From: Rockwell.com
by Peter
Janney
| |
This is
chapter one of Mary's
Mosaic: The CIA Conspiracy To Murder John F. Kennedy, Mary Pinchot
Meyer, and Their Vision for World Peace.
Copyright 2012 by
Peter Janney. Reprint permission courtesy of the author. Published
by Skyhorse Publishing.
Fate’s
Engagement
There are very
few human beings who receive the truth, complete and staggering, by
instant illumination. Most of them acquire it fragment by fragment,
on a small scale, by successive developments, cellularly, like a
laborious mosaic.
~ Anaïs
Nin
A patriot must
always be ready to defend his country against his
government.
~ Edward
Abbey
In some far
place, where all the lovely things
Of earth are born, the gods no longer weep.
She has returned to them. And what she brings
We lose, but always keep.
Of earth are born, the gods no longer weep.
She has returned to them. And what she brings
We lose, but always keep.
~ Mary Pinchot
(Meyer), (From her poem “Requiem”)[1]
A chilly
October wind sent leaves scudding across the cobblestones of
Washington’s elegant Georgetown streets as Mary Pinchot Meyer set
out on her customary early morning walk to her art studio. She was
lithe and feminine, radiant with a beauty that still turned heads.
On that day, too, she was almost ageless with grace. Her svelte
frame belied the strength within her, fed perhaps by a rare
reservoir of spiritual intensity. It was Monday morning, October 12,
1964. Two days later would be her forty-fourth birthday, the
first without the man she had come to love, and with whom she had
shared her hope for a world in pursuit of peace. [2]
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In spite of the
raw autumn temperature just above freezing that signaled winter’s
approach, there was the promise of an impending sun’s warmth. Still,
the weather called for several layers of clothing in anticipation of
the longer walk along the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal that had become
her daily ritual each afternoon after she painted. The walk from her
Thirty-Fourth Street home took less than ten minutes. Her artist’s
studio, a converted brick garage with two skylights in its tin roof,
was located in the alleyway behind her sister Tony and
brother-in-law Ben Bradlee’s N Street house, itself a poignant
reminder, only because its location was just seven doors away from
where her lover, the president, had lived before moving into the
White House in 1960. That morning, however, she may have pondered
the recent estrangement from her sister and brother-in-law. Months
earlier, a schism had developed, primarily involving Ben, whom she
had come to distrust. “Since his first marriage was a failure,” she
told her friends Jim and Anne Truitt, “he’s trying twice as hard
with Tony. One and a half would be enough.” [3]
The capital
city was still reeling from the unfathomable trauma that had taken
place eleven months earlier in Dallas. It had left a deep wound in
the fabric of America’s soul and identity, and in the meaning of
civilization across the globe. Festering, the wound wasn’t about to
heal, or even recede. That would require, among other things, an
elixir called truth, not its subversion in the form of the so-called
Warren Report that had emerged three weeks earlier from Supreme
Court justice Earl Warren’s commission on the assassination of
President John F. Kennedy. For Mary, the report may have been
further evidence of the infection that had already taken hold, long
before the nightmare in Dallas. Like a viral cancerous army, rogue
elements within the highest levels of the American government had
usurped the hope and vision she and Jack had shared and nurtured,
ending America’s dream for the president’s new trajectory toward
world peace. She wasn’t about to let the Warren Commission lie go
unchallenged. She had made her decision to stand up and be
counted. [4]
Since Dallas,
Mary had experienced a rough year of adjustments, with no real end
in sight. For months, she had attempted to retreat into her
discipline as an artist. She was by now an established painter in
the Washington Color School. Her dream of recognition as a
contemporary abstract painter had started to be realized just five
days before the horror in Dallas had struck. Her first solo art
opening at the Jefferson Place Gallery in Washington had been a
solid success. Reviewing her paintings on November 24, Washington
Post art critic Leslie Judd Ahlander heralded Mary’s artistry,
writing, “Her work has always shown a quality which made one want to
see more. Now she is working very hard and the results are
gratifying indeed.” Describing Mary’s tondo (circular canvas)
approach using acrylic paint, Ahlander had praised her presentation
as “luminous and carefully thought out. . . . a lyrical and
emotional statement rather than a cooly [sic] calculated one.
It is easy to see that the artist has brought a great deal of
thought to bear on the adjustment of areas and colors.” [5] The recognition was an
affirmation of the creative path she had long desired.
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Mary’s painting
had provided some respite in the wake of the president’s
assassination and eventually led to a second 1964 exhibit in May
with the Pan American Union’s Nine Contemporary Painters: USA
exhibit in Washington. Three of her most recently completed
works, Fire Island II, Clearing, and Foxglove,
had been included in the show. Overall, the exhibit had been
even more successful than her first. In November, it was due to be
shipped to the Museum of Modern Art in Buenos Aires for an
international opening, her first worldwide public exhibition – one
she would not live to witness.
