Description:

Kennedy Jacqueline

1p TLS on Crane's watermarked pale blue stationery paper with embossed Kennedy coat of arms at top signed by former First Lady Jackie Kennedy as "Jacqueline Kennedy" at bottom in blue ball point pen. Also featuring personalized note (9 words including signature) in Jackie's hand to letter recipient Norman Cousins. Accompanied by a free franked matching envelope with facsimile "Jacqueline Kennedy" signature at upper right corner, addressed to "Mr. Norman Cousins, 380 Madison Avenue, New York, New York". Both in near fine condition, the letter with the lightest of paper folds. Letter measures 5.25" x 7.625".

 

On October 20, 1966, Jackie thanked Saturday Review editor-in-chief Norman Cousins (1915-1990) for his offer of assistance. Jackie wrote: "I was so touched by your letter … I think things should either calm down or explode in the next few days -- and if there is anything you can do, I certainly shall call for help."

 

Jackie may well have been stressed during this period by obligations like attending a reception for the first class of Institute of Politics Fellows at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University (see the photo of Jackie and fellows taken on October 17, 1966 attached).

 

Norman Cousins had been the acting editor-in-chief of the Saturday Review since 1942; indeed, he would manage the periodical until his resignation in 1972. In addition to his editorial duties, Cousins was also a published author, university professor, and survivor of a rare connective tissue disease. Jackie and Cousins may have met after Cousins led the effort to secure a Soviet-American test ban treaty in August 1963, and was personally thanked by John F. Kennedy.

 

Free franking, or the ability to send mail free from postage, was instituted in the late eighteenth century. The privilege has been alternately granted, rescinded, expanded, and restricted over the last two hundred years. Traditionally, Presidents, Vice Presidents, and Congressmen, as well as former office holders and occasionally their spouses and relatives, held free franking privileges.

 Ex-Norman Cousins Estate

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