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- <text id=93HT1297>
- <link 93XV0050>
- <link 93XP0442>
- <link 93XP0207>
- <title>
- Kennedy:The 35th
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Kennedy Portrait
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 27, 1961
- The 35th
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The great day was at hand, and all seemed ready. The White
- House and the dome of the Capitol shimmered under fresh coats of
- paint. Timetables had been meticulously planned; the parade, for
- example, would last two hours and 46 minutes, not a moment
- longer. The invitations had gone out; and from all the states of
- the Union swarmed victorious Democrats, rushing jubilantly from
- party to party, Andy Jacksons in black ties.
- </p>
- <p> Then came the storm. The snow began to fall at noon, Jan.
- 19. It strangled Washington. Out like shattered glass went all
- the best-laid plans. For agonizing hours the huge event seemed
- destined to become a fiasco. Foul-ups, fumbles and failures fell
- upon one another in a tangled head. The inaugural ceremony itself
- might have to be postponed.
- </p>
- <p> But it was not postponed. Snow stopped falling, the sky
- cleared, and a white winter sun shone down. At 12:51 o'clock on
- Jan. 20, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, his breath frosty in the frigid
- air, raised his right hand and pronounced the fateful words: "I
- do solemnly swear..."
- </p>
- <p> Thus last week did Jack Kennedy become the 35th President of
- the U.S. This was his time of personal triumph. But it was more
- than that. For the moment of Kennedy's oath taking gave meaning
- to all the ritual and ceremony, to all the high jinks and low
- capers, to all the confusion bordering on chaos, that had gone
- before in a wild and wonderful week.
- </p>
- <p> Getting Ready. Into that week had gone hundreds of thousands
- of man-hours. For more than a month before, workers on double
- shift had labored at constructing the stands in front of the
- Capitol. No detail was overlooked. The National Park Service,
- seeking to achieve a touch of spring, sprayed fresh green dye on
- the lawns surrounding the Lincoln Memorial. Trees along the
- inaugural route got a light coasting of Roost-No-More, a compound
- guaranteed to put Washington's pesky starlings to flight. Secret
- Service agents battened down manhole covers on the right of way
- to forestall any bomb-planting saboteur, set up surveillance
- posts on rooftops and other strategic spots, organized an overall
- security guard of 5,000 men.
- </p>
- <p> In Rock Creek Park, the police cavalry, worried lest its
- horses should react violently to the roar of the parade and
- crowds, spent hours conditioning the mounts by feeding them heavy
- doses of Spike Jones recordings over loudspeakers. As a result,
- by Inauguration Day the horses were immune to noise, but the cops
- were nervous wrecks. Parade officials put on a small-scale dry
- run down Pennsylvania Avenue, pronounced everything satisfactory.
- They arranged for a helicopter to hover over the parade and radio
- traffic information to an Army-run command post. There, in a van
- off Pennsylvania Avenue, a control center was fitted out with
- radio-telephone connections to a swarm of roving observers.
- Closed-circuit TV cameras focused on possible bottlenecks,
- relayed their pictures to a row of TV monitors at the command
- post.
- </p>
- <p> The Boom. The rush to Washington began early, and by midweek
- it seemed easier to get a Cabinet job than a bed. Hotels, motels
- and boardinghouses were jammed, and the overflow reached as far
- away as Baltimore and Annapolis. Inaugural committees, swamped
- for tickets to the official functions, were in despair. It was
- hard enough to satisfy the requirements of the bigwigs who poured
- into town; even more embarrassing were the littlewigs who had
- been sent souvenir inaugural invitations and, mistaking them for
- the real thing, commandeered white ties and tails and rushed
- straightaway to Washington. Scalpers swept into action, unloaded
- $3 grandstand seats for $15 apiece, sold reservations for
- windowside tables in key restaurants along the route.
- </p>
- <p> And then, adding to all the excitement and giving even more
- bang to the boom of the Washington real estate market, came the
- members of the Kennedy clan. They congregated in the Georgetown
- area soon to be vacated by Jack. The President-elect's sister and
- brother-in-law, Jean and Steve Smith, already lived on O Street.