Tormented since
Jack’s death, Mary had refused to accept the lies being peddled to
the public. At times despondent, she had asked her friend and fellow
artist Bill Walton, a Kennedy insider who had escorted her many
times to White House functions that included stolen moments with the
president, “why Bobby wasn’t doing more about what had really
happened to Jack in Dallas.” Bobby did have a plan, Walton
told her, to attempt to retake the White House, but time would have
to pass first. Best to keep throwing herself back into her work,
Walton counseled, as Walton himself was doing. [6]
It wasn’t
enough. She would take matters into her own hands, she had finally
decided. [7] Throughout
the past year, she had made it her business to learn what had really
taken place in Dallas that late-November day. Like most Americans,
Mary grieved over the violent death of her president; for her,
however, his departure had also been uniquely personal. She and Jack
had not only been lovers, but had also grown into the deepest of
allies – kindred spirits in the pursuit of peace for the world. It
hadn’t been Mary’s first attempt at such a feat. Nearly fifteen
years earlier, she had worked tirelessly with her then-husband, war
hero Cord Meyer, to promote a world government structure that might
maintain the hard-won, fragile peace of a postwar nuclear world. But
Cord had ultimately chosen a different path and, in doing so, had
foreclosed on their marriage. With Jack, Mary had finally prevailed.
Everything, at least for a few moments, had looked so promising. And
that was really what she wanted – to give peace a chance.
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Her prior
access to Jack and his White House coterie had allowed her to
quietly interrogate the few who would talk about that day in Dallas.
She had read and collected some of the various reports and articles
that questioned the falsehoods that had been propagated and were now
worming their way into the public mind. Those writings occupied a
special place in the bookcase in her bedroom, next to her diary, the
final repository of reflections and analysis of what she had come to
understand. [8]
The past year
had also been a grueling duel with despair. It had taken a huge
toll. “What’s the use?” Mary bemoaned to her dear friend Anne Truitt
before she had left for Japan earlier that year. “Everything I love
seems to die.” [9]
Melancholy had periodically opened the wounds of past losses in
Mary’s life: her half-sister Rosamund’s suicide in 1938; the death
of her father, Amos, in 1944. Neither, however, had prepared her for
the unspeakable horror of losing her son Michael in 1956. That
tragedy had propelled her into an emotional typhoon which she
struggled long and hard to resolve. While scar tissue might stop the
bleeding, the wound of such a loss (as every mother either imagined
or knew firsthand) never really healed.
With her
friends Anne and Jim Truitt having left for Tokyo in early 1964, [10] Mary had recently,
perhaps mistakenly, spoken to another woman she knew only
peripherally, not realizing the woman had been sent to find out what
Mary had learned about the dastardly deed in Dallas, and its
orchestration. Mary wasn’t going to sit by and let it happen all
over again, she told the friend, who suggested that it might be
better to leave well enough alone. [11] The cover-up had reached its final public
crescendo with the release of the Warren Report on September 24,
about three weeks earlier. Mary had bought the abridged paperback
version and read it with her trained editor’s eye, making numerous
notes in the margins, and turning down page corners for markers.
Sensing it had been crafted as the final narcotic designed to deaden
any serious inquiry or public scrutiny, she had furiously confronted
her ex-husband, Cord Meyer, a CIA honcho who in turn had informed
his close friend and colleague Jim Angleton, also the longtime
godfather to her children.
[12] Of course, it hadn’t been the first time she’d openly
spoken out against their beloved Agency. During the preceding years,
Mary – unlike other CIA wives – had been outspoken at cocktail and
dinner parties, “always making wisecracks,” one Agency wife
remembered, about what the CIA was doing in the world. [13]
The art studio
was cold when she entered it. Her morning ritual included turning on
the electric space heater, pouring coffee from her thermos, and
lighting up a Salem, so as to begin. The transition into painting
allowed her to quiet, if only for a while, the challenges she knew
she would soon face.
