50
years ago on this date, November 22, 1963, the 35th President of the
United States, John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dealey Plaza, Dallas, Texas.
To honor this fallen President, I will post information about this event on
Wikipedia before posting an article about his achievements.
President Kennedy with his wife, Jacqueline,
and Governor of Texas
John Connally in the presidential
limousine, minutes before the President's assassination.
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Location
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Dealey Plaza, Dallas, Texas
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Coordinates
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Date
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November 22, 1963
12:30 p.m. (CST) |
Target
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John F. Kennedy
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Attack type
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Sniper style assassination
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Weapon(s)
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6.5 × 52 mm Italian Carcano M91/38
bolt-action rifle
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Deaths
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1 killed (President Kennedy)
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Injured (non-fatal)
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2 wounded (Governor Connally, James Tague)
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Perpetrator
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Lee Harvey Oswald
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John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the 35th
President of the United States, was assassinated at 12:30 p.m. Central
Standard Time (18:30 UTC) on Friday, November 22, 1963, in Dealey Plaza, Dallas, Texas. Kennedy was
fatally shot by a sniper while traveling with his wife Jacqueline,
Texas Governor John Connally, and Connally's wife Nellie, in a presidential
motorcade. A ten-month investigation in 1963–64 by the Warren Commission concluded
that Kennedy was assassinated by Lee Harvey Oswald, acting alone, and that Jack
Ruby also acted alone when he killed Oswald before he could stand trial.
Although
the Commission's conclusions were initially supported by a majority of the
American public, polls conducted between 1966 and 2003 found that as many as 80
percent of Americans have suspected that there was a plot or cover-up. A 1998
CBS News poll showed that 76% of Americans believed the President had been
killed as the result of a conspiracy. A 2013 AP poll showed, that although the
percentage had fallen, more than 59% of those polled still believed that more
than one person was involved in the President's murder.
In
contrast to the conclusions of the Warren Commission, the United States House
Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) concluded in 1978 that Kennedy was
probably assassinated as a result of a conspiracy. The HSCA found the original
FBI investigation and the Warren Commission Report to be seriously flawed.
While agreeing with the Commission that Oswald fired all the shots which caused
the wounds to Kennedy and Connally, the HSCA stated that there were at least
four shots fired (only three of which could be linked to Oswald) and that there
was "...a high probability that two gunmen fired at [the] President."
The
HSCA did not identify any other person or group involved in the assassination
besides Oswald, but they did specifically say the CIA, the Soviet Union,
organized crime, and several other groups were not involved, although they
could not rule out the involvement of individual members of those groups.
Kennedy's assassination is still the subject of widespread debate and has
spawned numerous conspiracy theories and alternative scenarios.
Route
to Dealey Plaza
Main
article: Timeline of the John F.
Kennedy assassination
President
Kennedy's motorcade route through Dallas was planned to give him maximum
exposure to Dallas crowds before his arrival, along with Vice-President Lyndon
Johnson and Texas Governor John Connally, at a luncheon with civic and business
leaders in that city. The White House staff informed the Secret Service that
the President would arrive in Dallas via a short flight from Carswell Air Force
Base in Fort Worth to Dallas Love Field airport.
The
Dallas Trade Mart had been preliminarily selected for the luncheon and the
final decision of the Trade Mart as the end of the motorcade journey was
selected by President Kennedy's friend and appointments secretary Kenneth
O'Donnell. Leaving from Dallas' Love Field, 45 minutes had been allotted
for the motorcade to reach the Dallas Trade Mart at a planned arrival time of
12:15 p.m. The actual route was chosen to be a meandering 10-mile (16-km)
route from Love Field to the Trade Mart which could be driven slowly in the
allotted time.
Special
Agent Winston G. Lawson, a member of the White House detail who acted as the
advance Secret Service Agent, and Secret Service Agent Forrest V. Sorrels,
Special Agent In Charge of the Dallas office, were most active in planning the
actual route. On November 14, Lawson and Sorrels attended a meeting at Love
Field and drove over the route which Sorrels believed best suited for the
motorcade. From Love Field, the route passed through a portion of suburban
Dallas, through the downtown area along Main Street, and finally to the Trade
Mart via a short segment of the Stemmons Freeway.
For
the President's return to Love Field, from which he planned to depart for a
fund-raising dinner in Austin later in the day, the agents selected a more
direct route, which was approximately 4 miles, or 6.4 kilometers (some of this
route would be used after the assassination). The planned route to the Trade
Mart was widely reported in Dallas newspapers several days before the event,
for the benefit of people who wished to view the motorcade.
To
pass through downtown Dallas, a route west along Dallas' Main Street, rather
than Elm Street (one block to the north) was chosen, because this was the
traditional parade route, and provided the maximal building and crowd views.
The Main Street route precluded a direct turn onto the Fort Worth Turnpike exit
(which served also as the Stemmons Freeway exit), which was the route to the
Trade Mart, because this exit was accessible only from Elm Street. The planned
motorcade route thus included a short one-block turn at the end of the downtown
segment of Main Street, onto Houston Street for one block northward, before
turning again west onto Elm, in order to proceed through Dealey Plaza before
exiting Elm onto the Stemmons Freeway. The Texas School Book Depository was
situated at this corner of Houston and Elm.
Three
vehicles were used for secret service and police protection in the Dallas
motorcade. The first car, an unmarked white Ford (hardtop), consisted of Dallas
police chief Jesse Curry, secret service agent Win Lawson, Sheriff Bill Decker
and Dallas field agent Forrest Sorrels. The second car, a 1961 Lincoln
Continental convertible, consisted of driver agent Bill Greer, SAIC Roy
Kellerman, governor John Connally, Nellie Connally, President Kennedy and
Jackie Kennedy.
The
third car, a 1955 Cadillac convertible code-named "Halfback,"
contained driver agent Sam Kinney, ATSAIC Emory Roberts, presidential aides Ken
O'Donnell and Dave Powers, driver agent George Hickey and PRS agent Glen
Bennett. Secret service agents Clint Hill, Jack Ready, Tim McIntyre and Paul
Landis rode on the running boards. There was an AR-15 rifle in the third
vehicle.
On
November 22, after a breakfast speech in Fort Worth, where President Kennedy
had stayed overnight after arriving from San Antonio, Houston and Washington,
D.C. the previous day, the president boarded Air Force One, which departed at
11:10 and arrived at Love Field 15 minutes later. At about 11:40, the
presidential motorcade left Love Field for the trip through Dallas, which was
running on a schedule about 10 minutes longer than the planned 45 minutes, due
to enthusiastic crowds estimated at 150,000–200,000 persons, and two unplanned
stops directed by the president. By the time the motorcade reached Dealey Plaza
they were only 5 minutes away from their planned destination.
