Revealing the Surprising Financial Legacy of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis - Veja Store Site
Onassisfinanced the construction of the Olympic Tower in New York City.Onassis was a friend ofJacquelineKennedy, widow of U.S. Aristotle Onassis, richest man, underdog, history, Greek, wealth, legacy, success, 20th century, Greeks, journey, global success, legendary figure, business magnate. Jacqueline Bouvier KennedyOnassis, fondly known as Jackie, was born on July 28, 1929, to Janet Norton Lee and John Vernou Bouvier III. Growing up in New York and Newport, Rhode Island, Jacqueline enjoyed a privileged upbringing marked by exposure to high society. The 1960s expected a First Lady above all to embody dignity, restraint, and representation. Aristotelis (or Aristotle) Sokratis Onassis (1906-1975) was a wealthy shipping magnate and husband to the widowed JacquelineKennedy. Red became a father figure to Jackie’s children after JFK’s murder. But the potential of danger seemed unthinkable on that Easter weekend, when Jackie tied her hair back in a scarf, donned a red-and-white gingham Lilly shift and talked to the children in her whispery voice. Onassis quit Viking in 1977 after the firm published a novel by Jeffrey Archer, “Shall We Tell the President?,” which centered on a plot to assassinate a fictional president based on Ted Kennedy. Although not directly involved with the book, she was apparently aware of its contents.
Onassisfinanced the construction of the Olympic Tower in New York City.Onassis was a friend ofJacquelineKennedy, widow of U.S. Aristotle Onassis, richest man, underdog, history, Greek, wealth, legacy, success, 20th century, Greeks, journey, global success, legendary figure, business magnate. Jacqueline Bouvier KennedyOnassis, fondly known as Jackie, was born on July 28, 1929, to Janet Norton Lee and John Vernou Bouvier III. Growing up in New York and Newport, Rhode Island, Jacqueline enjoyed a privileged upbringing marked by exposure to high society. The 1960s expected a First Lady above all to embody dignity, restraint, and representation. Aristotelis (or Aristotle) Sokratis Onassis (1906-1975) was a wealthy shipping magnate and husband to the widowed JacquelineKennedy. Red became a father figure to Jackie’s children after JFK’s murder. But the potential of danger seemed unthinkable on that Easter weekend, when Jackie tied her hair back in a scarf, donned a red-and-white gingham Lilly shift and talked to the children in her whispery voice. Onassis quit Viking in 1977 after the firm published a novel by Jeffrey Archer, “Shall We Tell the President?,” which centered on a plot to assassinate a fictional president based on Ted Kennedy. Although not directly involved with the book, she was apparently aware of its contents.