The hour was
approaching noon as she stepped back from her morning’s meditation –
a tondo focus of unprimed canvas containing “swaying velvety
semicircles of color” so rich in vivid acrylic pigment. [14] Whether that morning’s
endeavor was further informed by her recent thematic, ongoing
analysis of peace and harmony wasn’t known, but Mary’s former
intimacy with artist Ken Noland in the late 1950s had given her a
particular vantage point for her evolving exploration. Noland’s
“target” paintings had influenced her, as they had expressed a
distinct commentary about war. She had taken this target circular
device in her most recent painting, Half Light, and expressed
the four elements – fire, wind, water, and earth – using color to
underscore harmony with the earth, and the universe itself. Her
“one-world” harmony in the past year may have been an homage to Jack
and their shared vision for world peace. It was, after all, only a
vision – perhaps her vision, or their vision – of where mankind
should always be focused now and in the future. There was still
purpose to be explored, and she would continue to fight, even
without Jack. Seven years later, someone by the name of John Lennon
would sing a song called “Imagine,” capturing where Mary had been
headed. [15]
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While Mary’s
work that morning may have echoed her recent painting Half
Light, something within Half Light’s conception of
one-world harmony might have died in order to be reborn. Hope and
despair in the end had been engaged in an epic battle, and not just
in her life alone. Stepping back from her morning’s work, she might
have thought of naming the painting Lost Light, or just No
Light at all. The title would eventually emerge – as it always
seemed to – however private the artist’s meaning for the world to
see. Her mother’s discipline, from which she had built her own,
would ensure it.
The day
beckoned her to be on her way. Her usual long walk after a morning’s
artistic focus was another workday ritual she always looked forward
to. The paint was still damp on the circular canvas. Having
positioned an electric fan toward the wet painting, she collected
her Mark Cross leather gloves and her sunglasses and pulled on her
blue cable-knit angora hooded sweater over a lighter sweater and
white oxford cloth shirt.
[16] There was no need to take her purse; she liked to walk
freely with no encumbrance. Her paint-spattered PF Flyer canvas
sneakers likely squeaked across the wooden floor as she pivoted out
the door.
The October
breeze suggested the cooler days ahead, bringing welcome relief from
Washington’s oppressive humidity, which sometimes lingered well into
September. Even so, by noontime the day had already warmed. Circling
the block to N Street, Mary walked down the steep incline of
Thirty-Fourth Street toward the C & O Canal towpath. Crossing
the inevitable M Street traffic, she found herself face-to-face with
an approaching limousine, the long, black, official kind with
government license plates that at an earlier time could have been
taking Jack to some official function or meeting.
Good-bye,
Mary,” yelled Polly Wisner, one of Washington’s more aristocratic
women. The wife of Frank Wisner, one of the founding fathers of CIA
covert operations, Polly was preparing to fly to London without
Frank, whose descent into a labyrinth of depression, mania, and
compulsive talking, or logorrhea, had finally ended his intelligence
career in 1962. Mary would never know that a year later, in 1965,
Wisner would be found dead, an apparent suicide, a small-gauge
shotgun his final companion. His daughter would wonder whether her
father had suffered some kind of delayed guilt reaction over the
CIA’s recruitment and shelter of a number of high-level Nazis after
the war. [17] But the
small-gauge shotgun somehow kept emerging as “the final companion of
choice.” Just a year earlier, in August 1963, Mary’s friend, Philip
L. Graham, owner-publisher of the Washington Post, had
allegedly embraced such a firearm for himself. There would be
others, too, all unbeknownst to Mary. In 1977, the CIA asset George
de Mohrenschildt, once in charge of keeping Lee Harvey Oswald
positioned in Dallas, would also appoint the small-bore shotgun as
his final companion – immediately before he was to be interviewed by
an investigator for the House Select Committee on Assassinations
(HSCA). Mary would not survive to witness the self-destruction that
would explode in the years to come. She passed Polly Wisner,
undoubtedly waving in response to Polly’s greeting, and moved onward
toward the canal towpath. Polly would be the last acquaintance to
see Mary alive.
[18]
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As she
continued walking, Mary might have cheered herself with thoughts of
Thanksgiving and the anticipation of being reunited with her two
boys, Quenty and Mark, due home in a little more than a month from
their respective boarding schools, Salisbury and Milton Academy. She
had been to Salisbury the preceding academic year to visit Quenty,
the handsome son she’d called “mouse” when he was younger. There
were those in the extended family who privately felt Quenty had been
scarred by his father, Cord, and, of course, by the death of his
brother Mikey. Like his father, Quenty had been known to exhibit a
cruel disposition that was often visited on those more vulnerable
and defenseless in their immediate and extended family. The meanness
was a phase that Mary hoped he would grow out of, as children
sometimes did. At Salisbury, Quenty was coming into his own, his
athleticism in basketball and tennis readily apparent. During Mary’s
visit, his schoolmates had gawked at her the entire time, later
telling Quenty his mother was “incredibly beautiful.” [19]
The towpath was
nearly deserted that Monday as Mary proceeded westward from
Georgetown out to Fletcher’s Boat House, a distance of about two and
a quarter miles. Still, there was one young couple up ahead walking
in the same direction as Mary. Just as they disappeared around the
first bend, a young man wearing red Bermuda shorts ran past her on
his way west. He was probably a student at Georgetown University,
whose Gothic Healy Clock Tower soared above the tree line on a bluff
overlooking the canal.