Polaroid photo by Mary
Moorman taken a fraction of a second after the fatal shot (detail).
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Secret Service Special Agent Clint Hill
climbs onto the Presidential limousine, seconds after the fatal shot.
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Shooting
in Dealey Plaza
At
12:29 p.m. CST, as President Kennedy's uncovered limousine entered Dealey
Plaza, Nellie Connally, then the First Lady of Texas, turned around to
President Kennedy, who was sitting behind her, and commented, "Mr.
President, you can't say Dallas doesn't love you," which President Kennedy
acknowledged.
From
Houston Street, the presidential limousine made the planned left turn onto Elm
Street, allowing it access to the Stemmons Freeway exit. As it turned on Elm,
the motorcade passed the Texas School Book Depository. Shots were fired at
President Kennedy as they continued down Elm Street. About 80% of the witnesses
recalled hearing three shots.
A
minority of the witnesses recognized the first gunshot blast they heard as a
weapon blast, but there was hardly any reaction to the first shot from a
majority of the people in the crowd or those riding in the motorcade. Many
later said they heard what they first thought to be a firecracker, or the
exhaust backfire of a vehicle, just after the President started waving.
Within
one second of each other, President Kennedy, Governor Connally, and Mrs.
Kennedy, all turned abruptly from looking to their left to looking to their
right, between Zapruder film frames 155 and 169. Connally, a World War II
military veteran like the President (and unlike the President, a longtime
hunter), testified he immediately recognized the sound of a high-powered rifle,
then he turned his head and torso rightward, attempting to see President
Kennedy behind him. Governor Connally testified he could not see the President,
so he then started to turn forward again (turning from his right to his left).
Connally testified that when his head was facing about 20 degrees left of
center, he was hit in his upper right back by a bullet he did not hear fired.
The doctor who operated on Connally measured his head at the time he was hit as
turned 27 degrees left of center. After Connally was hit he shouted, "Oh,
no, no, no. My God. They're going to kill us all!"
Mrs.
Connally testified that just after hearing a first loud, frightening noise that
came from somewhere behind her and to her right, she turned toward President
Kennedy and saw him with his arms and elbows raised high, with his hands in
front of his face and throat. She then heard another gunshot and then Governor
Connally yelling. Mrs. Connally then turned away from President Kennedy toward
her husband, at which point another gunshot sounded and she and the limousine's
rear interior were covered with fragments of skull, blood, and brain.
According
to the Warren Commission, and the House Select Committee on Assassinations, as
President Kennedy waved to the crowds on his right with his right arm upraised
on the side of the limo, a shot entered his upper back, penetrated his neck,
slightly damaged a spinal vertebra and the top of his right lung, and exited
his throat nearly centerline just beneath his larynx, nicking the left side of
his suit tie knot. He raised his elbows and clenched his fists in front of his
face and neck, then leaned forward and left. Mrs. Kennedy, facing him, then put
her arms around him in concern.
Governor
Connally also reacted after the same bullet penetrated his back just below his
right armpit, creating an oval entry wound, impacted and destroyed four inches
of his right fifth rib, exited his chest just below his right nipple, creating
a two-and-a-half inch oval sucking-air chest wound, entered his arm just above
his right wrist, cleanly shattered his right radius bone into eight pieces,
exited just below the wrist at the inner side of his right palm, and finally
lodged in his left inner thigh. The Warren Commission theorized that the
"single bullet" (see single bullet theory) struck sometime between
Zapruder frames 210 to 225, while the House Select Committee theorized that it
struck exactly at Zapruder frame 190.
According
to the Warren Commission, a second shot struck the President at Zapruder film
frame 313. The Commission made no conclusion as to whether this was the second
or third bullet fired. The presidential limousine was then passing in front of
the John Neely Bryan north pergola concrete structure. Meanwhile, the House
Select Committee concluded that a fourth shot was then fired at almost the same
time, from a separate sniper, but that it missed. Each body concluded that the
second shot to hit the president entered the rear of his head (the House Select
Committee placed the entry wound four inches higher than the Warren Commission
placed it) and, passing in fragments through his head, created a large, roughly
ovular hole on the rear, right side. The president's blood and fragments of his
scalp, brain, and skull landed on the interior of the car, the inner and outer
surfaces of the front glass windshield and raised sun visors, the front engine
hood, the rear trunk lid, the followup Secret Service car and its driver's left
arm, and motorcycle officers riding on both sides of the President behind him.
Mrs.
Kennedy then reached out onto the rear trunk lid. After she crawled back into
her limousine seat, both Governor Connally and Mrs. Connally heard her say more
than once, "They have killed my husband," and "I have his brains
in my hand." In a long-redacted interview for Life magazine days
later, Mrs. Kennedy recalled, "All the ride to the hospital I kept bending
over him saying, 'Jack, Jack, can you hear me? I love you, Jack.' I kept
holding the top of his head down trying to keep the..." The President's
widow could not finish her sentence.
United
States Secret Service Special Agent Clint Hill was riding on the left front
running board of the follow-up car, which was immediately behind the
Presidential limousine. Hill testified that he heard one shot, then, as documented
in other films and concurrent with Zapruder frame 308, he jumped off into Elm
Street and ran forward to try to get on the limousine and protect the
President. (Hill testified to the Warren Commission that after he jumped into
Elm Street, he heard two more shots.)
After
the President had been shot in the head, Mrs. Kennedy began to climb out onto
the back of the limousine, though she later had no recollection of doing so.
Hill believed she was reaching for something, perhaps a piece of the
President's skull. He jumped onto the back of the limousine while at the same
time Mrs. Kennedy returned to her seat, and he clung to the car as it exited
Dealey Plaza and accelerated, speeding to Parkland Memorial Hospital.
Others
wounded
Governor
Connally, riding in the same limousine in a seat in front of the President and
three inches more to the left than the President, was also critically injured
but survived. Doctors later stated that after the Governor was shot, his wife
pulled him onto her lap, and the resulting posture helped close his front chest
wound (which was causing air to be sucked directly into his chest around his
collapsed right lung).
James Tague,
a spectator and witness to the assassination, also received a minor wound to
his right cheek while standing 531 feet (162 m) away from the Depository's
sixth floor, easternmost window, 270 feet (82 m) in front of and slightly
to the right of President Kennedy's head facing direction, and more than 16
feet (4.9 m) below the top of the President's head. Tague's injury
occurred when a bullet or bullet fragment with no copper casing struck the
nearby Main Street south curb. When Tague testified to the Warren Commission
and was asked which of the three shots he remembered hearing struck him, he
stated it was the second or third shot. When the Warren Commission attorney
pressed him further, Tague stated he was struck concurrent with the second
shot.
