THIS DAY IN HISTORY – John F. Kennedy assassinated – 1963

Via History.com

John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the 35th president of the United States, is assassinated while traveling through Dallas, Texas, in an open-top convertible.

First lady Jacqueline Kennedy rarely accompanied her husband on political outings, but she was beside him, along with Texas Governor John Connally and his wife, for a 10-mile motorcade through the streets of downtown Dallas on November 22. Sitting in a Lincoln convertible, the Kennedys and Connallys waved at the large and enthusiastic crowds gathered along the parade route. As their vehicle passed the Texas School Book Depository Building at 12:30 p.m., Lee Harvey Oswald allegedly fired three shots from the sixth floor, fatally wounding President Kennedy and seriously injuring Governor Connally. Kennedy was pronounced dead 30 minutes later at Dallas’ Parkland Hospital. He was 46.

Vice President Lyndon Johnson, who was three cars behind President Kennedy in the motorcade, was sworn in as the 36th president of the United States at 2:39 p.m. He took the presidential oath of office aboard Air Force One as it sat on the runway at Dallas Love Field airport. The swearing in was witnessed by some 30 people, including Jacqueline Kennedy, who was still wearing clothes stained with her husband’s blood. Seven minutes later, the presidential jet took off for Washington.

The next day, November 23, President Johnson issued his first proclamation, declaring November 25 to be a day of national mourning for the slain president. On that Monday, hundreds of thousands of people lined the streets of Washington to watch a horse-drawn caisson bear Kennedy’s body from the Capitol Rotunda to St. Matthew’s Catholic Cathedral for a requiem Mass. The solemn procession then continued on to Arlington National Cemetery, where leaders of 99 nations gathered for the state funeral. Kennedy was buried with full military honors on a slope below Arlington House, where an eternal flame was lit by his widow to forever mark the grave.

Lee Harvey Oswald, born in New Orleans in 1939, joined the U.S. Marines in 1956. He was discharged in 1959 and nine days later left for the Soviet Union, where he tried unsuccessfully to become a citizen. He worked in Minsk and married a Soviet woman and in 1962 was allowed to return to the United States with his wife and infant daughter. In early 1963, he bought a .38 revolver and rifle with a telescopic sight by mail order, and on April 10 in Dallas he allegedly shot at and missed former U.S. Army general Edwin Walker, a figure known for his extreme right-wing views. Later that month, Oswald went to New Orleans and founded a branch of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, a pro-Castro organization. In September 1963, he went to Mexico City, where investigators allege that he attempted to secure a visa to travel to Cuba or return to the USSR. In October, he returned to Dallas and took a job at the Texas School Book Depository Building.

Less than an hour after Kennedy was shot, Oswald killed a policeman who questioned him on the street near his rooming house in Dallas. Thirty minutes later, Oswald was arrested in a movie theater by police responding to reports of a suspect. He was formally arraigned on November 23 for the murders of President Kennedy and Officer J.D. Tippit.

On November 24, Oswald was brought to the basement of the Dallas police headquarters on his way to a more secure county jail. A crowd of police and press with live television cameras rolling gathered to witness his departure. As Oswald came into the room, Jack Ruby emerged from the crowd and fatally wounded him with a single shot from a concealed .38 revolver. Ruby, who was immediately detained, claimed that rage at Kennedy’s murder was the motive for his action. Some called him a hero, but he was nonetheless charged with first-degree murder.

Jack Ruby, originally known as Jacob Rubenstein, operated strip joints and dance halls in Dallas and had minor connections to organized crime. He features prominently in Kennedy-assassination theories, and many believe he killed Oswald to keep him from revealing a larger conspiracy. In his trial, Ruby denied the allegation and pleaded innocent on the grounds that his great grief over Kennedy’s murder had caused him to suffer “psychomotor epilepsy” and shoot Oswald unconsciously. The jury found Ruby guilty of “murder with malice” and sentenced him to die.

In October 1966, the Texas Court of Appeals reversed the decision on the grounds of improper admission of testimony and the fact that Ruby could not have received a fair trial in Dallas at the time. In January 1967, while awaiting a new trial, to be held in Wichita Falls, Ruby died of lung cancer in a Dallas hospital.