Once doomed to
be replaced by a freeway, the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal had been
saved through the efforts of Supreme Court justice William O.
Douglas. Douglas had led protest hikes the entire length of the
canal in 1954, wanting the most perfectly preserved example of
America’s canal-building era to be designated a national historic
park. He had personally undertaken the campaign in the spirit of his
boyhood hero, Gifford Pinchot, Mary’s uncle and a pioneering
conservationist who had twice been elected governor of Pennsylvania.
In 1905, Gifford Pinchot had been appointed the first head of the
U.S. Forest Service by President Teddy Roosevelt, his close
friend.
While the C
& O Canal itself had been declared a national historical
monument under President Eisenhower, efforts to make it a national
park had failed until President Kennedy took office, only because,
according to one source, Mary had lobbied hard for the proposal. [20] Jack was, according
to one insider, amused by Mary’s entreaties; he found them
endearing. Eventually, however, he came to rely more on her,
convinced that her counsel had critical value on even more important
issues. [21]
After Dallas,
Mary’s towpath excursions had become a sacred refuge, even in
inclement weather. Not a drinker like so many of the other women in
her circle, and willing to face the fury within, she had made
walking an antidote for her agitation. But about a month or so after
Jack’s assassination, she later told her friend Jim Truitt, she had
set out on the towpath one day in wintry weather, determined to
sustain her fragile equilibrium, only to confront further anguish
instead of the solace she’d sought. A short but violent snow squall
had materialized, making visibility difficult, if not impossible.
Coming toward her through the blinding snow was a ghostlike chimera
taking form as it neared. It wasn’t until she was nearly
face-to-face with the person, she said, that she recognized Jackie.
The two fell into each other’s arms, crying and consoling one
another in embrace, as only women know how to do. [22] Mary’s
discretion was always paramount, her capacity to comfort someone
else even amid her own deepest anguish somehow readily available
when called for. Jackie was adrift. Her life – and all of history –
dramatically, irrevocably shattered, she needed as many anchors as
she could find.
|
Jackie kept
repeating how happy she and the President had been in the White
House,” Mary later disclosed to Truitt about that day. [23] She hadn’t disputed Jackie,
although she easily could have, in view of the life she’d enjoyed
with Jack. Mary had understood his conflicted hunger as perhaps only
a uniquely enlightened woman could, viewing his sexual “wanderlust”
for what it was – a symptom of his rejection by a cold and distant
mother. [24]
She wasn’t threatened by it. “In addition to art, Mary was an acute
judge of masculine character,” her friend Anne Truitt would remark
years later. [25]
Historian Herb Parmet, in a groundbreaking biography of Jack,
had interviewed a close confidential source who knew the score. The
source had observed that Jack enjoyed a very different, and very
special, life with Mary. “He could talk in ways she understood and
their trust was mutual,” Parmet would write in 1983. “When he was
with her, the rest of the world could go to hell. He could laugh
with her at the absurdity of the things he saw all around his center
of power.” [26]
She continued
walking in her customary westerly direction, as the October noonday
sun warmed the morning chill. Throughout the past year, there had
been several incidents of someone intruding into her home. The
incidents started in January, only weeks after Dallas. Then, after
being away for some time that summer, she was sure someone had been
inside her house while she was gone. In another instance, she had
found the heavy basement door, which was impossible for her to move
even with the help of her two sons, ajar. But the finale had been
seeing somebody leaving her house as she had walked in. She was sure
of it. [27] What were
they after?
