News The Crafty Way Jackie Kennedy Onassis Supplemented Her $30,000 a Month "Allowance" You probably do this every few months, but Jackie O' did it first. By Isabel Jones Isabel Jones Isabel is an Oregon-born and Brooklyn-based writer and editor with a special interest in pop culture. InStyle's editorial guidelines Updated on January 21, 2019 @ 07:00AM Jackie Kennedy Onassis was many things — a style icon, socialite, editor, wife, and mother, to name a few — but frugal she most certainly was not. When she married Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis in 1968, the billionaire immediately took issue with his new wife’s spending habits. According to The Fabulous Bouvier Sisters: The Tragic and Glamorous Lives of Jackie and Lee, the former First Lady spent $1.25 million (around $9 million in today’s currency) on clothing in just the first year of their marriage. Bettmann/Getty Images Onassis gave Jackie a $30,000 per month “allowance” in the early days of their matrimony, but that wasn’t enough to satisfy the most-watched woman in America’s expensive tastes. Not one to beg, Kennedy found a sneaky way to increase her fortune: she’d use said allowance to buy couture, wear a piece once or twice, and then resell it to a consignment shop and pocket the money. Alain Dejean/Getty Images Jackie would also sell various personal items at auction — including picture frames and nursery furniture — and reap the proceeds through the private secretary Onassis had given her. A Broken Promise to Jackie Kennedy Was Responsible for JFK Jr.’s Untimely Death Moral of this story: Next time you find yourself waiting in an ungodly line at Buffalo Exchange to sell some old plaids, remember that Jackie O’ (kind of) did it first. Bettmann/Getty Images