- Now old Joe Kennedy and his wife Rose rented a P Street home for
- a tidy $200 a day. Ted Kennedy and his wife took over a place
- just across the way, next to the Christian Herters. Kennedy
- Sisters Eunice Shriver and Pat Lawford rented still another, a
- block away.
- </p>
- <p> Bouffant & Beads. Swirling with Kennedys, Washington society
- turned itself inside out in its most glittering display in years.
- Dinner dances, luncheons, buffets, receptions, cocktail
- parties--they flashed on and off like the lights on an electronic
- computer. No event could be considered a success without the
- appearance of at least one Kennedy--and, since there were more
- than enough Kennedys around, there were few failures on that
- account. The inaugural committee threw a huge affair at the
- National Gallery to welcome Bess Truman, the Cabinet wives, the
- Kennedy and Johnson ladies, and other women of importance; the
- hall became a rustling sea of mink and jewels, bouffant hairdo
- and beaded gowns. Over at the Statler-Hilton, House Speaker Sam
- Rayburn hosted a party for Lyndon Johnson; at the Mayflower,
- Young Democrats danced with anxious glances at the entrance,
- hoping for the arrival of Jack Kennedy. He did not show--but
- Brother Bobby and his wife Ethel saved the day. Hour after hour,
- top names turned up at parties given by other top names. Kennedy
- looked in on a dinner for Harry Truman; Pundit Walter Lippmann
- gave a cocktail party for some seven score luminaries in arts
- and science ("nobody below the rank of Nobel prizewinner");
- Eleanor Roosevelt and former New York Senator Herbert Lehman
- tirelessly made the rounds.
- </p>
- <p> Amid all the gaiety, the first flakes of snow were barely
- noticed. But they kept falling--and falling and falling. By
- nightfall on inaugural eve, confusion was complete. At least
- 10,000 cars were stalled and abandoned. Airplanes stacked up over
- the airport, then flew away; Herbert Hoover, winging up from
- Miami, had to turn back, never got to the inaugural. It took Pat
- Nixon 2 1/2 hours to get from her Wesley Heights home to the
- Senate Office Building, where her husband was holding a farewell
- party for his staff. Secretary of State Christian Herter got
- stuck for two hours in the traffic jam. At the White House, 30
- members of President Eisenhower's staff were snowbound for the
- night. Determined partygoers struggled through the storm, some of
- the men in white ties and parkas, some of the women wearing
- leotards under their gowns.
- </p>
- <p> But despite the blinding snow and the treacherous ice and
- the marrow-freezing wind, Democratic hearts stayed high. "To hell
- with it all," cried one celebrator. "We've elected a President!"
- They had indeed--and Jack Kennedy moved relentlessly through
- his week, seemingly never pausing even for breath and totally
- unfazed by the soaring confusion. He was at all times the central
- and dominating figure of inauguration week.
- </p>
- <p> Leaving Wife Jackie in Palm Beach early in the week (she
- flew up to Washington later), Kennedy climbed aboard his twin-
- engined Convair Caroline for a quick trip to the capital. As the
- plane turned northward, Kennedy removed his coat, slouched down
- in his seat behind a desk, drank a glass of milk and sawed away
- at a medium-rare filet of beef. Lunch done, he squinted out the
- window, picked up a ruled pad of yellow paper and a ballpoint
- pen. Over the first three pages, he scribbled a new opening for
- his inaugural speech--even while, just a few feet away,
- Secretary Evelyn Lincoln was hammering out an older version.
- </p>
- <p> "It's tough," mused Jack Kennedy. "The speech to the
- Massachusetts legislature went so well. It's going to be hard to
- meet that standard." He read the three pages aloud, ticking off
- historical allusions. He paused for a moment, then murmured some
- doubts about the long introductory part of the speech. "What I
- want to say," he explained, "is that the spirit of the revolution
- still is here, still is a part of this country." He wrote for a
- minute or two, crossed out a few words, then flung the tablet on
- the desk and began talking, ranging over a wide variety of
- subjects, both personal and political. He was concerned about the
- Eisenhower budget, felt that it was unrealistically balanced and
- that all the red ink to follow would be blamed on the new
- Administration. He was pleased with his Cabinet: "I've got good
- men. It looks good." He was sure that Lyndon Johnson would do
- well in his new job, though he was worried about Johnson's weight
- (L.B.J. has lost 30 lbs. since Election Day). Things would start
- happening the moment he moved into the White House; on the day
- after the inauguration he would issue an executive order,
- doubling the allotment of surplus food sent to depressed areas.
