In the 1940s, Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis, who would later become Jackie Kennedy, was in her youth and early adulthood. Born on July 28, 1929, she spent her childhood and teenage years during this decade.
In 1940, at the age of 11, she won a national junior horsemanship competition. The New York Times reported, “Jacqueline Bouvier, an eleven-year-old equestrienne from East Hampton, Long Island, scored a double victory in the horsemanship competition. Miss Bouvier achieved a rare distinction. The occasions are few when the same rider wins both competitions in the same show.”
Onassis attended Miss Porter’s School, a prestigious boarding school in Farmington, Connecticut; in addition to its rigorous academics, the school also emphasized proper manners and the art of conversation. There she excelled as a student, writing frequent essays and poems for the school newspaper and winning the award as the school’s top literature student in her senior year. Also during her senior year, in 1947, Onassis was named “Debutante of the Year” by a local newspaper. However, Onassis had greater ambitions than being recognized for her beauty and popularity. She wrote in the yearbook that her life ambition was “not to be a housewife.”
Upon graduating from Miss Porter’s School Onassis enrolled at Vassar College in New York to study history, literature, art and French. She spent her junior year studying abroad in Paris. “I loved it more than any year of my life,” Onassis later wrote about her time there. “Being away from home gave me a chance to look at myself with a jaundiced eye. I learned not to be ashamed of a real hunger for knowledge, something that I had always tried to hide, and I came home glad to start in here again but with a love for Europe that I am afraid will never leave me.”
By the end of the 1940s, Jackie was transitioning from her sheltered upbringing into a young woman who would soon step into the public eye in the 1950s.
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