Aftermath
in Dealey Plaza
The
presidential limousine was passing a grassy knoll on the north side of Elm
Street at the moment of the fatal head shot. As the motorcade left the plaza,
police officers and spectators ran up the knoll and from a railroad bridge over
Elm Street (the triple underpass), to the area behind a five-foot (1.5 m)
high stockade fence atop the knoll, separating it from a parking lot. No sniper
was found. S. M. Holland, who had been watching the motorcade on the triple
underpass, testified that "immediately" after the shots were fired,
he went around the corner where the overpass joined the fence, but did not see
anyone running from the area.
Lee
Bowers, a railroad switchman sitting in a two-story tower, had an unobstructed
view of the rear of the stockade fence atop the grassy knoll during the
shooting. He saw a total of four men in the area between his tower and Elm
Street: a middle-aged man and a younger man, standing 10 to 15 feet
(3.0 to 4.6 m) apart near the triple underpass, who did not seem
to know each other, and one or two uniformed parking lot attendants. At the
time of the shooting, he saw "something out of the ordinary, a sort of
milling around," which he could not identify. Bowers testified that one or
both of the men were still there when motorcycle officer Clyde Haygood ran up
the grassy knoll to the back of the fence. In a 1966 interview, Bowers
clarified that the two men he saw were standing in the opening between the
pergola and the fence, and that "no one" was behind the fence at the
time the shots were fired.
Meanwhile,
Howard Brennan, a steamfitter who was sitting across the street from the Texas
School Book Depository, notified police that as he watched the motorcade go by,
he heard a shot come from above, and looked up to see a man with a rifle make
another shot from a corner window on the sixth floor. He said he had seen the
same man minutes earlier looking out the window. Brennan gave a description of
the shooter, which was broadcast to all Dallas police at 12:45 p.m.,
12:48 p.m., and 12:55 p.m. After the second shot was fired, Brennan
recalled, "This man I saw previous was aiming for his last shot ...
and maybe paused for another second as though to assure himself that he had hit
his mark."
As
Brennan spoke to the police in front of the building, they were joined by
Harold Norman and James Jarman, Jr., two employees of the Texas School Book
Depository who had watched the motorcade from windows at the southeast corner
of the fifth floor. Norman reported that he heard three gunshots come from
directly over their heads. Norman also heard the sounds of a bolt action rifle
and cartridges dropping on the floor above them.
Estimates
of when Dallas police sealed off the entrances to the Texas School Book
Depository range from 12:33 to after 12:50 p.m.
Of
the 104 earwitnesses in Dealey Plaza who are on record with an opinion as to
the direction from which the shots came, 54 (51.9%) thought that all shots came
from the direction of the Texas School Book Depository, 33 (31.7%) thought that
all shots came from the area of the grassy knoll or the triple underpass, 9
(8.7%) thought all shots came from a location entirely distinct from the knoll
or the Depository, 5 (4.8%) thought they heard shots from two locations, and 3
(2.9%) thought the shots came from a direction consistent with both the knoll
and the Depository.
Additionally,
the Warren Commission said of the three shots they concluded were fired that
"a substantial majority of the witnesses stated that the shots were not
evenly spaced. Most witnesses recalled that the second and third shots were
bunched together."
The assassination site in 2008. White arrows
indicate the sixth floor window of the Texas School Book Depository, and the
mark on Elm Street is where Kennedy was hit in the head. The building seen
close to the Depository is the Dal-Tex
Building.
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Dealey
Plaza and Texas School Book Depository in 1969,
looking much as they did in November 1963.
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Lee
Harvey Oswald
Main
article: Lee Harvey Oswald
Lee
Harvey Oswald, reported missing to the Dallas police by Roy Truly, his
supervisor at the Depository, was arrested approximately 70 minutes after
the assassination for the murder of Dallas police officer J. D. Tippit.
According to witness Helen Markam, Tippit had spotted Oswald walking along a
sidewalk in the residential neighborhood of Oak Cliff, three miles from Dealey
Plaza. Officer Tippit had earlier received a radio message which gave a
description of the suspect being sought in the assassination and called Oswald
over to the patrol car.
Helen
Markam testified that after an exchange of words, Tippit got out of his car and
Oswald shot him four times. Oswald was next seen by shoe store manager Johnny
Brewer "ducking into" the entrance alcove of his store. Suspicious of
this activity, Brewer watched Oswald continue up the street and slip into the
nearby Texas Theatre without paying. Brewer alerted the theater's ticket clerk,
who telephoned police at about 1:40 p.m.
According
to one of the arresting officers, M.N. McDonald, Oswald resisted arrest and was
attempting to draw his pistol when he was struck and forcibly restrained by the
police. He was charged with the murders of President Kennedy and Officer Tippit
later that night. Oswald denied shooting anyone and claimed he was a patsy who
was arrested because he had lived in the Soviet Union.
Oswald's
case never came to trial because two days later, while being escorted to a car
for transfer from Dallas Police Headquarters to the Dallas County Jail, he was
shot and killed by Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby, live on American
television. Arrested immediately after the shooting, Ruby later said that he
had been distraught over the Kennedy assassination and that killing Oswald
would spare "...Mrs. Kennedy the discomfiture of coming back to
trial."
Carcano
rifle
Main
article: John F. Kennedy assassination rifle
Authorities
first declared that they found a German Mauser rifle, according to British
philosopher Bertrand Russell, in his "Sixteen Questions" essay about
the JFK Assassination. A 6.5 × 52 mm Italian Carcano M91/38
bolt-action rifle was found on the 6th floor of the Texas School Book
Depository by Deputy Constable Seymour Weitzman and Deputy Sheriff Eugene Boone
soon after the assassination of President Kennedy. The recovery was filmed by
Tom Alyea of WFAA-TV.
This
footage shows the rifle to be a Carcano, and it was later verified by
photographic analysis commissioned by the HSCA that the rifle filmed was the
same one later identified as the assassination weapon. Compared to photographs
taken of Oswald holding the rifle in his backyard, "one notch in the stock
at [a] point that appears very faintly in the photograph" matched, as well
as the rifle's dimensions.
The
previous March, the Carcano rifle had been bought by Oswald under the name
"A. Hidell" and delivered to a post-office box Oswald rented in
Dallas. According to the Warren Commission Report, a partial palm print of
Oswald was also found on the barrel of the gun, and a tuft of fibers found in a
crevice of the rifle was consistent with the fibers and colors of the shirt
Oswald was wearing at the time of his arrest.