As an artist,
Mary’s philosophical perspective had undergone a major
transformation when she embarked on a journey of personal
exploration of mind-expanding potions in the late 1950s. So profound
had been her journey that it allowed her to see her world in a way
she had never before envisioned or experienced. [28] It may have also allowed her
some deeper resolution about her son Michael’s death, though would
ever dishonor his spirit in her life. Nonetheless, despite Michael’s
departure, Mary’s awareness had expanded into the recognition of the
connectedness of all living things, the breathing atomic structure
of everything physical, all coexisting peacefully in harmony with
one another. Here, cosmic joy was real, a blessing given to all who
were willing to surrender. And here, within a sublime expanded
consciousness, such exploits as domination and war lust were seen as
infantile – mere vestigial reminders of an arrested evolutionary
history. [29]
What if world
leaders – those political titular heads of state – could experience
the sacred connection of life force in harmonious coexistence, just
as many artists and poets had envisioned? The pace of human
evolution itself might take a giant step forward, ending the rampant
Cold War madness, she told Timothy Leary in 1962. [30] At first, it had only been a
pipe dream, something she imagined mostly within. Yet fate somehow
kept managing to place her across Jack’s path – or was it Jack
across hers? She had sought Leary’s counsel, but her discretion once
again erected the boundary. She would never name names, never reveal
her real plan. He had kindly given her some tools, suggestions for
how to guide others through the psychedelic Garden of Eden. She had
shared her emerging experience with a small group of eight women who
were willing to engage a few powerful men in Washington. Leary,
unaware of what was really taking place, said he would continue to
periodically make himself available to help her. [31]
Mary had
decided she’d take it in steps, and so one hot summer night in July
of 1962 she and Jack smoked marijuana together in the White House
residence. She was curious as to how he might react. At first, he
had become “hungry” for food – “soup and chocolate mousse” – before
their amorous embrace that evening, in which she had held a more
vulnerable man in her arms. It may have frightened him initially,
but her assurance, her trust, likely conveyed that he was, however
momentarily, safe – safe in her arms, safe in her love, even safe in
the realization that it might be time to confront what had been
keeping him from his own redemption. [32]
Later on, she
had admittedly made “a mistake in recruitment” in her small
psychedelic group of eight women. “I was such a fool,” she had
anxiously told Timothy Leary in Millbrook, New York, in September
1963. “A wife snitched on us. I’m scared,” she’d blurted out, then
burst into tears. [33]
Discreet as ever, Mary never mentioned names to Leary,
but she had feared the worst at the time. With her husband dead,
Katharine Graham now wielded more power in Washington than ever
before. Mary had considered Katharine’s husband, Philip L. Graham,
whose name she never mentioned to Leary, to be “a friend of mine,” a
friend who she described as “losing the battle, a really bloody one.
He got drunk and told a room full of reporters about me and my
boyfriend.” [34]
Leary hadn’t realized at the time that Mary’s “boyfriend”
was the president. But the worst part was that Phil Graham had just
allegedly committed suicide, another detail she kept from Leary, who
couldn’t quite fathom why the usually bold, courageous Mary was so
upset. That day with Leary at Millbrook, she had voiced her worst
fear, that even her own life might be in danger, finally asking
whether, if she showed up unexpectedly at some point, he would be
able to hide her. Yes, he could, he reassured her. But nothing had
happened. There had been no repercussions. Maybe Phil Graham did
commit suicide after all, she may have thought as she kept walking,
perhaps not realizing that her paranoia had in fact been a case of
heightened awareness.
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The Potomac River was to her
left as the towpath also veered left, narrowing a bit as it
paralleled the elevated Canal Road to her right. Mary approached the
narrow, thirty-foot-long wooden footbridge that spanned the shallow
spillway drainage. It was almost the halfway mark to Fletcher’s Boat
House, her usual destination before turning back. The path ahead was
empty. She stepped into a dense arbor of mature black cherry trees,
river birch, and box elders, its wildness protruding beyond the
city’s boundary. It was likely one of her favorite parts of this
particular route because of its comforting solitude. Dappled by
sparking sunlight, the Potomac could be seen through a scrim of
branches down a steep embankment and beyond a thicket of
fire-scarred trees. But for the intermittent drone of passing cars
above and to her right, she was alone with her thoughts and all of
nature.
Unaware that
she had been under surveillance for the past several weeks, and
oblivious that day to the fact that she was being stalked, Mary
might well not have heard the footfalls gathering speed behind
her. [35] She had no
reason to be concerned. Park Service police regularly patrolled the
area, though for some reason they weren’t present that day. Other
pedestrians, bicyclists, and the fishermen and boatmen who
frequented the river almost guaranteed the towpath’s security in
daytime. Mary had never feared for her safety in this place, or any
other for that matter, despite the concerns her friend Cicely
Angleton would later express that day. “Besides being one of the
prettiest girls in the world, Mary had great courage,” recalled her
Vassar classmate Scottie Fitzgerald Smith, the daughter of author F.
Scott, remembering their days as apprentice journalists in New York.
“I wouldn’t go down into those subways at night, but Mary was never
afraid. ‘Oh nothing will happen,’” Scottie remembered Mary saying. [36]
The towpath was
an unlikely venue for an assault in broad daylight, yet Mary was
abruptly seized from behind. Her assailant wrapped her in a close,
hard embrace, pinning her arms against her side. Immobilized, the
vigorous, athletic woman came alive as she fought hard to escape the
lock of an aggressor she probably couldn’t see. Squirming, groaning,
trying to break free, she realized the strength of her attacker, and
instinctively yelled out, “Somebody help me!” Again and again, she
called out beyond the three-foot retaining wall of the canal to the
passing automobiles on Canal Road less than 150 feet away. [37] A muffled explosion
sent a ringing, echoing roar through her ears. She must have smelled
the stench of burning flesh and gunpowder as something hard and hot
seared into the left side of her skull just in front of her ear. A
gush of wet warmth poured down her face, soaking the collar of her
blue angora sweater, turning it red.
