1 Meeting Mrs. Kennedy It was with great trepidation that I approached 3307 N Street in Georgetown on November 11, 1960. I was about to meet the wife of the newly elected president of the United States, who I had just been assigned to protect, and I wasn''t looking forward to it at all. Being on the First Lady''s Secret Service detail was the last place I wanted to be. Looking back, I''m quite sure that Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy was filled with even more anxiety about our meeting than I was. Neither of us had much choice in the matter. She could refuse to accept me-as she had done with the first agent assigned to her-but if I rejected the assignment, it would be the end of my career. Just twenty-four hours earlier, I had been with outgoing President Dwight D.
Eisenhower, as he played a post-election round of golf at Augusta National Golf Course. The fact that the Republicans had lost the election was still sinking in, and while the entire administration was about to change, one of the few things that would remain the same was the Secret Service. It had been a great honor for me to be on President Eisenhower''s Secret Service detail, and, while it would be bittersweet to see him leave office, I was excited for the challenge and experience of protecting the new president. It never entered my mind that my job might not be as secure as I thought it was. There were just forty of us on the White House Secret Service detail-the elite team whose sole mission was to protect the president around the clock. We were not affiliated with any party or political group, and we were a tight group of men. The transition would require the Secret Service to adapt to the new president''s style, and even though I hadn''t yet met President-elect John F. Kennedy, it was obvious that protecting him was going to be a whole different ball game than it had been with Ike.
We were going from a seventy-year-old former general who ran the White House with military precision, to an energetic forty-three-year-old Irish Catholic Democrat from Massachusetts with a lot of new ideas to take America into the 1960s. I had been working the golf course with two other agents, and as soon as the president''s foursome finished the round, Jim Rowley, the Special Agent in Charge (SAIC) of the White House Detail, sent word that he needed to speak to the three of us. I had a feeling that this was probably my last game of golf with President Eisenhower and fully expected that Rowley was about to reassign the three of us to President-elect Kennedy. When we walked into the office, Rowley explained that he had to shuffle the personnel in order to cover President Eisenhower, along with President-elect Kennedy, until the Inauguration in January. First he addressed the other two agents, Jerry Blaine and Bill Skiles. "Jerry and Bill, you''ll be on the president-elect detail. Mr. Kennedy is going to spend the next month and the holidays at his father''s estate in Palm Beach, Florida, so you guys need to get on a flight down there this evening.
" He warned that they would likely remain in Florida until the Inauguration, meaning they''d be away from their own families for Christmas and New Year''s, and suggested they have their wives arrange to get some warm-weather clothing to them. As I was listening to Rowley give Blaine and Skiles their new assignment, an uneasy feeling started to come over me. Finally, Rowley turned to me and said, "Clint, Defense Secretary Tom Gates is here briefing the president and is returning to Washington shortly. I want you to fly back with him, then go to Secret Service headquarters and talk to Chief Baughman. The chief is expecting you." "Yes, sir," I said with a nod. Why does Baughman want to speak with me? Why am I not going to Palm Beach with Skiles and Blaine? I had a dozen questions, but I would never question Rowley''s authority or decision: he was our leader. Still, I had a foreboding feeling that whatever lay ahead for me could not be good.
SECRET SERVICE HEADQUARTERS was located in the U.S. Treasury Building, right next to the White House on Pennsylvania Avenue. I had never been in the chief''s office before, and in fact, had never personally met Chief U. E. Baughman, who had been head of the Secret Service since 1948. I was more than a little apprehensive when I checked in with his secretary, but I tried to sound as confident as possible. "I''m Special Agent Clint Hill.
Here to meet with Chief Baughman." "Yes, Mr. Hill, the chief is expecting you," she said. "You may go on in." As I walked through the doorway into the chief''s spacious office, the first thing I saw was a plaque hanging on the wall that said: You ain''t learning nothing when you''re talking. Sound advice, I thought. Then, as I looked around the room, and saw not just Chief Baughman but his deputy chief and an assistant chief as well as two inspectors, a feeling of dread suddenly came over me. The entire top echelon of the Secret Service was standing there, apparently awaiting my arrival.