A
bullet found on Governor Connally's hospital gurney, and two bullet fragments
found in the Presidential limousine, were ballistically matched to this rifle.
President
Kennedy declared dead in the emergency room
Further
information: Timeline of the John F.
Kennedy assassination
The
staff at Parkland Hospital's Trauma Room 1 who treated President Kennedy observed
that his condition was "moribund" (a mortal wound), meaning that he
had no chance of survival upon arriving at the hospital. Dr. George Burkley,
the President's personal physician, stated that a gunshot wound to the skull
was the cause of death. Dr. Burkley signed President Kennedy's death
certificate.
At
1:00 p.m., CST (19:00 UTC), after all heart activity had ceased and after
Father Oscar Huber had administered the last rites, the President was
pronounced dead. "We never had any hope of saving his life," one
doctor said. Father Huber told The New York Times that the President was
already dead by the time he arrived at the hospital, and he had to draw back a
sheet covering the President's face to administer the sacrament of Extreme
Unction. President Kennedy's death was officially announced by White House
Acting Press Secretary Malcolm Kilduff at 1:33 p.m. CST (19:33 UTC).
Kilduff was acting press secretary on the trip because Pierre Salinger was
traveling to Japan with half the Cabinet, including Secretary of State Dean
Rusk. Governor Connally, meanwhile, was taken to emergency surgery, where he
underwent two operations that day.
By
Texas law, the President's body could not legally be removed from the hospital
before an autopsy had been performed. This caused a brief scuffle between
Dallas officials and members of the President's security detail. The impasse
ended when Secret Service agents put the officials against the wall at
gunpoint.
A
few minutes after 2:00 p.m. CST (20:00 UTC), President Kennedy's body was
taken from Parkland Hospital and driven to Air Force One. The casket was then
loaded aboard the airplane through the rear door, where it remained at the rear
of the passenger compartment, in place of a removed row of seats. The body was
removed before a forensic examination could be conducted by the Dallas County
Coroner Earl Rose, who had jurisdiction. At that time, it was not a federal
offense to kill the President of the United States, although it was a federal
crime to conspire to injure a federal officer while he was acting in the line
of duty. Vice-President Lyndon B. Johnson, who became President upon President
Kennedy's death, and had been riding two cars behind President Kennedy in the
motorcade, refused to leave for Washington without President Kennedy and his
widow.
At
2:38 p.m. CST (20:38 UTC), Vice-President Johnson took the oath of office
on board Air Force One just before it departed from Love Field, with Jacqueline
Kennedy at his side.
Drawing depicting
the posterior head wound of U.S. President John F. Kennedy. The hand at the top
is holding a portion of his scalp in place. Made by medical illustrator Ida G.
Dox from an autopsy photograph, and published as Figure 13 on page 104 of
volume 7 (Medical and Firearms Evidence) of the Appendix to Hearings Before
the Select Committee on Assassinations of the U.S. House of Representatives
(1979).
Vincent Bugliosi
writes in Reclaiming History, Endnote pp. 258–259,
In order for the
entrance wound photograph to be taken, the autopsy surgeons lifted the
president’s right shoulder from the autopsy table, and rolled him onto his left
shoulder. Then, per his own testimony, Dr. Boswell gathered together these
loose strands of scalp between his thumb and index finger and drew them forward
across the gaping hole in the right front of the skull, thereby making the
entrance wound on the back of the president’s head clearly visible to the
photographer’s camera (ARRB Transcript of Proceedings, Deposition of Dr. J. Thornton Boswell, February
26, 1996, pp.97, 149–150, 164). Though the act of pulling the loose scalp
forward across the top right of the head made the entrance wound visible, it
also briefly covered the large exit defect on the right front side of the
president’s head.
|
Autopsy
Main
article: John F. Kennedy autopsy
The
autopsy was performed, beginning at about 8 p.m. and ending at about
midnight EST at the Bethesda Naval Hospital in Bethesda, Maryland. The choice of
autopsy hospital in the Washington, D.C. area was made at the request of Mrs.
Kennedy, on the basis that John F. Kennedy had been a naval officer.
Funeral
Main
article: State funeral of John F. Kennedy
The
state funeral took place in Washington, DC during the three days that followed
the assassination.
The
body of President Kennedy was brought back to Washington, D.C. and placed in
the East Room of the White House for 24 hours. On the Sunday after the
assassination, his coffin was carried on a horse-drawn caisson to the U.S.
Capitol to lie in state. Throughout the day and night, hundreds of thousands
lined up to view the guarded casket. Representatives from over 90 countries
attended the state funeral on Monday, November 25. After the Requiem Mass at
St. Matthew's Cathedral, the late President was laid to rest at Arlington
National Cemetery in Virginia.
Recordings
of the assassination
No
radio or television stations broadcast the assassination live because the area
through which the motorcade was traveling was not considered important enough
for a live broadcast. Most media crews were not even with the motorcade but
were waiting instead at the Dallas Trade Mart in anticipation of President
Kennedy's arrival. Those members of the media who were with the motorcade were
riding at the rear of the procession.
The
Dallas police were recording their radio transmissions over two channels. A frequency
designated as Channel One was used for routine police communications. A second
channel, designated Channel Two, was an auxiliary channel, which was dedicated
to the President's motorcade. Up until the time of the assassination, most of
the broadcasts on this channel consisted of Police Chief Jesse Curry's
announcements of the location of the motorcade as it wound through the streets
of Dallas.
President
Kennedy's last seconds traveling through Dealey Plaza were recorded on silent 8
mm film for the 26.6 seconds before, during, and immediately following the
assassination. This famous film footage was taken by garment manufacturer and
amateur cameraman Abraham Zapruder, in what became known as the Zapruder film.
Frame enlargements from the Zapruder film were published by Life
magazine shortly after the assassination. The footage was first shown publicly
as a film at the trial of Clay Shaw in 1969, and on television in 1975.
According to the Guinness Book of World Records, an arbitration panel ordered
the U.S. government to pay $615,384 per second of film to Zapruder's heirs for
giving the film to the National Archives. The complete film, which lasts for
26 seconds, was valued at $16 million.