- "I'm going to start seeing people right away," he said.
- Secretary Lincoln had already begun to book appointments, and an
- order had gone out to the Kennedy staff to be at work at 9 a.m.
- on Saturday.
- </p>
- <p> Arriving in Washington, Kennedy kept on the move. He watched
- Ike's farewell speech on TV, struggled into his formal clothes
- and hurried over to Sister Jean's house for a dinner dance. Then,
- after dropping in at a party tossed by West Coast Financier Bert
- Lytton, Kennedy took off again, in a chartered DC-6, for New York
- and a peaceful night away from the social demands of the capital.
- He got his final fittings for his inauguration outfit (cutaway,
- grey waistcoat, striped pants, topper), ordered a few business
- suits at $225 apiece, got a checkup from his dentist ("No
- cavities") and hopped on the plane for Washington again.
- </p>
- <p> Friend in a Hurry. On the morning before Inauguration Day,
- the light had just begun to creep down Georgetown's N Street when
- a motorcycle messenger clattered to a stop beneath Jack Kennedy's
- shuttered window. Awakened by the noise, the President-to-be rose,
- looked out, grimaced and went back to bed. A little later, the
- motorcyclist returned, and Kennedy called down to the Secret
- Service man on guard and asked for quiet. The guard shooed the
- driver away; but soon newsmen began to gather, and Kennedy
- abandoned his bed, snapped on his light and got dressed.
- </p>
- <p> Alone in the back seat of his cream-colored Lincoln, he rode
- to the White House for his last preinaugural meeting with Dwight
- Eisenhower. The two talked privately for about 45 minutes, during
- which Ike demonstrated the procedure for evacuating the White
- House in case of emergency. Ike lifted the phone, spoke a few
- words; five minutes later, an Army helicopter was hovering over
- the White House lawn. Suitably impressed, Kennedy strolled over
- to the Cabinet Room with Ike to meet with incoming Secretaries
- Dillon, McNamara and Rusk and their outgoing opposite numbers.
- Laughed Ike: "I've shown my friend here how to get out in a
- hurry."
- </p>
- <p> With President Eisenhower presiding, the group reviewed the
- problems of state that would soon become the responsibility of
- the Kennedy Administration. Each Eisenhower Cabinet member
- explained programs and policies existing in his particular field,
- and after each presentation Kennedy asked sharp, probing
- questions. At the end of the session Jack Kennedy thanked Ike
- for his help and cooperation. Replied President Eisenhower:
- "You are welcome--more than welcome. This is a question of the
- Government of the United States. It is not a partisan question."
- </p>
- <p> Missing Musicians. As Kennedy left the White House, the snow
- began to fall. It did not slow him down--then or later. Jackie
- Kennedy, arriving on the Caroline, had taken over virtually the
- whole house on N Street for her hairdressers and other
- attendants; Kennedy, fleeing from this female world, decided to
- make his temporary headquarters at the nearby home of a friend,
- Artist William Walton, an erstwhile journalist. In the afternoon,
- he drove to a Governors' reception at the Sheraton-Park, paid his
- respects all around, picked up Harry Truman and drove back home
- again. By now the traffic was tied in knots, and Kennedy canceled
- out on two receptions.
- </p>
- <p> That evening came a moment for which all Washington
- womanhood had been waiting: Jacqueline Kennedy, stunning in a
- white gown of silk ottoman, emerged coatless from the house with
- her husband, lifted her skirt daintily above the snow and headed
- off for the festivities of inauguration eve. The first big event
- was the inaugural concert, held in Constitution Hall, unmarred
- for the Kennedys even by the fact that 60 out of 100 musicians,
- including Soloist Mischa Elman, had failed to make it through the
- snowstorm for the occasion.
- </p>
- <p> Next on the list was Frankie Sinatra's Hollywood-style Gala
- at the cavernous National Armory. Happily for the Democratic
- Party coffers, the tickets had been sold long before the
- snowstorm--and just as Sinatra had predicted, the show made a
- mint: nearly $1,400,000 (single seats, $100; boxes, $10,000).
