Artwork for podcast Talk With History: Discover Your History Road Trip
JFK & Jackie’s Newport Wedding: St. Mary’s Church and the Birth of Camelot
Episode 1909th March 2026 • Talk With History: Discover Your History Road Trip • Scott and Jenn of Walk with History
00:00:00 00:24:09

Share Episode

Shownotes

➡️ Help history. 2 minutes for 7 questions 🫡

Scott and Jenn revisit St. Mary’s Church in Newport, Rhode Island, where Senator John F. Kennedy married Jacqueline Bouvier on September 12, 1953, in a spectacle likened to America’s “Camelot” moment.

🎥 Video from the church

📍 Google Maps to St Mary's

🎥 Video version of this podcast

-------------------------------------------------------

⬇️ Help us keep the show going and explore history with us! ⬇️

TheHistoryRoadTrip.com

🧳 Plus...get free travel resources in your inbox.

-------------------------------------------------------

📧 contact: talkwithhistory@gmail.com

Talk with History is a global Top 40 History podcast on Feedspot!

Transcripts

Speaker:

The humidity in Newport that September morning was heavy, but it was nothing

Speaker:

compared to the pressure, the sheer electric weight of expectation.

Speaker:

You're standing on the sidewalk outside St. Mary's Church, and

Speaker:

honestly, you can barely breathe.

Speaker:

It feels like the entire eastern seaboard has descended on this

Speaker:

one little corner of Rhode Island.

Speaker:

There are over 2000 people packed behind police barricades, craning their necks

Speaker:

just to catch a glimpse of a veil.

Speaker:

It's a media frenzy.

Speaker:

Cameras flashing like summer lightning.

Speaker:

Scent of expensive perfume mixing with the exhaust of a

Speaker:

hundred idling limousines inside.

Speaker:

It's not just a wedding, it's a political coronation.

Speaker:

You're squeezed into a pew.

Speaker:

Looking around, there's the future of American power sitting just rows away.

Speaker:

Senators, diplomats, socialites.

Speaker:

You spot Vice President Nixon and former President Truman chatting quietly

Speaker:

with Ed Sullivan, only three feet away from the Asters and the Vanderbilt.

Speaker:

You see the Kennedys a dynasty in the making their energy

Speaker:

radiating off the altar.

Speaker:

As Jacqueline Bouvier walks down that aisle, the air in the church changes.

Speaker:

It's no longer just a ceremony.

Speaker:

It's the birth of a myth.

Speaker:

You can feel it in your bones.

Speaker:

This isn't just a senator marrying a photographer.

Speaker:

This is the beginning of something that will define an era.

Speaker:

It's chaotic.

Speaker:

It's glamorous, and for every person here it feels like we're watching history.

Speaker:

Hold its breath.

Speaker:

Then the doors open.

Speaker:

The organ swells.

Speaker:

Fast forward to today, the cameras are gone.

Speaker:

The crowds have dispersed, but the stone and stained glass of St. Mary's remain.

Speaker:

That's where Jen takes us in this episode.

Speaker:

She's walking the same aisles, standing in the same light where a young Jack

Speaker:

and Jackie stood unknowingly stepping toward a future and a tragedy that

Speaker:

would change the world forever.

Speaker:

Welcome to Talk With History.

Speaker:

I'm your host Scott here with my wife and historian Jen.

Speaker:

Hello.

Speaker:

On this podcast, we give you insights to our history inspired while travels.

Speaker:

YouTube channel journey and examine history through deeper conversations

Speaker:

with the curious, the explorers and the history lovers out there living

Speaker:

love.

Speaker:

Alright, before we start, Jen, it's been a little while since I've had a good five

Speaker:

star review to read for the podcast for.

Speaker:

So for our podcast listeners, we're coming into busy season,

Speaker:

coming into the summertime.

Speaker:

Everybody's on the road and listening.

Speaker:

So if you're on the road and your loved one is sitting next to you in the

Speaker:

car, tell 'em to get on their phone.

Speaker:

Open up the podcast app, drop us a five star review and I'll review.