Zapruder
was not the only person who photographed at least part of the assassination; a
total of 32 photographers were in Dealey Plaza. Amateur movies taken by Orville
Nix, Marie Muchmore (shown on television in New York on November 26, 1963), and
photographer Charles Bronson captured the fatal shot, although at a greater
distance than Zapruder. Other motion picture films were taken in Dealey Plaza
at or around the time of the shooting by Robert Hughes, F. Mark Bell, Elsie
Dorman, John Martin Jr., Patsy Paschall, Tina Towner, James Underwood, Dave
Wiegman, Mal Couch, Thomas Atkins, and an unknown woman in a blue dress on the
south side of Elm Street.
Still
photos were taken by Phillip Willis, Mary Moorman, Hugh W. Betzner Jr., Wilma
Bond, Robert Croft, and many others. The lone professional photographer in
Dealey Plaza who was not in the press cars was Ike Altgens, photo editor for
the Associated Press in Dallas.
An
unidentified woman, nicknamed the Babushka Lady by researchers, might have been
filming the Presidential motorcade during the assassination. She was seen
apparently doing so on film and in photographs taken by the others.
Previously
unknown color footage filmed on the assassination day by George Jefferies was
released on February 19, 2007 by the Sixth Floor Museum, Dallas, Texas. The
film does not include the shooting, having been taken roughly 90 seconds
beforehand and a couple of blocks away. The only detail relevant to the
investigation of the assassination is a clear view of President Kennedy's
bunched suit jacket, just below the collar, which has led to different
calculations about how low in the back President Kennedy was first shot (see
discussion above).
Official
investigations
Dallas
Police
After
arresting Oswald and collecting physical evidence at the crime scenes, the
Dallas Police held Oswald at the police headquarters for interrogation. Oswald
was questioned all afternoon about both the Tippit shooting and the
assassination of the President. He was questioned intermittently for
approximately 12 hours between 2:30 p.m., on November 22, and 11 a.m.,
on November 24. Throughout this interrogation Oswald denied any involvement
with either the assassination of President Kennedy or the murder of Patrolman
Tippit. Captain Fritz of the homicide and robbery bureau did most of the
questioning, keeping only rudimentary notes. Days later, he wrote a report of
the interrogation from notes he made afterwards. There were no stenographic or
tape recordings. Representatives of other law enforcement agencies were also
present, including the FBI and the Secret Service, and occasionally
participated in the questioning. Several of the FBI agents present wrote
contemporaneous reports of the interrogation.
During
the evening of November 22, the Dallas Police Department performed paraffin
tests on Oswald's hands and right cheek in an apparent effort to determine, by
means of a scientific test, whether Oswald had recently fired a weapon. The
results were positive for the hands and negative for the right cheek. Because
of the unreliability of these tests, the Warren Commission did not rely on the
results of the test in making their findings.
Oswald
provided little information during his questioning. When confronted with
evidence which he could not explain he resorted to statements which were found
to be false. Dallas authorities were not able to complete their investigation
into the assassination of President Kennedy because of interruptions from the
FBI and the murder of Oswald by Jack Ruby
FBI
investigation
The
FBI was the first authority to complete an investigation. On December 9, 1963,
the FBI issued a report and gave it to the Warren Commission.
The
FBI stated that three bullets were fired during the Kennedy assassination; the
Warren Commission agreed with the FBI investigation that three shots were fired
but disagreed with the FBI report on which shots hit Kennedy and which hit
Governor Connally. The FBI report claimed that the first shot hit President
Kennedy, the second shot hit Governor Connally, and the third shot hit
President Kennedy in the head, killing him. In contrast, the Warren Commission
concluded that one of the three shots missed, one of the shots hit President
Kennedy and then struck Governor Connally, and a third shot struck President
Kennedy in the head, killing him.
Criticism
of FBI
The
FBI's murder investigation was reviewed by the House Select Committee on
Assassinations in 1979. The congressional Committee concluded:
- The Federal Bureau of Investigation adequately investigated Lee Harvey Oswald prior to the assassination and properly evaluated the evidence it possessed to assess his potential to endanger the public safety in a national emergency.
- The Federal Bureau of Investigation conducted a thorough and professional investigation into the responsibility of Lee Harvey Oswald for the assassination.
- The Federal Bureau of Investigation failed to investigate adequately the possibility of a conspiracy to assassinate the President.
- The Federal Bureau of Investigation was deficient in its sharing of information with other agencies and departments.
Criticism
of Secret Service
Sgt.
Davis, of the Dallas Police Department, believed he had prepared stringent
security precautions, in an attempt to prevent demonstrations like those
marking the Adlai Stevenson visit from happening again. The previous month,
Stevenson, the United States Ambassador to the United Nations, was assaulted by
an anti-UN demonstrator. But Winston Lawson of the Secret Service, who was in
charge of the planning, told the Dallas Police not to assign its usual squad of
experienced homicide detectives to follow immediately behind the President's
car. This police protection was routine for both visiting presidents and for
motorcades of other visiting dignitaries. Police Chief Jesse Curry later
testified that had his men been in place, they might have been able to stop the
assassin before he fired a second shot, because they carried submachine guns
and rifles.
An
investigation by the House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) in 1979
concluded that "the Secret Service was deficient in the performance of its
duties." The HSCA stated:
·
That
President Kennedy had not received adequate protection in Dallas.
·
That
the Secret Service possessed information that was not properly analyzed,
investigated, or used by the Secret Service in connection with the President's
trip to Dallas.
·
That
the Secret Service agents in the motorcade were inadequately prepared to
protect the President from a sniper.
The
HSCA specifically noted:
No actions were taken by the agent in the right front seat of the Presidential limousine [ Roy Kellerman ] to cover the President with his body, although it would have been consistent with Secret Service procedure for him to have done so. The primary function of the agent was to remain at all times in close proximity to the President in the event of such emergencies.
Warren
Commission
Main
article: Warren Commission
The
President's Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy, known
unofficially as the Warren Commission, was established on November 29, 1963, by
President Lyndon Johnson to investigate the assassination. Its 888-page final
report was presented to President Johnson on September 24, 1964, and made
public three days later. It concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in the
killing of President Kennedy and the wounding of Texas Governor John Connally,
and that Jack Ruby also acted alone in the murder of Oswald. The Commission's
findings have since proven controversial and been both challenged and supported
by later studies.
The
Commission took its unofficial name—the Warren Commission—from its chairman,
Chief Justice Earl Warren. According to published transcripts of Johnson's
presidential phone conversations, some major officials were opposed to forming
such a commission, and several commission members took part only with extreme
reluctance. One of their chief reservations was that a commission would
ultimately create more controversy than consensus, and those fears proved
valid. The Commissions were printed off at Doubleday book publishing company
located in Smithsburg, Maryland.
