All posts related to Jackie Kennedy on Guest of a Guest for Jackie Kennedy.

[Jackie Kennedy walks along the C&O Canal in Georgetown. Photo by Mark Shaw, 1959.]

[A photograph by Mark Shaw of John, Jacqueline, and Caroline Kennedy outside their Georgetown house, 3307 N Street NW, in 1959. In 1961, JFK was sworn in as the 35th president and so they moved to the White House.]
Before JFK was president, he was a senator kicking it in Georgetown with his wife Jacqueline Kennedy. Jackie's occupation at this time was a devoted housewife, making John's breakfast and taking his clothes to the dry cleaners. More»

[Georgetown, by Vithaya Phongsavan]
What better way to celebrate Inauguration than to dine like a president? Head to Georgetown during Inauguration week and hit up these spots to get the presidential treatment. More>>



Every holiday season, the White House is decorated like a winter wonderland, with the official White House Christmas tree as the centerpiece of the decorations. Here are some of our favorites from throughout the years:
Letitia Baldridge will forever go down in history as one of the greatest American etiquette experts, ranking right up there with Emily Post. She passed away at the age of 86 on Monday, and will forever be remembered as Jackie Kennedy's White House social secretary and the "Doyenne of Decorum." More»
Go HERE to see more pictures by Patrick MacLeod and tag yourself and your friends!
Last night the city rocked a bit through the storms not due to the weather but from the opening party for Bright Young Things. The new art and fashion exhibit took place at the MINA Gallery in Cooper Square. More»
(Photo via) 91-year old Viola Drath was murdered this week in her home in Georgetown, and papers are pointing the finger at her husband Albrecht Muth, 44-years her junior and gay.
Why anyone would want to kill a sweet 91-year old woman is beyond us. German-born Drath was a correspondent for German newspaper Handelsblatt, had a column in the Washington Times, authored several books and was a member of the National Committee on American Foreign Policy
If convicted, Muth will join a long list of social--not political--scandals that have shaken Georgetown in the last few decades.