In the public imagination, John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis embodied the image of an ideal American couple—youthful, elegant, and seemingly unshakable. Their presence in the White House helped define an era often remembered as “Camelot,” a time associated with glamour, optimism, and cultural refinement. Yet behind that carefully constructed image, Kennedy’s personal life was far more complicated, marked by a series of extramarital relationships that contrasted sharply with the public narrative. Among these relationships, one of the most intriguing—and perhaps the most emotionally significant—was his connection with Mary Pinchot Meyer, an artist and socialite deeply embedded in Washington’s…
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