Jack Schlossberg, the grandson of President John F. Kennedy and a candidate in New York’s 12th congressional district, recently revealed that he keeps a skeleton dressed in clothing that once belonged to his grandfather in his home, as reported by The New York Post.
Schlossberg, 33, discussed the unusual display during a recent interview with CBS News while speaking about his campaign and personal background.
According to Schlossberg, the skeleton was initially part of a personal exercise connected to recovering from a physical injury.
Jack Schlossberg, 33, grandson of President John F. Kennedy and son of Caroline Kennedy, shared in a CBS Sunday Morning interview (aired around March 14-15, 2026) that he keeps a human skeleton model in his home dressed in his late grandfather’s hand-me-down robe and hat.… pic.twitter.com/8L6nh3mhyx
— The scoop stateside (@ScoopStateside) March 15, 2026
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“I had a back injury, and I had to kind of relearn how to walk and stand up straight,” Schlossberg said during the interview. “So at the time, I wanted to study and visualize posture on my bones.”
The skeleton, which he keeps in his residence, is dressed in clothing that Schlossberg said belonged to the late president. During the interview, he gestured toward the figure, which was wearing a robe and a hat.
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Schlossberg explained that the display took on additional significance after he received a garment that had belonged to his grandfather.
“Then I was given a robe, a hand-me-down robe from my grandpa, and then I kind of put the robe on him, and I realized, ‘Oh, my God, now I can ask him questions. And we can talk,’ ” he said.
The candidate also referenced his grandfather’s well-known habit of appearing in public without a hat during his presidency in the early 1960s.
According to Schlossberg, Kennedy’s preference for going hatless had a broader cultural impact at the time.
Schlossberg said the president “killed the hat industry,” referring to the decline in popularity of men wearing hats after Kennedy’s presidency.
“I’m making him wear it now,” Schlossberg said about the hat placed on the skeleton.
He added additional detail about the clothing used in the display.
“I think it’s a dressing robe,” he said about the robe placed on the skeleton. “And this is his hat, which I think he didn’t wear very often, but he wore it sometimes.”
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