Tatiana Schlossberg
| Name | Tatiana Schlossberg |
| Title | American journalist and author |
| Gender | Female |
| Birthday | 1990-01-01 |
| nationality | United States of America |
| Source | https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q21012765 |
| pptrace | View Family Tree |
| LastUpdate | 2025-11-17T06:44:54.654Z |
Introduction
Tatiana Celia Kennedy Schlossberg, born on May 5, 1990, in Lenox Hill, New York City, is an American journalist and author specializing in environmental topics. She is the daughter of designer Edwin Schlossberg and diplomat Caroline Kennedy. Her paternal family is of Ashkenazi Jewish descent from Ukraine, and her maternal lineage includes Irish, French, Scottish, and English ancestry. She is a granddaughter of John F. Kennedy, the 35th President of the United States, and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, the former First Lady.
Schlossberg was raised primarily in Manhattan's Upper East Side, with significant time spent at her maternal grandmother Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis's estate in Martha's Vineyard. Her upbringing included participation in her uncle John F. Kennedy Jr.'s wedding in 1996, where she served as a flower girl. She attended the all-girls Brearley School alongside her sister Rose, and later graduated from the Trinity School in 2008.
She pursued higher education at Yale University, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in History in 2012. During her time at Yale, Schlossberg contributed to the Yale Herald, eventually serving as its editor-in-chief. She was a member of the senior society Mace and Chain and was awarded the Charles A. Ryskamp Travel Grant for her research into communities formed through relationships between runaway slaves and coastal New England Native American tribes, particularly around Martha's Vineyard during the nineteenth century. She continued her education at the University of Oxford, obtaining a master's degree in American history in 2014.
Professionally, Schlossberg completed an internship at the Vineyard Gazette in Edgartown, Massachusetts, and worked as a municipal reporter for The Record in New Jersey. In 2014, she participated in The New York Times' summer internship program, a 10-week training experience for recent graduates and select undergraduate students. Following the internship, she was hired as a reporter covering the Metro section. Notably, she authored a story about a dead bear cub in Central Park, later linked in 2024 to an incident involving her relative Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a detail Schlossberg stated she was unaware of at the time of reporting.
She served as a science and climate reporter for The New York Times until leaving the position in 2017. In 2019, Schlossberg published her debut book, "Inconspicuous Consumption: The Environmental Impact You Don't Know You Have," through Grand Central Publishing. The book received the Society of Environmental Journalists' Rachel Carson Environment Book Award in 2020.
In addition to journalism and authorship, Schlossberg has participated in events such as presenting the Profile in Courage Award at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston, and accompanying her mother Caroline Kennedy in diplomatic engagements in Japan and Australia. On the 50th anniversary of her grandfather's assassination in 2013, she delivered remarks and took part in a wreath-laying ceremony at his memorial at Runnymede in Surrey, which was unveiled by Queen Elizabeth II and Jacqueline Kennedy in 1965.
On September 9, 2017, Schlossberg married physician George Moran at her family's estate in Martha's Vineyard. They met during their undergraduate studies at Yale University. The couple has one son, born in 2022.
Family Tree
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