Ramsey
Clark Panel
In
1968, a panel of four medical experts appointed by Attorney General Ramsey
Clark met in Washington, D.C. to examine various photographs, X-ray films,
documents, and other evidence about the death of President Kennedy. The Clark
Panel determined that President Kennedy was struck by two bullets fired from
above and behind him, one of which traversed the base of the neck on the right
side without striking bone and the other of which entered the skull from behind
and destroyed its upper right side.
Rockefeller
Commission
The
United States President's Commission on CIA activities within the United
States was set up under President Gerald Ford in 1975 to investigate the
activities of the CIA within the United States. The commission was led by
Vice-President Nelson Rockefeller, and is sometimes referred to as the
Rockefeller Commission.
Part
of the commission's work dealt with the Kennedy assassination, specifically the
head snap as seen in the Zapruder film (first shown to the general public in
1975), and the possible presence of E. Howard Hunt and Frank Sturgis in Dallas.
The commission concluded that neither Hunt nor Sturgis were in Dallas at the
time of the assassination.
Church
Committee
Church
Committee is the common term referring to the United States Senate
Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence
Activities, a U.S. Senate committee chaired by Senator Frank Church, to
investigate the illegal intelligence gathering by the Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) after the Watergate
incident. It also investigated the CIA and FBI conduct relating to the JFK
assassination.
Their
report concluded that the investigation on the assassination by FBI and CIA
were fundamentally deficient and the facts which have greatly affected the
investigation had not been forwarded to the Warren Commission by the agencies.
It also found that the FBI, the agency with primary responsibility on the
matter, was ordered by Director Hoover and pressured by unnamed higher
government officials to conclude its investigation quickly.
The report hinted that there was a possibility that senior officials in both
agencies made conscious decisions not to disclose potentially important
information.
United
States House Select Committee on Assassinations
Main
article: United States
House Select Committee on Assassinations
As
a result of increasing public pressure caused partly by the finding of the
Church Committee, the United States House of Representatives Select
Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) was established in 1976 to
investigate the assassinations of President Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr.
and the shooting of Governor George Wallace. The committee was both
controversial and divided among themselves. The first chairman, Thomas N.
Downing of Virginia retired in January 1977 and was replaced by Henry B.
Gonzalez on February 2, 1977. Gonzalez sought to replace Chief Counsel Richard
Sprague. Eventually both Gonzalez and Sprague resigned and Louis Stokes became
the new chairman. G. Robert Blakey was then appointed Chief Counsel and his
deputy Robert K. Tanenbaum resigned soon afterwards.
The
Committee investigated until 1978, and in 1979 issued its final report,
concluding that President John F. Kennedy was probably assassinated as a result
of a conspiracy. The Committee concluded that previous investigations properly
investigated Oswald's responsibility but did not adequately investigate the
possibility of a conspiracy, and that the Warren Commission presented its
conclusions too definitively. The Committee also found that the FBI and CIA
were deficient in sharing information. Furthermore the Secret Service did not
properly analyze information it possessed prior to the assassination and was
inadequately prepared to protect the President.
Although
the HSCA concluded that President Kennedy was "probably" assassinated
as the result of a conspiracy it did not offer the name of any person or group
it thought had conspired with Oswald. Instead the HSCA listed several
organizations that it did not think were involved, including the governments of
the Soviet Union and Cuba, organized crime groups and anti-Castro groups, but
noted that it could not rule out the involvement of any individuals of these
groups.
Four
of the twelve committee members wrote dissenting opinions. Chris Dodd did not
think that Oswald fired all three shots from the depository and wanted more
investigation into the matter. Three other members did not think there was a
second shooter or a conspiracy. According to Robert W. Edgar the committee was
swayed at the last minute by the introduction of acoustic analysis of a
Dictabelt recording of radio transmissions made by the Dallas Police Department.
Prior to that a draft of the committee's report said "the available
scientific evidence is insufficient to find that there was a conspiracy."
The final report said: "Scientifically, the existence of the second gunman
was established only by the acoustical study, but its basic validity was
corroborated or independently substantiated by the various other scientific
projects." Three dissenters, Edgar, Devine and Sawyer, were not convinced
by the Dictabelt analysis. Subsequent examinations of the recording by the
National Academy of Sciences, by the FBI, and by the Justice Department
disputed the Dictabelt evidence, and in turn the NAS's analysis was contested
by Donald Thomas, see Dictabelt
evidence relating to the assassination of John F. Kennedy. The back and
forth on the acoustics evidence continues to this day.
The
HSCA made several accusations of deficiency against the Secret Service, the
Department of Justice, the FBI, the CIA and the Warren Commission. The
accusations encompassed organizational failures, miscommunication, and a desire
to keep certain parts of their operations secret. Furthermore, the Warren
Commission expected these agencies to be forthcoming with any information that
would aid their investigation. But the FBI and CIA only saw it as their duty to
respond to specific requests for information from the commission. The HSCA
found the FBI and CIA were deficient in performing even that limited role.
The
House Select Committee on Assassinations was conducted mostly in secret. They
issued a public report but much of its evidence was sealed for 50 years under
Congressional rules. In 1992, Congress passed legislation to collect and open
up all the evidence relating to Kennedy's death, and created the Assassination
Records Review Board to further that goal.
Sealing
of assassination records
All
of the Warren Commission's records were submitted to the National Archives in
1964. The unpublished portion of those records was initially sealed for
75 years (to 2039) under a general National Archives policy that applied
to all federal investigations by the executive branch of government, a period
"intended to serve as protection for innocent persons who could otherwise
be damaged because of their relationship with participants in the case.” The
75-year rule no longer exists, supplanted by the Freedom of Information Act of
1966 and the JFK Records Act of 1992. By 1992, 98% of the Warren Commission
records had been released to the public. Six years later, at the conclusion of
the Assassination Records Review Board's work, all Warren Commission records,
except those records that contained tax return information, were available to
the public with only minor redactions. The remaining Kennedy assassination
related documents are scheduled to be released to the public by 2017,
twenty-five years after the passage of the JFK Records Act. Among the items
most sought after by researchers are some 1,171 documents still closed by the
CIA on national security grounds.
The
Kennedy autopsy photographs and X-rays were never part of the Warren Commission
records and were deeded separately to the National Archives by the Kennedy
family in 1966 under restricted conditions.
Several
pieces of evidence and documentation are described to have been lost, cleaned,
or missing from the original chain of evidence (e.g., limousine cleaned out on
November 24, Connally's clothing cleaned and pressed, Oswald's military
intelligence file destroyed in 1973, Connally's Stetson hat and shirt sleeve
gold cufflink missing).
Jackie
Kennedy's blood-splattered pink and navy Chanel suit that she wore on the day of
the assassination is in climate controlled storage in the National Archives.
