Tag Archives: Hillary Rodham Clinton

Hillary Clinton’s Westport Lover

Six years ago — shortly after Seth Schachter moved to Westport — someone knocked on his door.

The daughter of an elderly neighbor across the street did not offer a welcoming apple pie. Instead she asked, “Do you know who lived in your house?”

Seth had no idea. She said she’d be back in a few minutes.

The neighbor’s daughter returned with a copy of a 1999 Globe story. (The supermarket tabloid, not the well-regarded Boston newspaper.) It showed a photo of Schachter’s new house — next to the White House.

Globe photos of David Rupert's house, and Hillary's.

Globe photos of David Rupert’s house, and Hillary’s.

Turns out that 17 years ago, Gail Sheehy wrote Hillary’s Choice. The biography of the then-First Lady included an account of the “tempestuous” relationship between Wellesley College student Hillary Rodham and David Rupert, a government major at Georgetown University (where, coincidentally, a classmate was Bill Clinton — who had not yet met his future wife). Rupert and Hillary met when she spent her junior summer in Washington.

After the book came out, reporters hoping for more scrambled to find the First Lady’s former boyfriend. They found him on Rustic Lane, off Greens Farms Road — in the house Schachter now owns.

The reason Rupert was such a catch — and why satellite trucks raced to Westport — was because of Sheehy’s provocative writing. She said that Hillary kept the relationship “secret from some of the people in her life.”

She added: “Rupert was every bit as abrasive and competitive as Rodham.” But “he liked her spunk.”

David Rupert and Hillary Clinton, while they were dating.

David Rupert and Hillary Clinton, while they were dating. The Globe called him a “Jim Carrey look-alike.”

By 1969, Sheehy wrote, their long-distance relationship was suffering. However, Rupert “discovered something unexpected about Hillary: get her away on a weekend, and she could be playful.” (He did not tell Sheehy whether his girlfriend “inhaled,” but urged the author to “read between the lines.”)

Rupert felt he was Hillary’s “first true love.” In another book — Bill and Hillary: The Politics of the Personal, author William H. Chafe calls Rupert “her second serious boyfriend.”

And the Globe story quotes a neighbor of Rupert’s — presumably from Westport — as saying, “He was the man who made a woman out of Hillary.”

As a student at Yale Law School, Hillary made weekend trips to Bennington, Vermont, where Rupert had moved. But their differences grew, as neither was willing to relocate to accommodate the other.

In the Globe‘s words, “they would argue about politics, the Vietnam War — and make up with passionate love.”

Rupert and Hillary dated for almost 3 years. Her college friend Nancy Pietrafesa told Chafe, “they had an intense love affair.”

In the final stages of their relationship, Rupert told Sheehy, “I never stated a burning desire to be President of the United States. I believe that was a need for her in a partner.”

David Rupert, around 1999.

Instead, he headed toward the non-profit sector — “all very noble, but not where Hillary wanted to go.” He earned a master’s degree in management — from Yale, ironically — and became an executive with both public and private organizations.

(The Globe story called Rupert “pretty darn successful himself … happily married and living in a $500,000 house in Westport, Connecticut.”)

Back then, Rupert knew of Hillary’s relationship with fellow Yale Law student Bill Clinton. In fact, they started going out while she was still dating Rupert. “If you care for him, then go for it,” her boyfriend told her about Clinton.

Which brings us back — almost 30 years after they split — to the 1999 Globe coverage. A headline teased “Hillary’s Affair with Jim Carrey Look-alike.” The story compared Rupert’s Rustic  Lane house with hers — at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

The full Globe story, with all its details.

The full Globe story, with all its details.

The Globe noted that when Chelsea Clinton discovered a photo of Rupert in her mother’s album, Hillary called him “a very special friend from a lot of years ago.”

I knew David Rupert. I spoke with him a few times about his brush with fame. Mostly, he was amused. I pressed him for details about his former girlfriend, but he kept mum.

He lived long enough to see her become not only First Lady, but also senator from New York and Secretary of State.

But he did not live to see Hillary Rodham Clinton become the 1st woman nominated by a major party to run for president of the United States. (And, no doubt, for Rupert himself to be rediscovered by the media). He died in May of 2009, at 61.

Which makes Seth Schachter’s Westport house just a minor — but very intriguing — footnote to American history.

The story on Hillary Clinton's romance with David Rupert was overshadowed by Globe stories about

The story on Hillary Clinton’s romance with David Rupert was overshadowed by Globe stories about Paul McCartney, Jackie Onassis, even Annette Funicello.


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“Hey, Hillary! Can Tony Come Out And Play?”

From 1955 to ’58, Jeff Schon lived in Westport. He moved back in 1998. He’s now a well-known executive, specializing in software, internet, TV and publishing.

Jeff left here when his father — an oil executive — was transferred to Beirut. But every other summer, Jeff visited his grandparents back in the States.

They lived at 230 Wisner Avenue in Park Ridge, Illinois — the town where Jeff’s mother had grown up.

Jeff Schon at 13, in 1965. He thinks it was Flag Day -- and his family flew both the American and Lebanese flags.

Jeff Schon at 13, in 1965. It was Flag Day — and his family flew both the American and Lebanese flags in front of their home.

The Chicago suburb was like many early-’60s towns. Kids played touch football in the streets, under a canopy of elms. They caught fireflies at night. They wandered in and out of each other’s homes.

During their time in Park Ridge, Jeff’s parents got to know the neighbors across the street, at 235 Wisner. They had a boy — Tony — the same age as Jeff.

Occasionally, Jeff rang their doorbell. Tony’s older sister would answer.

“Hey, Hillary! Can Tony come out and play?” Jeff asked. He didn’t pay much attention to her.

“As a 10-year-old boy, a 14-year-old sister hardly exists,” he says. “I just wanted Tony for touch football.”

By now you’ve figured it out: Tony was a Rodham. Today, his sister — who occasionally babysat for Jeff’s younger sister Christine — is known as Hillary Rodham Clinton.

From left: Tony, Hughie and Hillary Rodham with their parents, Hugh and Dorothy.

From left: Tony, Hughie and Hillary Rodham with their parents, Hugh and Dorothy.

Jeff has not kept up with his summertime friend Tony. But years later, he remembers Tony’s older sister.

“This just shows you how small the world is,” Jeff says.

“Traveling from Beirut to a small suburban street, I’m connected to possibly the next President of the United States.”

In 1992 -- when her husband Bill was running for president -- Hillary Rodham Clinton responded to a letter written by Maggi Schon, whom she once babysat for. In 2008, Maggi was at the Democratic convention -- as chair of the Democrats Abroad delegation.

In 1992 — when her husband Bill was running for president — Hillary Rodham Clinton responded to a letter written by Maggi Schon, Jeff’s mother. In 2008 Jeff’s sister, Christine Schon Marques (whom Hillary once babysat for) attended the Democratic convention — as chair of the Democrats Abroad delegation.

Jeff Schon today.

Jeff Schon today.