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JFK in Ireland: Four Days that Changed a President

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2019
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JFK in Ireland: Four Days that Changed a President
Ryan Tubridy

In his first book, award-winning radio and TV presenter Ryan Tubridy tells the fascinating story of the iconic president John F Kennedy's visit to Ireland.The idolized, handsome and glamorous John Fitzgerald Kennedy was the great-grandson of Irish immigrants and the first and only Irish-Catholic American elected as President of the United States. He relished his Irish heritage and in June 1963 made a memorable four-day trip to his homeland, which he called the best 'four days of his life'. Tragically, five months later he was assassinated.In this fully illustrated book, Tubridy reveals the huge effect JFK's visit had on Ireland - a country that at the time was largely agrarian and extremely poor. He includes never-seen-before photos of the president and private documents that reveal how the Irish rejoiced in having a president visit their shore. Tubridy evaluates whether the well-loved president, whose 'Camelot' years some believe would have heralded a golden age, actually inspired Ireland to reinvent itself and instilled pride in the Irish people, or whether the myth of JFK just left behind an idyllic dream of what could have been.This book is a fascinating, unique and insightful read from one of Ireland's most popular personalities.

JFK

In Ireland

FOUR DAYS THAT CHANGED A PRESIDENT

RYAN TUBRIDY

For Ella and Julia My little dotes

A letter from Jacqueline Kennedy to President de Valera, thanking him for attending her husband’s funeral.

The Irish tricolour comes alive for JFK as children from local schools dressed in orange, white and green rainwear rush to greet him in Galway.

Contents

Cover (#u0c5beea7-59eb-542a-992e-deb616bc4692)

Title Page (#u44abe08d-f49a-55aa-8b62-1e84d7baecee)

PROLOGUE (#u94e2d0b0-fd76-511e-9808-01178cd3f678)

CHAPTER ONE The Kennedys: From Poverty to Power (#u491bf544-003c-56df-a634-a22196aad21b)

CHAPTER TWO The Kennedys Come Home, 1930s–1950s (#u761d9b41-a38b-51e0-9ff4-25a56ffee16b)

CHAPTER THREE Wooing the President (#u9ccc84f0-193a-5634-80cb-defade7a20c3)

CHAPTER FOUR Planning the Visit (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER FIVE The European Tour Begins (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER SIX Arriving in Dublin (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER SEVEN New Ross (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER EIGHT Dunganstown (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER NINE Wexford Harbour (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER TEN The Garden Party (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER ELEVEN Iveagh House (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER TWELVE Cork (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER THIRTEEN Arbour Hill (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER FOURTEEN Leinster House (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER FIFTEEN Dublin Castle (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER SIXTEEN The Last Supper (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN Galway (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN Limerick (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER NINETEEN Shannon Airport (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER TWENTY The Road to Dallas (#litres_trial_promo)

CHAPTER TWENTY–ONE JFK in Ireland: The Legacy (#litres_trial_promo)

NOTES (#litres_trial_promo)

INDEX (#litres_trial_promo)

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS (#litres_trial_promo)

PICTURE CREDITS (#litres_trial_promo)

Copyright (#litres_trial_promo)

About the Publisher (#litres_trial_promo)

Badge of honour: three small children cheer JFK during his Irish visit.

PROLOGUE (#ulink_a8f65fd7-a666-559a-b327-f4961d54c164)

Kenny O’Donnell, the President’s right–hand man was flabbergasted. “Ireland?” he said. “Mr. President, may I say something? There’s no reason for you to go to Ireland. It would be a waste of time. You’ve got all the Irish votes in this country that you’ll ever get. If you go to Ireland, people will say it’s just a pleasure trip.”

Nobody thought it was a good idea. Not the American media, not the presidential advisers, nobody. But President Kennedy had made up his mind and when O’Donnell went back to the President the following day to relay this message, Kennedy looked up at him from his newspaper “with an air of exasperated impatience”. “Kenny, let me remind you of something,” he said with a distinct air of finality and authority. “I am the President of the United States, not you. When I say I want to go to Ireland, it means that I’m going to Ireland. Make the arrangements.”

(#litres_trial_promo)

It was meant to be a band–aid trip to key European allies, an attempt to show them that America cared as the Soviet beast breathed down their necks. Italy demanded a visit, Germany needed attention, England desired a distraction and France sulked. But there were bigger problems at play; Italy was between governments and there was an ailing Pope in the Vatican. In Germany, Chancellor Adenauer’s government was in disarray after the Der Spiegel affair. In England, Harold Macmillan was suffering through the extraordinary Profumo Affair, which saw his War Minister caught lying about his affair with a call–girl who happened to be sharing a bed with Russian naval attaché Eugene Ivanov. The thought of America’s glamorous young president popping over for tea was political manna for the electorally beleagured leaders of Europe.

June 1963 was as busy a month as any for President Kennedy. He had some significant dates in his diary and he had some housekeeping to attend to. In the latter category fell his appointment with Governor John Connolly of Texas. The two men needed to discuss the President’s visit to Dallas some five months later. In the former category, Kennedy delivered his “Peace Speech’ in which he addressed nuclear weapons and atmospheric test bans and urged the world to “cherish our children’s future”. But there were domestic problems too as the Kennedy administration confronted one of the great seismic struggles of twentieth century American politics, that of civil rights.

At home, the media natives were getting restless; the Washington Post made the wry observation that “Ireland is the only country the President will visit that has what can be described as a firmly–established and durable Government” while in a reference to the race riots in the South, Senator Hugh Scott said “I’d rather see him go to Birmingham (Alabama) than Berlin just now”.

(#litres_trial_promo) The spring of 1963 saw Birmingham inflamed with racial tension as the civil rights movement, spearheaded by Dr Martin Luther King Jr, sought to overthrow the bastions of racial segregation.

“It would be difficult to dream up a more unjustified and time-wasting trip than the one on which President Kennedy is scheduled to embark”, trumpeted an indignant New York Herald, before adding, “In Rome Mr. Kennedy will find neither a Pope nor an established Government; in London he will find a Prime Minister with other things on his mind. In Germany, too, he will find something in the nature of a ‘lame duck’ Government.” This grave assessment of the international situation was capped by a side–swipe at the other “explanation of the trip – the sentimental call of Dublin and the Kennedy ancestral town of New Ross; but surely his Irish friends would understand that urgent Congressional and racial problems required his continued presence in Washington at the moment.”
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