Read Kick Kennedy: The Charmed Life and Tragic Death of the Favorite Kennedy Daughter Online

Authors: Barbara Leaming

Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Rich & Famous, #Royalty, #Women, #History, #Europe, #Great Britain

Kick Kennedy: The Charmed Life and Tragic Death of the Favorite Kennedy Daughter (36 page)

BOOK: Kick Kennedy: The Charmed Life and Tragic Death of the Favorite Kennedy Daughter
3.28Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

accompanied by his aunt: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, July 13, 1938, JFKL.

Rose Kennedy had her reservations: Debo Devonshire to BL, author interview.

“favorite”: Anne Tree to BL, author interview.

acquiesced to his brother’s claim: Andrew Devonshire to BL, author interview.

“We listened to the radio for news flashes…”: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, September 19, 1938, JFKL.

Three

September 21, 1938: Dates based on Jean Ogilvy’s diary.

two chairs remained conspicuously empty: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

Jean perceived that Kick: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

Lady Airlie was the parent: Debo Devonshire to BL, author interview.

tended to be good-humored: Debo Devonshire to BL, author interview.

he was instructed to tell: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

As the girls understood: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

“All you can hear or talk about…”: Kathleen Kennedy to Lem Billings, September 23, 1938, JFKL.

“You are all dangerous…”: Lord Airlie quoted by Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

Accompanying them now: Debo Devonshire, author interview.

The duchess privately preferred: Debo Devonshire to BL, author interview.

even in this romantic setting: Debo Devonshire to BL, author interview.

The determined silliness and laughter: Debo Devonshire to BL, author interview.

Ivar Colquhoun sprayed: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, September 19, 1938, JFKL.

Jakie Astor: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview. Also, Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, September 19, 1938, JFKL.

she listened to: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, September 19, 1938, JFKL.

“I have never seen such happiness”: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, September 26, 1938, JFKL.

Munich and the war were the only topics of conversation: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

“to find peace and everyone deliriously happy”: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, September 26, 1938, JFKL.

went to stay at Churchdale Hall: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, October 3, 1938, JFKL.

talked for hours every night: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, October 3, 1938, JFKL.

One speech: Andrew Devonshire to BL, author interview.

“Peace he certainly…”:
Hansard
, House of Commons Debate, European Situation, October 4, 1938, vol. 339, cc 169–308 UK Parliament.

“These precedents do not justify…”: Hansard.

Andrew would darkly reflect: Andrew Devonshire to BL, author interview.

Kick had a good deal more freedom: Debo Devonshire to BL, author interview.

travel to Cambridge in the company of Jane Kenyon-Slaney: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, October 27, 1938, JFKL.

“All Billy’s relatives…”: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, November 23, 1938, JFKL.

To the duchess’s perception: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview. Also, Anne Tree to BL, author interview.

“normally reticent”: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

she had no intention of giving in: Anne Tree to BL, author interview.

to Billy’s right: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, December 9, 1938, JFKL.

a tacit acknowledgment: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

“dirty looks”: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, December 9, 1938, JFKL.

at the 400 Club: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, December 9, 1938, JFKL.

“mad games…”: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, December 10, 1938, JFKL.

the better part of the evening: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, December 13, 1938, JFKL.

breaks a previously arranged date: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, December 14, 1938, JFKL.

several long lunches: Jean Ogilvy’s diary.

went on to Ciro’s: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, December 21, 1938, JFKL.

she confessed: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

Rose had exhibited: Debo Devonshire to BL, author interview.

she dreaded the explosion: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

Kick had indignantly objected: Betty Coxe Spalding to BL, author interview.

“acted as if…”: Arthur Krock, transcript of interview by Joan and Clay Blair Jr., Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston (hereafter MHS).

“Such is Kick!…”: Kathleen Kennedy’s scrapbook, JFKL.

the cousins remarked: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

forcefully confronted with the duties: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

he felt he would be: Anne Tree to BL, author interview.

would not have been permitted: Kathleen Kennedy, diary entry, February 14, 1939, JFKL.

Billy had become absorbed: Anne Tree to BL, author interview.

a model for the influential figure: Anne Tree to BL, author interview. Also, Richard Holderness to BL, author interview.

“The Prime Minister…”: The Duke of Devonshire quoted in Robert Kee,
The World We Left Behind
(London: Weidenfeld, 1990), p. 144.

more than a thousand spectators: Julian Amery,
Approach March: A Venture in Autobiography
(London: Hutchinson and Co., 1973), p. 115.

undertook to make Kick understand: Andrew Devonshire to BL, author interview.

showed them a movie: The scene of the film screening is based on interviews with Fiona Arran and Jean Lloyd.