- Unhappily for the showfolk, however, only two-thirds of the
- ticket-holders (some 6,000 people) turned up, and what with the
- traffic delays, the extravaganza got under way nearly two hours
- late. The biggest stars, of course, were the Kennedys themselves,
- and they had a fine time watching Conductor Leonard Bernstein,
- Ethel Merman, Milton Berle, Nat King Cole, Mahalia Jackson,
- Juliet Prowse, Sir Laurence Olivier, Jimmy Durante and a squad
- of others, including Brother-in-Law Peter Lawford.
- </p>
- <p> Father Joe Kennedy's big bash at a downtown restaurant
- followed Frankie's Gala. An exhausted Jackie Kennedy went home,
- but all the rest of the clan, surrounded by the Hollywood troupe
- and scores of Kennedy friends, crowded in for a sedate but
- delightful few hours of champagne, caviar, hors d'oeuvres and
- supper. It was 4 a.m. before Jack Kennedy slipped into bed.
- </p>
- <p> Inaugural Day came clear and cold. Three thousand men, using
- 700 plows and trucks, had worked throughout the night removing
- almost eight inches of snow from Washington's main streets. Jack
- Kennedy's big day began when he attended Mass at nearby Holy
- Trinity Church, then drove to the White House with Jackie for
- coffee with Dwight and Mamie Eisenhower, the Lyndon Johnsons, the
- Richard Nixons and several congressional leaders. Then, the day's
- preliminaries done, President Dwight Eisenhower and President-
- elect John Kennedy emerged in top hats and smiles, stepped into
- the black, bubble-top presidential limousine, and drove down
- Pennsylvania Avenue toward Capitol Hill and the drama that
- awaited them there.
- </p>
- <p> "Father Joe?" Shorn of snow, shining in the sun's glare, the
- wide avenues and the Capitol plaza bristled with tens of
- thousands of onlookers in bright stocking caps, fur coats and
- warm blankets as protection against the 20 degree temperature.
- The big inaugural platform on the steps of the Capitol's east
- portico was studded with eight white Corinthian columns matching
- those of the Capitol itself. U.S. flags whipped in the stiff wind
- above the great marble office buildings and the Library of
- Congress.
- </p>
- <p> Slowly the platform filled with the great figures of
- Washington and the nation: the Justices of the Supreme Court, the
- members of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, the
- diplomatic corps, the new Cabinet officers, the Joint Chiefs of
- Staff--and, of course, the Kennedy family. "Is that Father Joe
- over there?" asked Arkansas' Senator John McClellan. "I do
- believe it is." It was. Joe Kennedy, beaming and laughing, was
- telling his friends that "this is what I've been looking forward
- to for a long time. It's a great day."
- </p>
- <p> Inevitably, the ceremony ran behind schedule. Jack Kennedy,
- waiting in a small chamber near the rotunda, whistled softly to
- himself. At last he got the word that everything was ready,
- walked out onto the windswept platform, sat down next to Ike, and
- the two passed a few minutes in an animated discussion of
- Cornelius Ryan's book on D-Day, The Longest Day, which Kennedy
- had been reading. It was 12:13 o'clock--and even though he had
- not yet taken his oath of office, Kennedy, under the U.S.
- Constitution, had been President of the U.S. since the stroke of
- noon. The Marine Band struck up America the Beautiful. Contralto
- Marian Anderson sang The Star-Spangled Banner. Then, as Boston's
- Richard Cardinal Cushing delivered his long invocation, smoke
- began wafting from the lectern. On and on the cardinal prayed--upward and upward poured the smoke. When Cardinal Cushing
- finished, Dick Nixon and several other volunteer firemen rushed
- to the lectern. The fire was located in a short-circuited
- electric motor that powered the lectern; the plug was pulled and
- the smoke drifted away.
- </p>
- <p> Dedication. The ceremony moved on: Lyndon Baines Johnson
- rose, raised his right hand and took the oath, administered, at
- his request, by his friend, mentor and fellow Texan, Sam Rayburn.