Jackie wore the suit for the remainder of the day, stating "I want them to
see what they have done to Jack" when asked aboard Air Force One to change
into another outfit. Not included in the National Archives are the white gloves
and pink pillbox hat she was wearing.
Assassination
Records Review Board
The
Assassination Records Review Board
was not commissioned to make any findings or conclusions. Its purpose was to
release documents to the public in order to allow the public to draw its own
conclusions. From 1992 until 1998, the Assassination Records Review Board
gathered and unsealed about 60,000 documents, consisting of over 4 million
pages. All remaining documents are to be released by 2017.
"Wanted for Treason". Infamous
handbill circulated on November 21, 1963 In Dallas, Texas, one day before John
F. Kennedy visited the city and was assassinated.
|
Conspiracy
theories
Main
article: John F. Kennedy
assassination conspiracy theories
From
the day of the assassination, many Americans suspected that a conspiracy, and
not a lone gunman, was responsible for President Kennedy's death. Polls taken
that day through November 27, 1963 by Gallup showed 52 percent believing
"some group or element" was behind the assassination.
Before
the Warren Commission issued its report which concluded Oswald acted alone,
several books had already been published suggesting a conspiracy was behind the
assassination. Within a few months of the assassination, lawyer Mark Lane, who
had been hired by Oswald’s mother Marguerite to represent Oswald’s interests
before the Warren Commission, had formed his Citizens' Committee of Inquiry on
the assassination and was speaking in the United States and Europe in early
1964, challenging the work of the Warren Commission, even before it had
published its findings.
Upon
the publication of the Warren Report in September, 1964, only a minority 31.6
percent of Americans rejected the conclusion that Oswald had acted alone, with
55.5 percent accepting the Report's conclusion. But since then, public opinion
has consistently shown majorities, often large majorities, believing a
conspiracy had been in place. In 1966, Lane's Rush to Judgment was
published, spending six months on The New York Times best-seller list.
The book accused the Warren Commission of "being biased towards its
conclusions before the facts were known," and cited evidence found within
the 26 volumes of the Warren Report and in his interviews with witnesses which
seemed to suggest bullets coming from multiple directions striking the
president and hence a conspiracy. The Freedom of Information Act was also
passed that year, which had the effect of permitting researchers greater access
to once-secret government files, particularly those connected to the Warren
Commission.
Many
researchers were now investigating the assassination, most of whom believed the
Warren Report was at best inaccurate and at worst a lie. In July 1966, in
commenting on Edward Jay Epstein's book Inquest, which focused on the
inner workings of the Warren Commission, Richard N. Goodwin became the first of
Kennedy’s inner circle to publicly call for a review of the Warren Report. That
November, former assistant to the president and Pulitzer-prize winning author
Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. called on Congress to initiate a new inquiry. That
same month, Life magazine called for a new investigation as did The
Saturday Evening Post the following January. The New York Times, in
an editorial dated November 25, 1966, did not call for a re-investigation, but
said that the Warren Commission and its staff should address "the many
puzzling questions that have been raised... There are enough solid doubts of
thoughtful persons."
In
1967, Six Seconds in Dallas by Josiah Thompson was published. The book
was the first to focus on many technical aspects not previously discussed by
other authors, such as firearms, bullet trajectories, medical and photographic
evidence. Thompson, who was a consultant to Life magazine, had unique
access to a first-generation print of the Zapruder film and was the first to
suggest that President Kennedy was struck by two near-simultaneous bullets to
the head, one from the rear, the other from the right front.
That
March, New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison announced he would prosecute
local businessman Clay Shaw for the murder of President Kennedy, and,
galvanized, many Warren Commission critics descended on New Orleans. Public
interest in the trial was high, with a Harris poll that May showing nearly two
of three Americans saying they were following the investigation. The same poll
indicated 66 percent believed there was a conspiracy, compared to 44 percent
who believed that in a Harris poll done in February.
Garrison
was also notable for being among the first to assert that there were two
conspiracies: The first conspiracy being the one which engineered the assassination
of the president; the second conspiracy being the deliberate cover-up by the
Warren Commission to hide the true facts of the assassination.
Shaw
was acquitted in March, 1969, and the conspiracy movement was dealt a blow as
Garrison’s trial was widely seen as a debacle, with many researchers denouncing
Garrison as a fraud and megalomaniac. Further, as conspiracy theorist Robert
Anson put it, because of Garrison, "bills in Congress asking for a new
investigation were quietly shelved." Nevertheless, the trial opened new
avenues of investigations for the movement, particularly with previously
unexplored New Orleans connections and links of others to Oswald.
The
year 1973 saw the release of the film Executive Action starring Burt
Lancaster, the first Hollywood depiction of events surrounding the
assassination. In the film, three gunmen shoot President Kennedy in a
conspiracy led by right-wing elements and military/industrial interests. That
year also saw the formation of the Assassination Information Bureau. The
influential group spoke to ever-growing audiences at hundreds of colleges
throughout the United States, urging a reopening of the investigation, and was
ultimately instrumental in the realization of that goal in 1977.
In
March 1975, Good Night America broadcast, for the first time, the
Zapruder film, with an audience of millions watching. Almost immediately, with
the film showing a backward snap of President Kennedy’s head, indicating to
many a shot from the right front and hence a conspiracy, there were new demands
for a re-investigation. The findings of the Rockefeller Commission that year
and the Church Committee the next year added impetus to calls for a new
inquiry, which was realized by the House Select Committee on Assassinations
(HSCA) from 1977 to 1979. That investigation concluded President Kennedy
"was probably assassinated as a result of a conspiracy".
While
the HSCA's conclusion was welcomed by many in the conspiracy community, the
HSCA’s inability to name any players in the conspiracy they identified, and
their actions in sealing much of their documentation, left many in the
community frustrated.
Numerous
books, television shows and articles continued to appear. Writing in 2007,
Vincent Bugliosi said, "close to one thousand books" had been
published on the subject of the assassination, of which "over 95
percent" were pro-conspiracy. Some notable books to 1990 were Anthony
Summers' Conspiracy (later revised and published as Not in Your
Lifetime, David Lifton's best-selling Best Evidence, both published
in 1980, and Henry Hurt's Reasonable Doubt in 1985. The Summers and Hurt
books explore many of the prominent conspiracy theories, while Lifton argues
that President Kennedy’s wounds were altered before the autopsy to frame
Oswald. Jim Marrs published Crossfire in 1989, the same year High
Treason, by Robert J. Groden and Harrison Livingstone was published. The
latter book argued the autopsy photos were altered to give the appearance that
wounds were caused by shots from a single gunman.