Speaker:

I'll read it here on the podcast.

Speaker:

So this video, yeah, you actually recorded probably like six months ago.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Um, we are recording this podcast episode March of 26.

Speaker:

You recorded this back in September, I think.

Speaker:

And.

Speaker:

It was beautiful time of year up there in Newport.

Speaker:

One of your last kind of, um, cruises for American Cruise Line, and you got up to

Speaker:

Newport and you got to go see the church.

Speaker:

Where JFK married then Jacqueline Bouvier.

Speaker:

Yeah, so as maybe some of our listeners don't know, I'm the historian on American

Speaker:

Cruise Line, one of the historians and I do the history talk every night.

Speaker:

Uh, after we've gotten underway again, before we pull into port the next day

Speaker:

and I get, I talk about where we're going next and history about it, and

Speaker:

usually before we pull into Newport, uh, and anytime I do this whole New

Speaker:

England island area, the Kennedy's is something you just can't Yeah.

Speaker:

Avoid, right?

Speaker:

There's so much immersed in Martha's Vineyard and off the coast of, you know.

Speaker:

Massachusetts Kenny Bun Port, but Newport, and when we pull in with

Speaker:

the American cruise line, we're right beside Hammersmith Farm.

Speaker:

And so most people don't realize that our ship docks right beside that farm

Speaker:

where, uh, the Auckland clauses lived.

Speaker:

And that is.

Speaker:

Jackie's stepfather, and that's where her mother marries into that family,

Speaker:

and that's where they will have their wedding reception and then all through

Speaker:

JFK's presidency, they will visit there.

Speaker:

That'll be where they kind of vacation and then they sail out of

Speaker:

the harbor where we are actually.

Speaker:

With, uh, American Cruise Line.

Speaker:

So all those famous sailing pictures, that's all from Newport.

Speaker:

And if you know anything about Newport, it's a big sailing town anyway, so

Speaker:

anytime we're on the tram with American Cruise Line, we'll stop, we'll drive

Speaker:

right by St. Mary's Church, and I always point out that's where they got married.

Speaker:

Well, I never had a chance to actually go there, and you never know how

Speaker:

much these historic locations, um.

Speaker:

Embrace their historic stories.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

It's, it, it definitely varies from what you've seen.

Speaker:

Yes.

Speaker:

From, from spot to spot.

Speaker:

Some places don't wanna be really associated with those historic stories.

Speaker:

They wanna tell a different story, but this church embraces the marriage

Speaker:

and they have photographs of it.

Speaker:

And even when I approach them about filming inside, she was like, yes,

Speaker:

please do, please tell this story.

Speaker:

We want more people to know.

Speaker:

We want more people to visit.

Speaker:

We actually have the original, uh, kneeling.

Speaker:

Uh, what did, what do they call those prayer?

Speaker:

Kind of like, I don't know.

Speaker:

That's a good question.

Speaker:

I, I don't know if they have an official name.

Speaker:

We, I say it in the video, the prayer kneeler that they use and it's the only

Speaker:

picture from inside, from the wedding.

Speaker:

They actually have those where they're kneeling and, and saying a prayer during

Speaker:

the, the mass that is their wedding.

Speaker:

Um, and so.

Speaker:

It was super cool, right?

Speaker:

Because what you don't realize is, as you're walking up to the church is those

Speaker:

famous photographs really have the, the architecture of the doorway behind

Speaker:

them, and you're standing right there

Speaker:

and it hasn't changed, right?

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Like the one for our listeners, our, you, you can probably picture in your head.

Speaker:

JFK and Jackie walking out of the church.

Speaker:

You know, black and white picture, pretty typical kind of this, this,

Speaker:

uh, this kind of pope type arch.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

Kind of an arch up has a point.

Speaker:

And then within that it's got this circular kind of design typical

Speaker:

of, of that, that architecture.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

You know, pop.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Big brown mason masonry.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Ma masonry over the door.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

And so you can picture that in your head, you know, those two, kind

Speaker:

of the picture kind of from down below, catching them coming out.

Speaker:

Because if you watch our video.