With a
desperate lunge, Mary broke away, stumbling across the towpath to
the wooded embankment border. Seeking refuge somewhere at the
border’s edge, holding onto a nearby birch tree, she brought her
gloved hand to her left temple, only to draw away great smears of
blood that darkly stained the leather glove. Assaulted by waves of
nausea and weakness, falling to her knees and fighting to retain
consciousness, she braced herself from falling farther, clinging to
the smooth birch tree trunk. Failing to kill her with his first
shot, the assailant seized her again, even more roughly. This time,
he dragged Mary from the embankment clear across the towpath, out of
the shadows and into the sunlight toward the canal’s edge, her
paint-spattered PF Flyers vainly seeking traction against the
pebbled dirt, leaving parallel tracks that would mark the last path
of her earthly life. Still, she struggled. But she didn’t scream
again. As she lost strength, her voice may have been quieted by both
pain and fear. Or perhaps she silently beseeched the passing cars
above, before something hard was pressed against her body over her
right shoulder blade. [38]
Mary likely
didn’t hear the second explosion. There was only the hot path of
metal that tore through her chest, severing her aorta. As the last
echo of gunfire faded, death forced her final surrender and she fell
upon the grassy ledge at the water’s edge.
Chapter
Notes
[1] Mary Pinchot, “Requiem,” New
York Times, January 25, 1940, p. 16. The poem was a tribute to
her half-sister Rosamond Pinchot, who committed suicide in
1938.
[2] The nature of Mary Meyer’s
involvement with President Kennedy and their mutual concern with
world peace initiatives, away from the Cold War, is the focus of
this book and will be demonstrated throughout. Significant support
for this perspective came from former presidential adviser Kenneth
P. O’Donnell’s extensive interviews with the late author Leo Damore,
shortly before O’Donnell’s death, as well as other sources and
interviews with Damore. The most recent account of Mary Meyer’s
influence in the Kennedy White House was provided by David Talbot in
his book Brothers:
The Hidden History of the Kennedy Years (New York: Free
Press, 2007).
[3] James McConnell Truitt, letter
to author Deborah Davis, dated May 11, 1979. The letter was
part of the files of the late author Leo Damore, and was confirmed
by author Deborah Davis in 2005.
[4] Mary Meyer’s intention to go
public with her revelations about the CIA’s involvement in the
Kennedy assassination has been documented in a number of sources. It
was revealed, according to author Leo Damore, in Mary’s real diary,
which Damore finally obtained and described in detail to his
attorney, James H. Smith, Esq., on March 31, 1993 (see Appendix 3).
Mary Meyer’s awareness of CIA involvement in the Kennedy
assassination is also alluded to by Robert Morrow in his book First
Hand Knowledge: How I Participated in the CIA-Mafia Murder of
President Kennedy (New York: S.P.I. Books, 1992), 275–280,
and in two transcripts of alleged conversations between CIA covert
action specialist Robert T. Crowley and author Gregory Douglas on
January 27, 1996, and April 2, 1996. The mutually reinforcing effect
of these sources, and the way in which in the aggregate they
establish Mary Meyer’s intention to go public (after the Warren
Report’s release in September) with all that she had discovered
throughout the year of 1964, is discussed in greater detail in
chapters 11, 12, and 13 and the Epilogue.
[5] Leslie Judd Ahlander, “Frederick
Drawings Exhibited,” Washington Post, November 24, 1963, p.
G10.
[6] Leo Damore, interview by the
author, Centerbrook, Conn., February 1992. Between 1992 and 1994,
there were at least five face-to-face meetings between Damore and
this author, in addition to numerous follow-up telephone
conversations regarding the life of Mary Meyer, her death, and
Damore’s research. Damore stated that Mary Meyer had sought
out Bill Walton’s counsel in early 1964.
[7] See note 4 above. Leo Damore,
who had acquired a copy of Mary Meyer’s real diary, told his
attorney, James E. Smith, on March 31, 1993, that Mary had made a
decision to go public with what she had discovered, sometime after
the Warren Report had been released. See Appendix 3. Chapters 11,
12, and 13 also cover this arena thoroughly.
