This article was originally published on Lizanest.com

Edith “Big Edie” Bouvier Beale and her daughter Edith “Little Edie” Bouvier Beale were not just society women; they were the rebellious cousins of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, born into the glittering Bouvier dynasty. In 1923, Big Edie claimed Grey Gardens, a lavish East Hampton mansion that would one day become a crumbling stage for their eccentric lives. Surrounded by cats, raccoons, and memories of lost grandeur, the Beales turned scandal into spectacle, transforming their decaying home into one of America’s most haunting and fascinating legends.
#1: Little Edie Almost Married Joseph Kennedy Jr.
Joseph Kennedy Jr., the charismatic heir to America’s most famous political family, was one of Little Edie’s most talked-about alleged suitors. She claimed he proposed, a match that could have propelled her into the Kennedy dynasty. But, according to Edie, Rose Kennedy herself intervened, deeming her an unsuitable wife for her eldest son.

The rejection seemed to haunt Edie, and she revisited the story for decades, presenting herself as the almost-Kennedy bride who slipped away. Whether embellished or entirely accurate, the tale added another layer to the Beale mystique, a “what might have been” that kept her name on society’s lips.
