a b Confessore Nicholas Hakim Danny January 22 2009 Kennedy Drops Bid for Senate Seat Citing Personal Reasons The New York Times Retrieved January 9 2010 Hakim Danny Confessore Nicholas February 3 2009 In Attack on Kennedy Echo of a Spitzer Tactic The New York Times Retrieved February 23 2009 Hakim Danny Confessore Nicholas February 20 2009 Paterson Had Staff Deny Kennedy Was Top Choice The New York Times Retrieved February 23 2009 Confessore Nicholas May 18 2009 Kennedy Says Children Had No Role in Senate Decision The New York Times Retrieved January 9 2010 Caroline Kennedy Withdraws Senate Bid NBC News January 22 2009 Retrieved January 22 2009 Caroline Kennedy chosen as Ambassador to Japan Politico July 24 2013 Retrieved July 24 2013 Landler Mark July 24 2013 Caroline Kennedy Chosen to Be Japan Ambassador The New York Times Retrieved July 24 2013 Nichols Hans February 27 2013 Caroline Kennedy Said to Be Candidate for Envoy to Japan Bloomberg Retrieved on December 29 2013 Kamen Al July 13 2013 Caroline Kennedy Poised for Japan The Washington Post Retrieved July 13 2013 Cassata Donna September 19 2013 Caroline Kennedy Humbled To Carry On Father s Legacy The Huffington Post Retrieved October 24 2014 Saenz Arlette October 16 2013 Caroline Kennedy Confirmed as Ambassador to Japan ABC News Retrieved November 5 2013 Caroline Kennedy sworn in as ambassador to Japan CBS News November 12 2013 Archived from the original on November 21 2013 Retrieved December 11 2013 Spitzer Kirk November 15 2013 Caroline Kennedy arrives in Japan as new ambassador USA Today Retrieved November 15 2013 Caroline Kennedy meets with Japanese diplomats The Washington Post November 18 2013 Kurtenbach Elaine November 19 2013 US envoy Caroline Kennedy meets Japan s emperor Houston Chronicle Wakatsuki Yoko December 10 2013 Caroline Kennedy meets atomic bomb survivors in Nagasaki CNN Retrieved December 10 2013 Reynolds Isabel August 5 2014 Kennedy Attends Hiroshima Ceremony 36 Years After First Visit Bloomberg News Yamaguchi Mari Japan marks 69th anniversary of Hiroshima bombing The Herald News Joliet Illinois a b US envoy visits Okinawa amid long running row over military bases The Guardian Manchester February 11 2014 Retrieved July 8 2014 Kennedy visits Hiroshima A bomb museum for first time as U S envoy The Japan Times April 18 2015 Hungo Jun Japan Remembers Hiroshima Bombing With Call to Abolish Nuclear Arms The Wall Street Journal August 5 2015 Retrieved August 6 2015 Soble Jonathan Hiroshima Commemorates 70th Anniversary of Atomic Bombing The New York Times August 6 2015 Retrieved August 6 2015 Moritsugu Ken January 17 2017 Caroline Kennedy Leaves Japan After Three Years as U S Ambassador Bloomberg News Associated Press Ex U S envoy Kennedy among foreign recipients of Japan decorations Kyodo News November 3 2021 President Biden Announces Key Diplomatic and Agency Nominees The White House December 15 2021 Retrieved July 23 2022 Wilkie Christina December 15 2021 Biden picks Caroline Kennedy and Michelle Kwan to be ambassadors CNBC Retrieved December 16 2021 Caroline Kennedy confirmed by US Senate as next ambassador to Australia ABC News May 6 2022 Retrieved May 6 2022 Caroline Kennedy sworn in as Australian ambassador in Canberra The Canberra Weekly June 13 2022 USEmbAustralia July 25 2022 Ambassador Caroline Kennedy met with Governor General David Hurley in Canberra to present her credentials as the United States Ambassador to Australia Tweet via Twitter a b c d e f In Book World Caroline Kennedy is a Powerhouse The New York Times January 15 2009 Retrieved December 26 2017 Book sources Andersen Christopher P 2004 Sweet Caroline Last Child of Camelot HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 103225 7 Heymann C David 2007 American Legacy The Story of John and Caroline Kennedy Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 74 349739 8 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Caroline Kennedy Appearances on C SPAN Ms Kennedy Regrets She s Unable to Be in the Senate Today Larissa MacFarquhar The New Yorker February 2 2009Diplomatic postsPreceded byJohn Roos United States Ambassador to Japan2013 2017 Succeeded byWilliam F HagertyPreceded byArthur B Culvahouse Jr United States Ambassador to Australia2022 present Incumbent Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Caroline Kennedy amp oldid 1151570493, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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