[8] Ron Rosenbaum and Phillip
Nobile, “The Curious Aftermath of JFK’s Best and Brightest Affair,”
New Times, July 9, 1976, p. 29. “Mary Meyer was accustomed to
leaving her diary in the bookcase in her bedroom where,
incidentally, she kept clippings of the JFK assassination.” In 1976,
the authors interviewed some of the people closest to Mary Meyer who
had intimate knowledge of her habits during the last year of her
life. In addition, according to Leo Damore, Mary also talked with
presidential adviser Kenneth P. O’Donnell shortly after the Kennedy
assassination. See note 2 above.
[9] Nina Burleigh, A
Very Private Woman: The Life and Unsolved Murder of Presidential
Mistress Mary Meyer (New York: Bantam, 1998), p.
304.
[10] Anne and James Truitt had
moved to Tokyo shortly after Anne’s sculpture exhibit Black,
White, and Grey opened in January 1964 at the Wadsworth Atheneum
in Hartford, Connecticut. Her husband, James, was Japan’s bureau
chief for Newsweek.
[11] Morrow, First Hand
Knowledge, p. 277. As noted in note 4 above, this event was also
mentioned by former CIA official Robert T. Crowley in a conversation
to author Gregory Douglas in January 1996. See Chapter 13 for
further discussion of the way in which these sources are mutually
corroborating.
[12] Leo Damore revealed Mary
Meyer’s altercation with Cord Meyer to his attorney, James H. Smith,
Esq., during the above-referenced telephone call of March 31, 1993.
Smith took six pages of notes on this call, which are reproduced in
Appendix 3.
[13] Confidential source who asked
to remain anonymous, interview with the author, Washington, D.C.,
March 10, 2006.
[14] Rosenbaum and Nobile,
“Curious Aftermath,” p. 22.
[15] I am indebted to
award-winning Boston fine artist Shelah Horvitz for her insightful
analysis of some of the last paintings of Mary Pinchot Meyer, as
well as Horvitz’s overall knowledge of the Washington Color School
artists.
[16] Rosenbaum and Nobile,
“Curious Aftermath,” p. 22. Part of this description was based on
the authors’ interviews with principals in 1976, as well as the
clothing Mary Meyer wore that day, which was documented in the trial
transcript, United States of America v. Ray Crump, Jr., Defendant,
Criminal Case No. 930-64, United States District Court for the
District of Columbia, Washington, D.C., July 20, 1965. Volume 1: pp.
4-7.
[17] Burton Hersh, The
American Elite and the Origins of the CIA (New York:
Scribner, 1992), p. 439.
[18] Burleigh, Very Private
Woman, p. 11.
[19] Damore, interview.
[20] Ibid. According to Damore,
Kenny O’Donnell had shared with him that Mary Meyer had pushed hard
for President Kennedy to protect the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal
towpath area.
[21] Herbert S. Parmet, JFK:
The Presidency of John F. Kennedy (New York: Dial, 1983), p.
306. In addition, Leo Damore said he had interviewed Mr. Parmet, who
gave him a number of other details about what he had learned about
Jack’s relationship with Mary Meyer.
[22] Bernie Ward and Granville
Toogood, “Former Vice President of Washington Post Reveals JFK
2-Year White House Romance,” National Enquirer, March 2,
1976, p. 4. In addition, Leo Damore had interviewed an anonymous
source who was a close friend of Mary Meyer’s who gave him more
details about this encounter, which he discussed with me in
1992.
[23] Ibid. Ward and Toogood,
National Enquirer, March 2, 1976, p. 4. Damore
interview with anonymous source, as with me in
1992.
[24] The extent of John F.
Kennedy’s difficulty with emotional intimacy, particularly with
women, has been well documented in the following: Nigel Hamilton,
JFK:
Reckless Youth (New York: Random House, 1992), and two books
by Ralph G. Martin: A
Hero for Our Time: An Intimate Story of the Kennedy Years
(New York: Macmillan, 1983) and Seeds
of Destruction: Joe Kennedy and His Sons (New York: G. P.
Putnam’s Sons, 1995). In addition, presidential historian Robert
Dallek’s An
Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy, 1917–1963 (Boston: Little,
Brown, 2003) further documents this arena thoroughly, as does Doris
Kearns Goodwin’s The
Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys (New York: St. Martin’s, 1987).
All five volumes address John Kennedy’s emotional maternal
deprivation and the toll it took on him. President Kennedy’s sexual
addiction and reckless philandering is further documented by Seymour
Hersh’s The
Dark Side of Camelot (New York: Back Bay Books, 1997). See
also chapter 6 for further discussion.
[25] Anne Truitt, Daybook:
The Journal of an Artist (New York: Pantheon, 1982), p.
