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- This file is copyright of Jens Schriver (c)
- It originates from the Evil House of Cheat
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- Essay Name : 1433.txt
- Uploader : Renavo
- Email Address :
- Language : English
- Subject : Biography
- Title : The Lost Kennedy Brother
- Grade : "A"
- School System : University
- Country : U.S.
- Author Comments : Good obscure history, great for JFK buffs!!
- Teacher Comments : "Great Job"
- Date : 11-22-96
- Site found at : Web search
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-
- The Lost Kennedy Brother
-
- The Kennedys may well be the most photographed, written about, and
- controversial family in American history, more so than the Hearsts and Rockefellers
- combined. Not only have they been prominent in recent American history, but in our
- nation's pop culture as well. When one thinks of the Kennedy brothers, certain images
- come to mind. Jack. The young and energetic President who was savagely killed. Bobby.
- The natural heir to the Kennedy throne who met a similar fate as his older brother. Ted.
- Never quite reaching the White House, he has nontheless made a name for himself as a
- major politician in the Senate.
- What many people are seemingly unaware of is that there existed another Kennedy
- brother, the eldest of the four. His name was Joseph Patrick Kennedy, Jr., named after his
- father and two years older than JFK. He was the son that his father had planned on
- molding to one day be President, not Jack. If not for Joe Jr.'s terrible fate, it would have
- most likely been him, and not JFK as our commander-in-chief.
- The Kennedy household was a patriarchy ruled by Joe Senior. He ruled with an
- iron fist and recieved deep respect, fear, and love from his family in return. Besides taking
- a part in their educational development, Joe Sr. also encouraged his children to compete in
- most everything against one another to win their father's favor. Out of this, a tense rivalry
- evolved between Joe Jr., and Jack, with the eldest son usually defeating the younger.
- Meanwhile, Joe Sr. did not hide the fact that Joe Jr. was his favorite son, molding him to
- become President to compensate for his failure to reach the White House. The spitting
- image of his father, Joe Jr. was destined for greatness. The intense rivalry between Joe Jr.
- and Jack continued into their early twenties when they enlisted in the armed services for
- World War II; both in the Navy, but Joe Jr. enlisting under Aviation.
- While Joe Jr. was stuck patrolling the Atlantic in mostly inactive recconaissance
- missions, Jack was made captain of a small PT boat in the Pacific war zone. On August 4,
- 1943, a Japanese destroyer mysteriously plowed into the smaller American craft, splitting it
- in half. JFK managed to grab a drowning crew member, and swim three miles to an island
- with the sailor in tow, where they were rescued almost a week later. In short, the "PT 109"
- incident made national headlines, and Jack was the newest hero of the American cause.
- Everyone in the family was thrilled about JFK's success......except for Joe Jr. of course. A
- family friend even heard the eldest son weeping in his sleep. He begged for a chance to
- show his family, especially his father, that he was better than Jack, just like before. He
- grey an insane jealousy over his brother's new found glory.
- Three weeks later, he was off to England to test himself in battle at last. Young Joe
- flew in the D-Day invasion in June 1944, but many of his fellow fliers remembered a
- driven desperation in his actions to prove he was the better, stronger sibling. His extended
- tour ending, he had all but given up hope and was packing his belongings when he heard of
- a top-secret mission in which experienced pilots were being sought. He immediately
- volunteered.
- The mission involved destroying a launching facility of German V-1 rockets by
- flying a plane full of explosives into the target, then bailing out before the imminent crash.
- The mission had been previously tried four times, but none of the bombers made it
- anywhere near the target. The night before take-off, the mission was to be delayed due to
- electrical malfunctions. Stubbornly wanting to prove himself to the world and his father,
- Joe Jr. called off the delay. On August 12, 1944, a little before six in the evening, Joe Jr.
- lifted off the runway on his PBY 4 bomber loaded with over ten tons of TNT. Twenty
- eight minutes after take-off, just after uttering "Spade Flush"to give up control of the
- bomber to the mother ship, there was a sudden gasp from Joe over the radio followed by a
- huge fireball and an explosion that damaged his escort planes. There was no doubt that
- Young Joe was dead.
- After the initial shock upon hearing the news, Joseph Kennedy Sr. took on his new
- protege, John Fitzgerald Kennedy. Up until that time, JFK was hoping to use his new
- found fame and eventually become a journalist or an author (his thesis Why England Slept
- was a Pulitzer Prize winner). Joe ignored his son's wishes and began to instill the art of
- politics which Jack would later learn to love. After World War II, his political career took
- off, and he won a seat in the House in 1946, the Senate in 1952, and eventually the
- Presidency in 1960. Through his political career, he sometimes felt like a stand-in for his
- dead brother. Nobody knows what may have happened had Joe Junior survived his death
- marked mission. Nonetheless, President John Kennedy went on to become the leader of
- his generation and his imprint on American history, unlike his older brother, will remain
- forever.
-
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