By
the late 80s, interest in the subject among the general public was waning. One
theory for this from writer Pete Hamill was that by 1988, "an entire
generation had come to maturity with no memory at all of the Kennedy
years." In 1991, Oliver Stone's film JFK introduced the subject –
and many of the attendant conspiracy theories – to a new generation of
Americans. The sudden renewed interest in the assassination led to the passage
by Congress of the JFK Records Act in 1992. The Act created the Assassination
Records Review Board to implement the Act’s mandate to release all sealed
documents related to the assassination. Thousands of documents were released
between 1994 and 1998, providing new material for researchers.
To
date, there is no consensus on who, among many players, may have been involved
in a conspiracy to kill President Kennedy. Those often mentioned as being part
of a conspiracy include Jack Ruby, organized crime as an organization or
organized crime individuals, the CIA, the FBI, the Secret Service, the KGB,
right-wing groups or right-wing individuals, President Lyndon Johnson, pro- or
anti-Castro Cubans, the military and/or industrial groups allied with the
military.
Reaction
to the assassination
Main
article: Reaction to the
assassination of John F. Kennedy
The
assassination evoked stunned reactions worldwide. Before the President's death
was announced, the first hour after the shooting was a time of great confusion.
Taking place during the Cold War, it was at first unclear whether the shooting
might be part of a larger attack upon the U.S., and whether Vice-President
Lyndon Johnson, who had been riding two cars behind in the motorcade, was safe.
The
news shocked the nation. People wept openly and gathered in department stores
to watch the television coverage, while others prayed. Traffic in some areas
came to a halt as the news spread from car to car. Schools across the U.S.
dismissed their students early. Anger against Texas and Texans was reported
from some individuals. Various Cleveland Browns fans, for example, carried signs
at the next Sunday's home game against the Dallas Cowboys decrying the city of
Dallas as having "killed the President."
The
event left a lasting impression on many Americans. As with the December 7, 1941
attack on Pearl Harbor before it and the September 11, 2001 attacks after it,
asking "Where were you when you heard about President Kennedy's
assassination" would become a common topic of discussion.
Artifacts,
museums and locations today
The
plane serving as Air Force One is on display at the National Museum of the
United States Air Force in Dayton, Ohio, where tours of the aircraft are
offered including the rear of the aircraft where President Kennedy's casket was
placed and the location where Mrs. Kennedy stood in her blood stained pink
dress while Vice-President Lyndon Johnson was sworn in as president. The 1961
Lincoln Continental limousine is at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn,
Michigan.
Equipment
from the trauma room at Parkland Memorial Hospital, where President Kennedy was
pronounced dead, including a gurney, was purchased by the federal government
from the hospital in 1973 and stored by the National Archives at an underground
facility in Lenexa, Kansas. The First Lady's pink suit, the autopsy report, the
X-rays, President Kennedy's jacket, shirt and tie are stored in the National
Archives facility in College Park, Maryland, and access is controlled by a
representative of the Kennedy family. The rifle used by Oswald, his diary,
revolver, bullet fragments, and the windshield of Kennedy's limousine are also
stored by the Archives. The Lincoln Catafalque, which President Kennedy's
coffin rested on while he lay in state in the Capitol, is on display at the
United States Capitol Visitor Center.
The
three-acre park within Dealey Plaza, the buildings facing it, the overpass, and
a portion of the adjacent railyard – including the railroad switching tower –
were designated part of the Dealey Plaza Historic District by the National Park
Service on October 12, 1993. Much of the area is accessible to visitors,
including the park and grassy knoll. Though still an active city street, the
approximate spot where the presidential limousine was located at the time of
the shooting is marked with an X on the street. The Texas School Book
Depository now draws over 325,000 visitors each year to the Sixth Floor Museum
at Dealey Plaza operated by the Dallas County Historical Foundation. There is a
re-creation of the sniper's nest on the sixth floor of the building.
At
the Historic Auto Attractions museum in Roscoe, Illinois, are permanently
displayed items related to the assassination such as the catalogue Oswald used
to order the rifle, a hat and jacket that belonged to Jack Ruby and the shoes
he wore when he shot Oswald, and a window from the Texas School Book Depository.
The Texas State Archives have the clothes Governor Connally wore on November
22, 1963.
Some
items were intentionally destroyed by the U.S. government at the direction of
Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, such as the casket used to transport President
Kennedy's body aboard Air Force One from Dallas to Washington, which was
dropped by the Air Force into the sea as "its public display would be
extremely offensive and contrary to public policy". Other items such as
the hat worn by Jack Ruby the day he shot Lee Harvey Oswald and the toe tag on
Oswald's corpse are in the hands of private collectors and have sold for tens
of thousands of dollars at auctions.
Jack
Ruby's gun, owned by his brother Earl Ruby, was sold by the Herman Darvick
Autograph Auctions in New York City on December 26, 1991, for $220,000.
OTHER
LINKS:
Official White House portrait of President
John F. Kennedy
|
INTERNET
SOURCE: http://www.netplaces.com/john-f-kennedy/john-f-kennedys-legacy/john-f-kennedys-top-ten-accomplishments.htm
John
F. Kennedy’s Top 10 Accomplishments
1.
John F. Kennedy accomplished what no other American had done — he became the
first Catholic president of the United States.
2.
To this day, John F. Kennedy's call for Americans to serve their country has
remained an inspiring and memorable appeal.
3.
Among John F. Kennedy's most notable and long-standing accomplishments was the
establishment of the Peace Corps, an organization that is now responsible for
sending thousands of American volunteers around the world to help the needy.
4.
It was John F. Kennedy's cautious and sensible approach to the standoff during
the Cuban missile crisis that ultimately diverted a nuclear war with the Soviet
Union and secured the removal of missiles from Cuba.
5.
John F. Kennedy was committed to landing a man on the moon, and although it
occurred after his death, it was his support of space exploration that helped
make it happen.
6.
John F. Kennedy's perseverance was instrumental in securing a limited nuclear
test ban treaty with the Soviet Union.
7.
It was John F. Kennedy's dedication that helped secure the passage of the Area
Redevelopment Act, which assisted states that were suffering from high rates of
unemployment.
8.
Under John F. Kennedy's administration, laws were put in place to end
segregation in interstate travel facilities.
9.
John F. Kennedy helped promote the arts by holding concerts, plays, and
musicals at the White House.
10.
John F. Kennedy issued an executive order prohibiting discrimination in the
sale or lease of housing that was financed by federally guaranteed loans or
owned by the federal government.
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