Description:

Kennedy John

The Kennedy's Last Trip to Atoka. White House Photographer Cecil Stoughton's Own Personalized Album of 16 Large 8" x 10" Spectacular Vintage Photos

 

Exquisite red calf leather photo album, personally owned by White House photographer, Cecil Stoughton. Who was best known for being President John F. Kennedy's photographer during his White House years. Stamped with decorative tooling to the front and back, with the spine of the album stamped with Stoughton's initials of "CWS", and the location of the photos of "Last Trip to Atoka". Dated along the bottom of the spine as "Nov", "1963". Interior of the spiral bound album lined with red damask silk, 9.5" x 10.5" x 2". Contains 16 large 8" x 10" first generation glossy period color photos, on double weight paper stock. Each with Stoughton's unique numbering system on verso.

An wonderful set of 16 large original photos personally owned by Kennedy's White House photographer, Cecil Stoughton, taken from the summer of 1963 at the Kennedy home in Atoka, Virginia - just weeks before President Kennedy's assassination. Included within the album the following noted photos:

 

  1. Two photos of First Lady Jaqueline Kennedy, Caroline Kennedy, and John F. Kennedy, Jr, accompanied by their Nanny, Maud Shaw, arriving at the Kennedy family residence, Wexford in Atoka, Virginia.
  2. Four photos of President Kennedy and family, John Kennedy Jr, Jaqueline Kennedy and Kirk LeMoyne "Lem" Billings, ride a golf cart near the Kennedy residence. Clipper the Kennedy family dog walks alongside.
  3. Two pictures of Caroline Kennedy riding her horse
  4. Two pictures of President Kennedy departing St. Stephen the Martyr Church with his daughter, Caroline Kennedy, after attending Mass. First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy exits with John F. Kennedy, Jr. Two Secret Service agents look on, one of which is Walt Coughlin.
  5. Six photographs of the Kennedy family home from various angles.

 

John F. Kennedy’s legacy has been the subject of much memorialization. His home in Virginia, was not fully completed until only weeks before JFK's murder on Nov. 22, 1963.While the Kennedys were famous for their pilgrimages to their Cape Cod compound in Hyannis, Ma,  – it was in this tranquil section of Virginia where Jackie Kennedy joyously sought to create a family retreat away from the cameras and commotion that followed the famous First Family.

 

The outdoors reflect the natural setting Jackie Kennedy was looking for in her horse-country estate just an hour from the White House. There’s lots of natural stone landscaping, a flagstone pool deck with an outdoors cooking area, and vine-covered trellises, stone patio and a tennis court. There are also stables, a three-car garage and, yes, there’s still an underground bunker and facilities used by Secret Service personnel. Burns said that after the construction was completed, Jackie added about $10,000 in renovations, including the addition of a special communications room to allow JFK access to other officials back in Washington DC. The property is not very well known, even among Kennedy aficionados, which is pretty much the kind of solitude Jackie Kennedy was looking for. “I don’t want it [Wexford to be exploited and photographed all over the place just because it was ours,’’ she was quoted in a publication called “The Kennedy White House: Family Life and Pictures, 1961-1963.” “It’s the only house Jack and I ever built together, and I designed it all myself,” she’s quoted as saying.

 

The one level house, of 5,000 square feet,  located on over 166 acres in Atoka,  features built-in bookcases and French doors, was described as "really a dream" by Kennedy, a place her family wished they "could live in all year long," according to a handwritten letter from the first lady.

"This house may not be perfectly proportioned—but it has everything—all the places we need to get away from each other—so husband can have meetings…wife paint…all things so much bigger houses don’t have. I think it’s brilliant!" reads another letter by Kennedy.

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