165.
[26] Parmet, JFK, p.
306.
[27] Burleigh, Very Private
Woman, p. 226.
[28] See Chapter 8. Mary Meyer’s
initial foray into psychedelics, according to James Truitt, appears
to have taken place in the San Francisco Bay area during a
late-1950s visit with Jim Truitt and his wife, Anne. Deborah Davis,
interview by Leo Damore, February 23, 1991; Deborah Davis, interview
by the author, March 17, 2009. During Davis’s research for her book
Katharine the Great in 1976, she traveled to Mexico to
interview Jim Truitt for more than ten hours over a three-day
period. The two then corresponded further by mail. Nina Burleigh
also references the likelihood of Jim Truitt’s influence for “Mary’s
initiation into drug experimentation.” See Burleigh, Very Private
Woman, pp. 171–172).
[29] During his
never-before-published two-hour interview by Leo Damore on November
7, 1990, Timothy Leary commented extensively on Mary Meyer’s
experience with psychedelics and the impact it had on her worldview
and in her life. Timothy Leary, interview by Leo Damore, Washington,
D.C., November 7, 1990. See also Chapters 8 and 9.
[30] Timothy Leary, Flashbacks:
An Autobiography (Los Angeles: J. P. Tarcher, 1983), p. 129.
Also, during his 1990 interview with Leo Damore, Leary spoke at some
length about how Mary Meyer defined her mission with psychedelics.
See chapter 9.
[31] Leary, interview. See also
Leary, Flashbacks, p. 156.
[32] Ward and Toogood, “White
House Romance,” p. 4; Damore, interview. Damore repeatedly stressed
that Mary Meyer had been in large measure “a healer” in Kennedy’s
tortured emotional life. Some of Damore’s insight had been based on
his talks with Kenny O’Donnell regarding Mary Meyer’s influence on
the president.
[33] Leary,
Flashbacks, p. 191.
[34] Ibid., p. 162. In addition,
since the first edition (1979) of Deborah Davis’s Katharine the
Great (which was recalled and shredded due to pressure from Ben
Bradlee and Katharine Graham), there has been controversy over
whether Phil Graham actually mentioned during his infamous
“meltdown” in Phoenix at a newspaper convention in January 1963 the
fact that Mary Meyer was having an affair with President Kennedy.
Carol Felsenthal, whose 1993 book Power,
Privilege and the Post was thoroughly checked and vetted,
maintains that Phil Graham did, in fact, reveal the affair during
his drunken tirade. In an interview for this book, Ms. Felsenthal
stated the following: “Because of what happened to the Deborah Davis
book, my book was vetted and re-vetted. I would never have been able
to get away with something that wasn’t thoroughly checked.” In
addition, Felsenthal also revealed that Ben Bradlee “told a
journalism class at USC that he had read every entry [in the
Felsenthal book] and he thought it was fair.” Carol Felsenthal,
interview by the author, August 10, 2010.
[35] In an interview Nina Burleigh
conducted with CIA wife Joanne (“Joan”) Bross, Ms. Bross stated that
James Angleton bragged on more than one occasion that he had
wiretapped Mary Meyer’s telephone and bugged her bedroom. See
Burleigh, Very Private Woman 18, pp. 124–125. In addition,
during Leo Damore’s above-mentioned telephone call to his attorney,
James H. Smith, Esq., on March 31, 1993, Damore said that he had
just talked for several hours with “William L. Mitchell,” who
confessed to being part of a surveillance team assigned to Mary
Meyer around the time of the Warren Report’s release to the public
in September 1964.
[36] Rosenbaum and Nobile,
“Curious Aftermath,” p. 29.
[37] The description of the final
seconds of Mary Meyer’s life and what occurred at the scene of her
death was outlined in detail in prosecuting attorney Alfred
Hantman’s fifteen-page opening statement at the trial of Ray Crump
Jr. in July 1965. See trial transcript, United States of
America v. Ray Crump, Jr., Defendant, Criminal Case No. 930-64,
United States District Court for the District of Columbia,
Washington, D.C., July 20, 1965, Vol. l: pp. 2–17.
[38] According to the 1965 trial
testimony of Dr. Linwood Rayford, the deputy coroner, the second
shot was placed over Mary Meyer’s right shoulder blade, “angling
from right to left and slightly downward,” where its trajectory
would traverse the chest cavity, “perforating the right lung and the
aorta . . .” Trial transcript, pp. 71–72. In 1991, Dr. Rayford told
Leo Damore that “whoever assaulted this woman intended to kill her”
Dr. Linwood L. Rayford, interview by Leo Damore, Washington, D.C.,
February 19, 1991.
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