- Poet Robert Frost, his white hair fluttering in the wind, tried
- to read a newly written dedication to his famed poem, "The Gift
- Outright." But the bright sun blinded the old (86) New Englander,
- the wind whipped the paper in his hands, and he faltered. In the
- front row, Jackie Kennedy snapped up her head in concern. Lyndon
- Johnson leaped to shade Frost's paper with his hat, but it did no
- good. At length Robert Frost, proud of the fact that Jack Kennedy
- had invited him and 155 other writers, artists and scientists to
- the inaugural, turned boldly to the microphones and said, "This
- was supposed to be a preface to a poem that I can say to you
- without seeing it. The poem goes this way..." The crowd left
- off its embarrassed titters over the old man's bobble and listened
- quietly as Frost recited from memory his finely chiseled lines:
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l> ...Such as we were we gave ourselves outright</l>
- <l> (The deed of gift was many deeds of war)</l>
- <l> To the land vaguely realizing westward,</l>
- <l> But still unstoried, artless, unenhanced,</l>
- <l> Such as she was, such as she will become.</l>
- </qt>
- <p> Raised Hands. At last came the event that Jack Kennedy had
- awaited so long and worked so tirelessly to bring into reality.
- To the ring of fanfares he arose, removed his black topcoat,
- stepped forward with Chief Justice Earl Warren and, over a
- closed, family Douay Bible, repeated his oath in a clear, crisp
- voice. Whatever lay ahead of him, this would always remain the
- high moment of John Kennedy's life.
- </p>
- <p> Kennedy's inaugural speech, destined to be famed within
- minutes of its delivery, was about the last solemn occasion of
- the day. That afternoon the new President and his First Lady
- drove to the reviewing stand in front of the White House to see
- the inaugural parade. With a steady thump-de-thump of drums and a
- silvery splash of cymbals and brass, the marchers tootled
- endlessly down the avenue. Trundling along, interspersed with the
- 32,000 marchers, were more than 40 huge floats: Massachusetts'
- contribution portrayed highlights of Kennedy's life; Texas
- proudly hoisted a big portrait of Lyndon Johnson between an
- enormous Lone Star and a globe that sprouted rockets ("From
- Lone Star to Space Star"); Hawaii launched a star of orchids
- fitted with a device that pumped scent out along the way; the
- Navy trucked in a PT boat carrying members of Kennedy's wartime
- crew--and when the President spied it, he raised his hands and
- cheered.
- </p>
- <p> Now and then, a Kennedy sister or brother joined President
- Kennedy at the front reviewing position. Father Joe shared the
- spotlight for a long while, and Mother Rose watched too. They
- came--and they left, and even Jackie Kennedy disappeared after
- a suitable time. Two and a half hours passed, then three, then
- 3 1/2. The sun went down, but the President of the U.S., popping
- his topper on and off his head, stuck it out to the very
- end--and seemed to be having the time of his life.
- </p>
- <p> Do It Again. It was a shuddering thought, but there was
- still more--much more--to come. The time had arrived for the
- partymakers to get back to work, and Jack Kennedy is no man to
- shun parties. Leaving Jacqueline to rest at the White House,
- Kennedy headed off for the most important private social function
- of the week: a dinner party at the home of his Choate schoolmate
- (now a Washington lobbyist) George Wheeler. Dashing back to the
- White House, he picked up Jackie and started a tour of the five
- inaugural balls. For a while Jackie, glowing in a silver-
- embroidered gown, stuck it out; then shortly after midnight, she
- gave up. Touching down at each of the massive balls, Kennedy
- found the halls so jammed that dancing was impossible. To one
- crowd he cracked: "I hope we can all meet here tomorrow at the
- same place at 1 o'clock and do it all over again." To another he
- quipped: "I must say that you dance much better than at any of
- the other balls. I don't know a better way to spend an evening
- than for you to be standing and looking at us and for us to be
- looking at you." To a third, he said: "We still have one
- unfulfilled ambition. We still would like to see somebody dance."
- </p>
- <p> At 2 a.m. Kennedy dropped his police escort and churned
- through the snowy side streets with his Secret Service and press
- detail to the Georgetown home of Columnist Joe Alsop. He tarried
- at a party there for about an hour and a half, came out alone,
- puffing serenely on a cigar, and rode off to the White House. And
- so, at last, to bed in the home he would occupy for the next four
- years.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-