Speaker:

For our listeners, I'll link this in the show notes.

Speaker:

If you watch our video, I found one picture that had been taken from up

Speaker:

high and just this mass of people outside the church as they start walking

Speaker:

out, and so the fact that you get a couple clean photographs of those two.

Speaker:

Come walking out.

Speaker:

That's what you can picture in your head.

Speaker:

And you're standing right at those doors,

Speaker:

standing right at those doors.

Speaker:

So what you have to know about this historically is really,

Speaker:

this is the birth of Camelot.

Speaker:

So when we talk about Camelot and the Kennedys, this is their

Speaker:

fairytale story of American royalty.

Speaker:

And this wedding really mimics those.

Speaker:

Images you have of British royalty getting married.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Like this looks a lot like Diana when she got married.

Speaker:

It looks a lot like, uh, princess Kate when she gets married to William.

Speaker:

Like this is America's version of this and it looks just like

Speaker:

it picks it, it picture perfect.

Speaker:

Looks like that.

Speaker:

And so the church is a very big church.

Speaker:

St. Mary's, Roman Catholic Church is uh.

Speaker:

It could hold 800 people.

Speaker:

Yeah,

Speaker:

it's huge.

Speaker:

And that's how many people came to that wedding.

Speaker:

And uh, inside is just beautiful.

Speaker:

And we'll talk more about the church history, but that's not where Jackie

Speaker:

had originally gone to church.

Speaker:

That's not where she wanted to get married.

Speaker:

Now you have to realize she's a local.

Speaker:

Yeah, she's a Newport local.

Speaker:

Like this is where she has been raised.

Speaker:

And if you know anything about, we've talked about before,

Speaker:

the Gilded Age and these, uh, aristocratic families of America.

Speaker:

She's part of that.

Speaker:

That's why she lives in Newport.

Speaker:

That's why she's raised in Newport.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

So she comes from some of that old money.

Speaker:

She comes from that old money.

Speaker:

When you think of the, are you, like you said, the Rockefellers, the

Speaker:

Asters, and all these people that live in Newport, the Vanderbilt.

Speaker:

We've been to those gilded age mansions.

Speaker:

Jackie Boer is part of that her mother has married into, even though Boer was that,

Speaker:

and her father is part of that, he has.

Speaker:

It's basically swindled the money away with his habits and he has gambling

Speaker:

habits and uh, intoxication habits.

Speaker:

So he has liquor habits and that's also prevents him from walking

Speaker:

her down the aisle that day.

Speaker:

Yeah,

Speaker:

that's one of the things that I, when I, I cut some little, couple

Speaker:

facts I'm gonna try to bring up here.

Speaker:

That was one of the things that I brought up.

Speaker:

'cause you can see there's some very quick.

Speaker:

Um, you can find it on YouTube.

Speaker:

And I put it, I clipped it in the video, very quick footage, video footage of them

Speaker:

walking out of, of her getting out of her limousine with her stepfather and then

Speaker:

getting ready to walk into the church.

Speaker:

Um, but that's why it's her stepfather and not her father.

Speaker:

Yes.

Speaker:

And the Akin Clause family.

Speaker:

Now, if you've seen our videos from Newport, we've gone to

Speaker:

Jackie's mother's Graves.

Speaker:

They, they are both buried.

Speaker:

They're in Newport.

Speaker:

So you have to think.

Speaker:

This is very much an aristocratic family.

Speaker:

Now the Kennedys want to be a part of this crowd, right?

Speaker:

They're not really born into this crowd, but their family has high

Speaker:

ambitions and much very high ambitions for John F. Kennedy at the time.

Speaker:

He's a senator and, uh, marrying into this type of family meets their ambitions.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And so you can kind of, I wouldn't say it was an arranged

Speaker:

marriage, but she was an approved.

Speaker:

Person to, to date and to pursue.

Speaker:

Let's put it that way.

Speaker:

I, but this wedding is just.

Speaker:

Beautiful.

Speaker:

Uh, Robert Kennedy is in like a full on tuxedo with the tails.

