When she was 15, Barbara Rimer was so crushed by the death of President John F. Kennedy that she wrote a letter of condolence and mailed it to JFK's widow.
Rimer, now the dean of the Gillings School of Global Public Health at UNC-Chapel Hill, never thought of it again until recently, when a historian in New Hampshire contacted her, asking permission to publish it as part of a new book of those condolence letters that Jackie Kennedy received after JFK's assassination.
Here's the story.
I didn't include the entire letter in the story, but here it is.
Dear Mrs. Kennedy,
Something vital is missing from the house on 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Maybe it is youthfulness, a lovely young couple, two charming children, or maybe a guiding hand, a gay wit, and a special security people drew from his presence, all these things and more, Americans lost when Lee Harvey Oswald committed his heinous crime. These losses are irreplaceable.
Though you have lost a loving husband, Carolina and John a devoted father, Robert and his sisters and brother, a brother, Mr. & Mrs. Kennedy a son, and all Americans a cherished friend, we will not forget John Fitzgerald Kennedy. We share a wonderful memory though he died, still his ideals were not and will not [die] be buried. I promise you I will give body and soul to perpetuate the very ideals President Kennedy lived for. And I am sure he would wish to be remembered for his humanitarian beliefs.
So now, in your time of grief, I offer to you and your children all I can, my deepest sympathy and a solemn promise for the future.
Sincerely yours,
Barbara Rimer (15 yrs. old)