"Come on in, Clint," Baughman said as he moved toward me and shook my hand. "Have a seat and make yourself comfortable." His cordial manner seemed to be an attempt to help me relax, but I still had an uneasy feeling about why I had been summoned. After introducing me to the other men in the room, Baughman asked casually, "Clint, how long have you been in the Secret Service?" "I started in the Denver Field Office on September 22, 1958, sir." "And when were you transferred to the White House Detail?" Baughman asked. "Just over one year ago. On November 1, 1959." This is strange, I thought.
Surely all of this information is in my file. Baughman asked a couple of more innocuous questions, and then each of the other men began asking me things, all sorts of things about my past, both personal and professional, as well as my attitude about protective activities. What did you do prior to becoming an agent? Where did you grow up? Where did you go to college? Are you married or single? Do you have any children? Do you swim? Do you know how to play tennis? Have you ever ridden horses? I answered the barrage of inquiries as honestly and candidly as possible, but each new question increased my anxiety, as I still had no idea what this was all about. My mind was spinning as I replayed the events of the last couple of weeks, trying to figure out what I could have done wrong, and though my stomach was in knots, I did my best to stay calm and composed. At times, the men would go off into a corner of the room and confer, just out of earshot, so I couldn''t hear what was being discussed. I was thoroughly convinced that I was about to be fired. Why else wouldn''t I have been sent to Palm Beach? The interrogation went on for nearly one and a half hours. One and a half hours in which I''d done all the talking, and just like it said on Baughman''s plaque, I hadn''t learned a damn thing.
Finally, Baughman said, "Clint, we have made a decision. You are being assigned to protect Mrs. John F. Kennedy. Jim Jeffries is the leader of the First Lady''s Detail and you''ll be his assistant." I was too stunned to speak. The First Lady''s Detail? Me? But why? "Yes, sir," I said. There was nothing more to say.
I was relieved that I wasn''t being fired, but I was deeply disappointed that I wasn''t going to be with the new president. Baughman told me to report to 3307 N Street Northwest, to the Kennedy home in Georgetown. Mrs. Kennedy would soon be arriving from Hyannis Port, Massachusetts. My mind was spinning as I left the chief''s office. Why was I selected for this assignment? What actions or experience in my background caused them to make this decision? It felt as though I had been demoted from the starting lineup to the bench. From grade school to college, in all my years playing football, basketball, and baseball, I''d always been a star player, and now, in the most important game of my life, I''d just been kicked off the first team. I was devastated.
The more I thought about it, the more upset I became. I had been on the White House Detail for just over a year and had traveled with President Eisenhower on several unprecedented trips that took us throughout Europe, Asia, and South America. At the time, I was twenty-seven years old and had never flown in a jet aircraft. Having grown up in the high plains of North Dakota, I could never have imagined I would accompany the President of the United States to ancient cities I''d only read about in history books: Rome, Ankara, Karachi, Kabul, New Delhi, Tehran, Athens, Tunis, Toulon, Paris, Lisbon, and Casablanca. To top things off, I was issued a diplomatic passport, which allowed for preferential treatment, as if I were a dignitary myself. I felt so privileged and I thrived on the constant activity. One of the things I most enjoyed was the camaraderie among all the agents as we worked together as a team. Now all that excitement was over, and I could just envision what lay ahead.
While my buddies on the President''s Detail would be right in the middle of all the action, I knew where I was going to end up: fashion shows, afternoon tea parties, and the ballet. I felt as if my career had come to a screeching halt. I pulled my Secret Service commission book out of my suit coat pocket and held it in my hands. The impressive midnight blue grosgrain leather case was engraved on the front cover with the gold five-point Secret Service star. Within the star it read: UNITED STATES SECRET SERVICE.