Speaker:

Her dress is gorgeous and they have all of these attendants, which you'll learn later

Speaker:

in history, will be like his brothers.

Speaker:

Yeah, his sisters.

Speaker:

Her sister, right?

Speaker:

So these people are gonna play bigger parts in American history and they

Speaker:

are the attendance to their wedding.

Speaker:

So it was just super cool to walk down that.

Speaker:

Aisle, you have full access to all of that.

Speaker:

They sat in Pew 10 when they would come back to Newport and worship.

Speaker:

You can, I sat in Pew 10.

Speaker:

I give you a full vantage point of what it would look like to

Speaker:

see the church from Pew 10.

Speaker:

So what they saw every time they would come in and then I walk you over to

Speaker:

where the wedding couple had, um.

Speaker:

Had prayed on the kneeler and the photograph that exists

Speaker:

from the wedding, uh, are those nailers and those are original.

Speaker:

Uh, when Scott was making the video, he's like, there's not

Speaker:

a lot of pictures from inside.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

From inside the wedding, from inside the chapel.

Speaker:

And I was like, well, I don't know if that was socially a norm at the time.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

Nowadays, yeah.

Speaker:

We take a ton of pictures everywhere, but I don't know if that was.

Speaker:

At the time, not considered prudent to be photographing inside a church.

Speaker:

And it's so interesting because that just lends to the exclusivity of the event.

Speaker:

Yes.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

So at the time, partly it was, you know, it was 53, right?

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

So

Speaker:

yeah, September 12th, 1953,

Speaker:

September 12th, 1953.

Speaker:

So photography was everywhere, right?

Speaker:

Obviously we've got news reels of this, and so they could have been in

Speaker:

there, but it just wasn't a thing.

Speaker:

Right like it is nowadays.

Speaker:

And again, that lent to how exclusive this was.

Speaker:

And that was, I think, was it Jackie Kennedy's?

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

Jacque Le Bo's father who kind of worked, or maybe it was on the

Speaker:

Kennedy side, worked the guest list.

Speaker:

Oh, it was the Kennedy's.

Speaker:

It was.

Speaker:

It was the Kennedy's.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

So they worked this guest list and they've got political rivals there,

Speaker:

but they had like just everybody there.

Speaker:

It was when I looked up a list of, I kind of just typed into Google,

Speaker:

tell me the list, gimme a list of famous names of people who were at

Speaker:

the the JFK wedding and I started reading it and I was like, oh my gosh.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

Truman had just had just left office, right?

Speaker:

He was, he was there.

Speaker:

Nixon was vice president.

Speaker:

And so it was just, and, and, and that, those are just two people.

Speaker:

Ed Sullivan.

Speaker:

Ed Sullivan was there.

Speaker:

Um,

Speaker:

it was a, it was a who's who of society like you wanted to be at this wedding.

Speaker:

Very much like when we saw in our lifetime when we saw the Kate and William wedding.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And it was so much like celebrities and.

Speaker:

High ranking people from around the world.

Speaker:

It was kind of a com, a hodgepodge of both.

Speaker:

This is exactly what this wedding was, uh and like, and to what Scott

Speaker:

said, maybe a lot of people didn't want to be photographed or didn't

Speaker:

want all the spotlight there.

Speaker:

So you have a difference in how many people at the ceremony than how

Speaker:

many people come to the reception.

Speaker:

Oh, yes.

Speaker:

So because the church only holds 800.

Speaker:

That's how many people came to the ceremony.

Speaker:

But then Hammersmith Farm, which is like a horse farm, where do you see a

Speaker:

lot of Jacqueline Vier on the horses?

Speaker:

And they basically have the reception outdoors.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And they can put all these tables outdoors that 1200 people come to the reception.

Speaker:

And this is when you first, I mean, I would say it probably starts happening

Speaker:

before this, but I kind of get the feeling that this is when they first become.

Speaker:

Bigger than their own lives.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And you know, we're talking a lot about right now in, in Media

Speaker:

is John F. Kennedy Jr's wedding.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

1996 he gets married on an island, a secluded island with 30 people

Speaker:

and they keep it very secret.

