in the
White House John Fitzgerald Kennedy Jr. was born on November 25, 1960, in Washington, D.C., to
Massachusetts senator John F. Kennedy and
Jacqueline Kennedy (née Bouvier). His father had been
elected president less than three weeks earlier and was
inaugurated two months after his son's birth. Kennedy had an older sister,
Caroline, born in 1957. His parents had previously lost a stillborn daughter, Arabella, in 1956, and an infant son,
Patrick, who died two days after his premature birth in 1963. His widely repeated nickname, "John-John", originated when a reporter misheard his father calling him "John" twice in quick succession; the family did not use the nickname. saluting the coffin Kennedy lived in the
White House during the first three years of his life and remained in the public spotlight. His father was assassinated on November 22, 1963, and the
state funeral was held three days later, on Kennedy's third birthday. In a widely broadcast moment, he stepped forward and saluted his father's flag‑draped casket as it was carried out of
St. Matthew's Cathedral.
NBC News vice president
Julian Goodman described the image as "the most impressive... shot in the history of television." The moment was photographed by several journalists, including
United Press International photographer
Stan Stearns—later chief White House photographer during the
Lyndon B. Johnson administration—and Dan Farrell of the
New York Daily News. President Johnson wrote his first letter in office to Kennedy, telling him that he "can always be proud" of his father. Following the assassination, the family continued with their plans for Kennedy's birthday celebration to demonstrate their resolve to carry on despite the president's death. They lived briefly in the
Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, D.C., before moving to a luxury apartment on the
Upper East Side of
Manhattan, where Kennedy grew up. In 1967, his mother took him and Caroline on a six-week "sentimental journey" to Ireland, where they met President
Éamon de Valera and visited the Kennedy ancestral home in Dunganstown. After the
assassination of Kennedy's uncle Robert in 1968, Jacqueline took Caroline and Kennedy out of the United States, saying, "If they're killing Kennedys, then my children are targets ... I want to get out of this country." She married Greek shipping magnate
Aristotle Onassis later that year, and the family moved to his private island of
Skorpios. Kennedy reportedly considered his stepfather "a joke". Onassis died in 1975 and left his widow an annual income of $250,000, though she later settled with
Christina Onassis for $25 million in exchange for not contesting the will. Kennedy returned to the White House with his mother and sister in 1971 for the first time since his father's assassination. President
Richard Nixon's daughters gave him a tour that included his former bedroom, and Nixon showed him the
Resolute desk under which his father had allowed him to play. Kennedy attended private schools in Manhattan, beginning at
Saint David's School and later moving to
Collegiate School, which he attended from third to 10th grade. yearbook photo, 1975 In 1976, Kennedy and his cousin travelled to the earthquake-affected region of
Rabinal in Guatemala, where they assisted with heavy construction work and distributed food. A local priest said that they "ate what the people of Rabinal ate and dressed in Guatemalan clothes and slept in tents like most of the earthquake victims," adding that the two "did more for their country's image" in Guatemala "than a roomful of ambassadors." On his 16th birthday, Kennedy's Secret Service protection ended, and he spent the summer of 1978 working as a
wrangler in Wyoming. In 1979, the
John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in
Boston was dedicated, and Kennedy made his first major speech, reciting
Stephen Spender's poem "The Truly Great". Kennedy attended
Brown University, where he majored in American studies. He co-founded a student discussion group that focused on contemporary issues such as
apartheid in South Africa, gun control, and
civil rights. He was appalled by apartheid when visiting South Africa on a summer break and arranged for U.N. ambassador
Andrew Young to speak about the topic at Brown. By his junior year, Kennedy had moved off campus to live with several other students in a shared house, and he spent time at Xenon, a club owned by
Howard Stein. Kennedy was initiated into Phi Psi, a local social fraternity that had been the Rhode Island Alpha chapter of national
Phi Kappa Psi fraternity until 1978. In January 1983, Kennedy's Massachusetts
driver's license was suspended after he received more than three
speeding summonses in 12 months and failed to appear at a hearing. The family's lawyer explained that Kennedy most likely "became immersed in exams and just forgot the date of the hearing". That same year, he graduated with a bachelor's degree in American studies and took a break, traveling to India and spending time at the
University of Delhi, where he did post-graduate work and met
Mother Teresa. ==Career==