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Remembering where JFK and Jacqueline Bouvier were married

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The church where John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Bouvier wed is inviting visitors in to kneel where the couple knelt, listen to the music that played and imagine the day.

St. Mary’s Church, in Newport, R.I., was the site of the wedding on Sept. 12, 1953, when Kennedy was a senator from Massachusetts. The couple often spent weekends and summers in Newport, where her family owned property. During those visits, including during his presidency, the couple worshipped at St. Mary’s, always sitting in pew 10.

People fascinated with the Kennedys regularly turn up at the church. Often they find the doors locked. The church typically isn’t open when Mass isn’t scheduled.

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Father Kris von Maluski wanted to welcome them in. He’s giving a presentation about the wedding, Tuesdays through October. He’s calling it “Return to Camelot.”

“I hear from people all the time, ‘I haven’t been to that church. I can’t get in,’” he said. “We wanted to be a bit more friendly and contribute to the tourism of Newport, too. We’re doing our part to make Newport a nice place to come by adding another interesting thing to do.”

In this 2016 photo, scaffolding is used to help disassemble the organ stands in the sanctuary of St. Mary's Church in Newport, R.I. The church where John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Bouvier married in 1953 is inviting the public to visit and learn about the wedding.
In this 2016 photo, scaffolding is used to help disassemble the organ stands in the sanctuary of St. Mary’s Church in Newport, R.I. The church where John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Bouvier married in 1953 is inviting the public to visit and learn about the wedding.
(Michelle R. Smith / Associated Press)

Von Maluski will talk about how elaborately the inside of the church was decorated, with vines and flowers wrapped around every column and arch. Locals went into the church after the wedding hoping to get a piece of history and walked out with armfuls of flowers, he said.

He’ll discuss the controversial place where the photographer stood to capture photos of the couple kneeling. It’s clear from the angle that the photographer was in the sanctuary to the side of the altar, a place where only clergy can go, which would have required special permission, Von Maluski said.

Evan Smith, the tourism director in Newport, said people come from all over the world to the town and “know of this magical wedding.” They want to see where it took place, he said.

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“Travelers today are really seeking authentic experiences. And for someone to come to Newport and say, ‘I sat in the pew in the church where Jacqueline Bouvier married John Kennedy,’ that is a real experience that people will remember for the rest of their life,” he said.

The Diocese of Providence saw this as a way for the church to reach out and connect with more people.

“I have approved of social and cultural events as a means of welcoming people to our Church, evangelization and outreach,” Bishop Thomas Tobin said in a statement. “It is especially appropriate given the history of Newport and St. Mary’s in particular.”

Von Maluski will show vintage film clips and tell stories of the wedding as recounted to him by local residents. The video includes an interview with Hugh D. Auchincloss III, stepbrother and lifelong friend of Jacqueline Kennedy, talking about the wedding before he died in 2015 in Newport. The organist will play music and hymns from the ceremony and the first dance song from the reception.

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