Speaker:

But it was still a huge media frenzy.

Speaker:

Yes.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

Not there, but just the, the fact that it happened

Speaker:

and I think he really.

Speaker:

Was influenced by what happened to his parents because this is where

Speaker:

you really start to see their really pawns even in their own wedding.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Like Jackie doesn't wear a dress she wants to wear.

Speaker:

Yeah, I have that.

Speaker:

I have that note here.

Speaker:

So you bring that up and that's one of the facts that I brought up is.

Speaker:

So there's this, the famous dress, right, designed by am

Speaker:

Lowe beautiful, beautiful dress.

Speaker:

I mean it, you can see the pictures.

Speaker:

And if, if for our listeners and our watchers, like I've put pictures of

Speaker:

her, you know, in her dress at the reception and um, at the wedding ceremony.

Speaker:

She's absolutely gorgeous.

Speaker:

Her dress looks amazing on her.

Speaker:

I think you said it something like 50 yards of fabric,

Speaker:

which is Yes, because it's

Speaker:

pleated,

Speaker:

which is crazy.

Speaker:

So much

Speaker:

pleading

Speaker:

and it's heavy.

Speaker:

But Ann Lowe was, who was a prominent African American designer at the time.

Speaker:

She wasn't really given public credit then, but it, it came out later.

Speaker:

Um, but I guess Jackie actually preferred more, the more sleek.

Speaker:

Kind of French style.

Speaker:

And so she, I guess from what I saw when I looked up, she told

Speaker:

her Jackie Re reportedly told her French, she looked like a lampshade.

Speaker:

Um, and, you know, kind of like a, a patchwork quilt.

Speaker:

I don't know if that's true.

Speaker:

I'd have to go and, and di dive deep and see, um, and, and that stuff.

Speaker:

But it's interesting.

Speaker:

Like you said, even within their own wedding, it's, Hey, here's

Speaker:

the dress you're gonna wear.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

So she wants something more sleek.

Speaker:

Kind of like what Carolyn Bessette will wear when she marries John F. Kennedy

Speaker:

Jr. She just wears that plain silk gown.

Speaker:

That also is a fashion iconic dress, but that's what Jackie wants to wear.

Speaker:

But her family's like, how are people gonna.

Speaker:

See that?

Speaker:

Yeah,

Speaker:

you have 800 people.

Speaker:

You need something that has some, some

Speaker:

presence.

Speaker:

Girth to it.

Speaker:

Yeah, some presence.

Speaker:

And so that's why there's like 50 yards of fabric.

Speaker:

It's pleated, it kind of sticks out.

Speaker:

And I can see where she gets this patch where quilt kind of thing.

Speaker:

'cause it looks like quilting, almost like the design, but it, it stands out.

Speaker:

The dress basically could.

Speaker:

Looks like it could stand on its own without a person in it.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

And Jackie Kennedy at the time, um, vie Kennedy, she's a, she's small,

Speaker:

she's small, framed, like this dress is really like making her double the size.

Speaker:

Oh, it, but she looks amazing in it.

Speaker:

It, I mean the, the reception pictures, which are where you get

Speaker:

the most, most of the pictures.

Speaker:

It.

Speaker:

It's just absolutely stunning.

Speaker:

It's, it's storybook.

Speaker:

Picturesque.

Speaker:

Oh, the dress is iconic for sure.

Speaker:

But you can see why her family wanted her to wear something like

Speaker:

that and kind of forced it upon her.

Speaker:

Like most brides think it's their day.

Speaker:

I decide, well, not in this case.

Speaker:

When you start to think of this American royalty, Camelot, this

Speaker:

is the first time we're gonna see, like we know John F. Kennedy.

Speaker:

W had a lot of autonomy while his brother was alive, but once his brother was

Speaker:

killed and he got pushed to the front of the family as their token, like what

Speaker:

they want to, to move through society.

Speaker:

And so, you know, John F. Kennedy is really like being

Speaker:

pushed into the spotlight.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And here he is marrying into society.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And she is starting to feel, she, I'm sure she felt it beforehand, but

Speaker:

she's starting to also have this same, like, I don't get the choice this is.

