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Parian Figurine

A white figurine of a young Scottish couple

John Fitzgerald Kennedy NHS Museum Collection (JOFI 21)

Displayed on a small table at the front of the Kennedy living room is the figurine shown above. It depicts a young man and woman, dressed in late 18th or early 19th century attire. The couple is likely Scottish, as the figure of the young man wears a traditional Scottish Glengarry cap. The figurine is made of parian, a type of bisque porcelain initially created as a form of imitation marble. First used in the mid-19th century by English manufacturers of porcelain figurines and busts, parian ware made mass production of these pieces possible due to the fact that it could be poured into a mold in liquid form, thereby vastly increasing the rate at which pieces were created.

The significance of this piece to the Kennedy family is unknown, as it appears to depict a Scottish couple, rather than an Irish couple. According to research materials, the piece may have originally been in the Beals Street house during the Kennedys' 1910s residency, or at least was owned by the family prior to Mrs. Rose F. Kennedy's 1960s rehabilitation project of the family's first home as a memorial to her son President John F. Kennedy. The piece seems to have been a personal possession of Mrs. Kennedy as well; the name "Rose" is inscribed on the bottom in pencil.


John Fitzgerald Kennedy National Historic Site

Last updated: January 11, 2024