“grow up more quickly”: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

“not to waste a minute”: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

“I have seen much…”: Robert Rhodes James, ed.,
Chips: The Diaries of Sir Henry Channon
(London: Phoenix, 1996), p. 204.

He thereupon spoke: Anne Tree to BL, author interview.

out of the question: Anne Tree to BL, author interview.

forbade her: Debo Devonshire to BL, author interview.

more than 2,500 guests: Debo Devonshire’s scrapbook.

the more conspicuous by her absence: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

did persist in talking about her: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

“These Catholic girls are a menace!”: Lord Dick Cavendish quoted by Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

the Duchess of Richmond’s ball: Andrew Devonshire,
Accidents of Fortune
(Norwich; Michael Russell, 2004), p. 26.

officially entered the Coldstream Guards: Public Records Office, Kew (hereafter PRO).

“Some day—somehow”: Kathleen Kennedy to Rose F. Kennedy, July 6, 1944, JFKL.

Four

“like a beautiful dream”: Kathleen Kennedy to Joseph P. Kennedy, September 18, 1939, JFKL.

“Thanks a lot…”: Kathleen Kennedy to Joseph P. Kennedy, September 18, 1939, JFKL.

“killing time”: Kathleen Kennedy quoted in Peter Collier and David Horowitz,
The Kennedys: An American Drama
(New York: Summit, 1984), p. 131.

“a castle and not…”: Amanda Smith, ed.,
Hostage to Fortune: The Letters of Joseph P. Kennedy
(New York: Viking, 2011), p. 517.

“a person…”: Lem Billings quoted in Doris Kearns Goodwin,
The Kennedys and the Fitzgeralds
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1987), p. 703.

Jean Ogilvy sent word: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

“He is…”: Robert Rhodes James, ed.,
Chips: The Diaries of Sir Henry Channon,
p. 22.

“They bemoaned your absence…”: Nancy Astor to Kathleen Kennedy, n.d., UR.

where her real life and real friends: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

a sealed private message: Nancy Astor to Philip Lothian, November 27, 1939, UR.

“scandalous”: Nancy Astor to Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., February 2, 1940, UR.

shown no such reluctance: Philip Lothian to Nancy Astor, December 2, 1939, UR.

the ambassador wrote to notify: Joseph P. Kennedy to Rose F. Kennedy, April 5, 1940, JFKL.

“without America taking credit for it”: Joseph P. Kennedy to Rose F. Kennedy, April 5, 1940, JFKL.

“shuttled off to war”: Joseph P. Kennedy to Rose F. Kennedy, April 16, 1940, quoted in David Nasaw,
The Patriarch: The Remarkable Life and Turbulent Times of Joseph P. Kennedy
(New York: Penguin Press, 2012), p. 438.

“a psychological tonic”:
New York Times,
May 11, 1940.

“I still keep…”: Kathleen Kennedy to Joseph P. Kennedy, May 21, 1940, quoted in Doris Kearns Goodwin,
The Kennedys and the Fitzgeralds,
p. 704.

“nothing but a miracle”: Field Marshal Lord Alanbrooke,
War Diaries, 1939–1945
(London, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2001), p. 67.

“and the next time…”:
New York Times,
June 2, 1940.

“drawn, miserable”: Nancy Astor to Philip Lothian, June 10, 1940, UR.

hoping that good news: Nancy Astor to Philip Lothian, June 16, 1940, UR.

struggling desperately: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

“They just attacked and attacked”: Billy Hartington quoted by Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

strategy of terror: on the terror tactics of the Germans, see Sinclair McKay,
Dunkirk: From Disaster to Deliverance
(London: Aurum Press, 2014), p. 114.

their talk that first day: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

Five

“calling the huddle”: Charles Spalding, oral history, JFKL.

“The big difficulty…”: Joseph P. Kennedy to Rose F. Kennedy, August 2, 1940, JFKL.

“I wish…”: Kathleen Kennedy to Joseph P. Kennedy, August 6, 1940, JFKL.

shipped off to live with Nancy Astor: Debo Devonshire to BL, author interview.

Jean traveled daily: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

Joe Airlie had: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

Foreign Office documents: FO 371/24251, PRO.

interview with
The Boston Globe
: FO 371/2451, PRO.

address to film industry figures: E. A. Cleugh to Richard Ford, November 22, 1940, FO 371/2451, PRO. Also, Fairbanks to Roosevelt, November 19, 1940, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library, Hyde Park.

“Hope the New Year…”: Amanda Smith, ed.,
Hostage to Fortune: The Letters of Joseph P. Kennedy,
p. 517.

Soon, Nancy Astor was signaling: Nancy Astor to Kathleen Kennedy, February 22, 1941, UR.