Speaker:

Chosen for me,

Speaker:

it seems to me like this, for the Kennedys, this was the tipping

Speaker:

point that really brought them into the status that they wanted.

Speaker:

Yes, this was it.

Speaker:

And like I said, it was a see who's who of society at the wedding, A huge

Speaker:

reception, beautiful photographs.

Speaker:

And it all starts September 12th, 1953, and you can visit that church today.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And so a couple other interesting facts.

Speaker:

So you talked about the 1200 people that went to reception,

Speaker:

so I guess the receiving line.

Speaker:

Right where you're kind of standing there saying hello to your guests

Speaker:

was they stood there for three hours and greeted every single person

Speaker:

that came through three hours.

Speaker:

I know.

Speaker:

Well, you can imagine we, we've been married 20 years and I told Scott when

Speaker:

we were getting married, everyone wants their moment with the bride and groom.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Everyone wants that moment to say.

Speaker:

Congratulations.

Speaker:

I

Speaker:

shook their hand.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

You know, a small anecdote,

Speaker:

and we only had 125 at our wedding.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

You can imagine 1200 people.

Speaker:

Everyone wants their moment.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

With you.

Speaker:

So some other things here, we, I, I kind of took a look at some

Speaker:

of the facts around their wedding and compared them to modern day.

Speaker:

Norms.

Speaker:

Right?

Speaker:

Because I just thought that was interesting.

Speaker:

And so in 1953, the guest list was about 1200 people, right?

Speaker:

As you mentioned at the reception nowadays, I mean, it's still

Speaker:

considered large if you're only from anywhere from two to 500.

Speaker:

And that's at the, at, that's at the high end, right?

Speaker:

Not, not everybody's gonna have 500 people at their wedding.

Speaker:

This wedding had 1200.

Speaker:

The dress back then, it costs about $500.

Speaker:

That was in 53, which in today's money would be almost 6,000.

Speaker:

Now, today there's some brides out there that are spending a hundred

Speaker:

grand, tens of thousands of dollars.

Speaker:

So that's, but again, iconic picture.

Speaker:

At the time, the venue that was at the Hammersmith farm,

Speaker:

again, that was family estate.

Speaker:

Again, today, people are dropping tons of money, you know, to, to.

Speaker:

Host their wedding reception somewhere.

Speaker:

I'm sure they had to rent everything still in.

Speaker:

Yeah, in catering.

Speaker:

And we don't really do that whole reception line as much anymore.

Speaker:

It's not as common.

Speaker:

Not as common.

Speaker:

What we did is we went to the tables.

Speaker:

Yeah, we, so, and that's what people will do.

Speaker:

They'll get up and walk around.

Speaker:

They won't necessarily stand there at a reception line.

Speaker:

Um, so again, kind of difference in, in media presence, right?

Speaker:

Back then it was Life Magazine and Local Press.

Speaker:

Today it's all social media stuff.

Speaker:

And then, um, nobody, I couldn't find anywhere online what the total estimated

Speaker:

cost of the the JFK wedding was.

Speaker:

Right?

Speaker:

And then on high, high end weddings, people are spending hundreds of

Speaker:

thousands, if not a million dollars.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

Not the average person, but we're talking high society type folks.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

So just kind of an interesting comparison to them at the time.

Speaker:

And what I'll call high society or the rich the wealthy are are doing nowadays.

Speaker:

Yeah, they were definitely setting a precedence because it wasn't like society.

Speaker:

People weren't getting married and having huge weddings that was happening.

Speaker:

They just weren't the media frenzy and.

Speaker:

This is a marriage of society and politics and so that that didn't happen as much.

Speaker:

And so this really was setting a precedence for what was going to be.

Speaker:

Again, Camelot, and again, we're talking about this beginning of this

Speaker:

whole Fair Tale America royalty story.

Speaker:

This is the start of it all, and the church is very historic for Newport.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And that was another thing going there like they built in around 1828.

Speaker:

So they were talking about how in 2028 they was gonna have their 200

Speaker:

anniversary, one of these original Newport churches, but also during the Civil War.