“Every few days…”: Tony Rosslyn to John F. Kennedy, October 27, 1940, JFKL.

“over the dead bodies…”: Tony Rosslyn to John F. Kennedy, January 6, 1941, JFKL.

“pals”: Debo Devonshire to BL, author interview.

when he told the story afterward to his brother: Andrew Devonshire to BL, author interview.

Even he had been heard to exclaim: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

the arrangement appeared to work out no better: Debo Devonshire to BL, author interview.

“It was a…”: Billy Hartington quoted by Kathleen Kennedy in letter to Joseph P. Kennedy, October 22, 1941, JFKL.

to be living more in Belgium and France: Jean Lloyd to BL, author interview.

“temporarily”: Andrew Devonshire to BL, author interview.

“my Billy”: Sally Norton quoted by Debo Devonshire to BL, author interview.

“after Billy”: Debo Devonshire to BL, author interview.

“should have to make do with second best”: Billy Hartington to Rose F. Kennedy, April 30, 1944, JFKL.

she would later acknowledge: Betty Coxe Spalding to BL, author interview.

“hang around”: Frank Waldrop, transcript of interview by Joan and Clay Blair Jr., MHS.

“and even if…”: Kathleen Kennedy to Joseph P. Kennedy, October 3, 1941, JFKL.

“I am nearly going mad” Kathleen Kennedy to Joseph P. Kennedy, October 20, 1941, JFKL.

“Rather sad…”: Kathleen Kennedy to Joseph P. Kennedy, October 22, 1941, JFKL.

Six

“usual childhood illnesses”: John F. Kennedy’s naval records, JFKL.

cling to her collective Kennedy identity: Betty Coxe Spalding to BL, author interview.

the Kennedy Kids: Betty Coxe Spalding to BL, author interview.

as Kick later recalled: Kathleen Kennedy to John F. Kennedy, July 29, 1943, JFKL.

“quick victory”: JFK notes on dinner at Mrs. Patterson’s, JFKL.

sit up late with him: Betty Coxe Spalding to BL, author interview.

“the devil’s position”: John White, transcript of interview by Nigel Hamilton, MHS.

“Tonight for the first time…”: John White’s diary quoted in Doris Kearns Goodwin,
The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys,
p. 727.

viewed himself as a beneficent presence in her life: Betty Coxe Spalding to BL, author interview.

“Frivolous, but harmless”: John White, transcript of interview by Nigel Hamilton, MHS.

“in the way”: John White, transcript of interview by Nigel Hamilton, MHS.

But whereas John White: John White, transcript of interview of Joan and Clay Blair, Jr., MHS.

“Jack’s Future”: Betty Coxe Spalding to BL, author interview.

“He had the charm…”: Inga Arvad’s unpublished memoir, MHS.

“I have gooey…”: John White, transcript of interview by Joan and Clay Blair Jr., MHS.

“motherly”: Betty Coxe Spalding to BL, author interview.

“a boy with a future”: Inga Arvad,
Washington Times Herald,
November 27, 1941.

“big bag of wind”: Kathleen Kennedy quoted in Lynne McTaggart,
Kathleen Kennedy: Her Life and Times
(New York: Dial, 1983), p. 97.

“ignorant, thick headed Mick”: John White quoted in Lynne McTaggart,
Kathleen Kennedy: Her Life and Times,
p. 99.

lunch at a local restaurant: John White, transcript of interview by Nigel Hamilton, MHS.

“arranged”: Cissy Patterson quoted in Ralph G. Martin,
Cissy
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1979), p. 418.

intensive monitoring operation: memorandum for the attorney general, Re: Mrs. Paul Fejos, nee Inga Arvad, Espionage, Internal Security, January 21, 1942, FBI.

“getting ready to…”: John White, transcript of interview by Joan and Clay Blair Jr., MHS.

bequeathed to Kick: Betty Coxe Spalding to BL, author interview.

Kick’s personal photographs: Betty Coxe Spalding to BL, author interview.

broken off with Sally Norton: Nancy Astor to Kathleen Kennedy, December 24, 1941, JFKL.

a prime mover in the breakup: Anne Tree to BL, author interview.

seemed to affect Billy profoundly: Anne Tree to BL, author interview.

BOOK: Kick Kennedy: The Charmed Life and Tragic Death of the Favorite Kennedy Daughter
3.28Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Lost in Pattaya by Kishore Modak
Carolyn G. Hart_Henrie O_02 by Scandal in Fair Haven
Finding Eden by Sheridan, Mia
Indecent Intent by Bethany Amber
The Back of Beyond by Doris Davidson
Eternal Melody by Anisa Claire West
Heaven Knows Who by Christianna Brand
Blood Rites by Jim Butcher
A Week in the Woods by Andrew Clements