Speaker:

The Naval Academy is moved from Annapolis to Newport.

Speaker:

If you know anything about Newport, we've talked about it before.

Speaker:

It has this big naval presence there as where Scott went to graduate

Speaker:

school, uh, we're we're going back there for more of his training.

Speaker:

Uh, and so they moved.

Speaker:

The Naval Academy there for protection for the North during the Civil War.

Speaker:

And they used this church as their chapel?

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

For the Naval Academy.

Speaker:

For the Naval Academy, yeah.

Speaker:

And if you know John F. Kennedy served in the United States Navy, right?

Speaker:

He used, that's one of the things I say in the video, he says,

Speaker:

with a lot of pride, I can say I served in the United States Navy.

Speaker:

And I just love that about him because of course we can relate to that.

Speaker:

And so to be married in that church, I'm sure he knew that history.

Speaker:

Getting married there as well.

Speaker:

But I just think it's comes kind of full circle that you're a former naval

Speaker:

officer who's gonna eventually come.

Speaker:

President of the United States is married in a church that once served

Speaker:

the United States Naval Academy.

Speaker:

Uh, it's a, again, it, it embraces the story.

Speaker:

So they want you to visit, they open the church up for visitors.

Speaker:

It's

Speaker:

beautiful inside.

Speaker:

It's that classic.

Speaker:

Roman Catholic style stained glass windows and the Oregon has been there for forever.

Speaker:

I think the Oregon's super old.

Speaker:

Yes, it's a beautiful church.

Speaker:

You know, if you're up in the Newport area in the summertime, great, great place

Speaker:

to swing by and, and visit real quick

Speaker:

and lots of, uh, stained glass windows and.

Speaker:

I think it's free to visit.

Speaker:

I left a donation so it's there for you.

Speaker:

It's available to you.

Speaker:

I definitely recommend going in there and seeing it 'cause it is just one

Speaker:

of those awestruck moments of American history that you get to stand there in

Speaker:

the presence of, uh, of American royalty.

Speaker:

As you stand in the quiet of St. Mary's, the thing that

Speaker:

strikes you isn't the opulence.

Speaker:

It's the intimacy of the space.

Speaker:

Despite the 1200 guests and media helicopters, at the end of the day,

Speaker:

it was just two people in a wooden pew making a promise in a small.

Speaker:

Seaside Church.

Speaker:

We call it Camelot now, but in 1953 it was just a beginning.

Speaker:

And while the marriage would eventually face trials that would

Speaker:

break the heart of a nation that day in Newport remains frozen in time.

Speaker:

A perfect golden moment of American royalty before the world changed forever.

Speaker:

Now next time you're in Newport, take a walk down Spring Street,

Speaker:

sit in Pew 10 and listen closely.

Speaker:

You might just hear the echoes of the organ playing for a

Speaker:

young senator and his bride.

Speaker:

We'll talk to you next time.

Speaker:

Thank you.

Speaker:

It's a good outro.

Speaker:

This has been a Walk with History.

Speaker:

Production Talk with History is created.

Speaker:

Hosted by me, Scott Benny.

Speaker:

Episode Researched by Jennifer Benny.

Speaker:

Check out the show notes for links and references mentioned in this episode.

Speaker:

Talk With History is supported by our community at the history

Speaker:

road trip.com and Eternal thanks.

Speaker:

Go out to our lifetime members to help keep us going.

Speaker:

Thank you to Doug Liberty.

Speaker:

Larry Meyers.

Speaker:

Patrick.

Speaker:

Benny.

Speaker:

Gail Cooper, Christie Coates, Calvin Gifford.

Speaker:

Corny.

Speaker:

Nini Gino, Larry Mitchell, Tommy Anderson, Susan Solis, Bruce

Speaker:

Lynch, Dino Garner, Mark Barrett, Don Kennedy and John Simpsons.

Speaker:

Do make sure you hit that follow button in that podcast player

Speaker:

and we'll talk to you next time

Speaker:

you.

Chapters

Video

More from YouTube