The official Warren Commission report of 1964 concluded that neither Oswald nor Ruby were part of a larger conspiracy, either domestic or international, to assassinate President Kennedy. Despite its seemingly firm conclusions, the report failed to silence conspiracy theories surrounding the event, and in 1978 the House Select Committee on Assassinations concluded in a preliminary report that Kennedy was “probably assassinated as a result of a conspiracy” that may have involved multiple shooters and organized crime. The committee’s findings, as with those of the Warren Commission, continue to be widely disputed.

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17 Comments
SmallerGovNow
SmallerGovNow
November 22, 2018 7:45 am

THE beginning of the END… Chip

CCRider
CCRider
November 22, 2018 8:16 am

It taught THEM the true value of Goebbels dictum; Lie all you need to get your way just make it astounding and the rabble will fall in line. Don’t imagine we’re any better. WMD’s in Iraq? Health care that pays for itself? A wall from sea to shining sea? It’s why THEY love and promote democrazy. The peons who support it always lose. Always.

NathanBedfordQuantrell
NathanBedfordQuantrell
  CCRider
November 22, 2018 9:44 am

On this Thanksgiving Day, I am grateful for that healthy dose of bitter cynicism.

CCRider
CCRider
  NathanBedfordQuantrell
November 22, 2018 10:13 am

As cynical as I can muster.

Lincoln’s holiday always brings out the devil in me.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
November 22, 2018 10:15 am

This rendition of the tale leaves out the lead conspirator: Ted Cruz’s dad.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  Iska Waran
November 22, 2018 12:20 pm

It leaves out a LOT of co-conspirators.

gatsby1219
gatsby1219
November 22, 2018 10:26 am
Steve C
Steve C
November 22, 2018 11:18 am

From The Godfather Part II

[discussing how to kill Hyman Roth]

Michael Corleone: Tom, you know you surprise me. If anything in this life is certain, if history has taught us anything, it’s that you can kill anyone.

bob
bob
November 22, 2018 11:38 am

Not to put too fine a point on it, but the title of the article should be “On This Day in History George H.W. Bush Assisted With, Even Orchestrated the Assassination of JFK.” Hate to be such a stickler on a holiday.

CCRider
CCRider
  bob
November 22, 2018 1:51 pm

“George Herbert Walker Bush: ‘Sarah, if the American people ever find out what we have done, they would chase us down the street and lynch us.’ That is a famous 1992 quote by George Herbert Walker Bush to Sarah McLendon, a Texas journalist

unit472
unit472
November 22, 2018 12:11 pm

Every so often National Geographic drops its progressive indoctrination posing as programming and runs the actual TV footage from Dallas on that day. It is eye opening in so many ways. There were no fat people, negroes were civil and dressed like everyone else which is to say wearing a shirt with a collar, slacks and leather shoes or a suit. Woman wore dresses and everyone could express what they observed without using obscenities, slang or ‘you know’.

The initial suspicion fell on right wing extremists ( yep America actually had some back then) and the media then, as now, were partial to Democrat thinking even in Dallas but not rampantly so.

It took much longer to put together who Oswald was and coming one year after the Cuban missile crisis there wasn’t much stomach to have another confrontation with the USSR once Oswalds political leanings became public.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
November 22, 2018 12:22 pm

While the Deep State may have had its infancy in the creation of the Federal Reserve and may have suckled on the teat of the income tax for a couple of decades, it got a real boost at the end of WW2, but truly came into full maturity on this date in 1963. Here they showed that there is NOTHING they won’t do to get their own way, NOBODY they won’t murder, even in broad daylight, and nobody they won’t intimidate and murder to maintain their story. Americans are so gullible.

EL Coyote (EC)
EL Coyote (EC)
  MrLiberty
November 22, 2018 3:27 pm

Mr Lib, I tried to provide a tiny snapshot yesterday in The Between Age.

A Confederacy of Dunces does an excellent job giving us a panoramic view of America in ’62. It is a clear-eyed criticism of that golden era when blacks were kept in their place, pornography was against the law, tv fare was harmless fluff, cops weren’t all that dangerous, etc.

It also captures a time when the newer generation was rising up against shitty educators, when reactionaries ruled the country, when business and commerce was young and not an all-powerful political force.

It was a time when the novel’s main character, Ignatius, could dream of homosexuals defeating the militarism of the country, at a time when the MIC was in its infancy.

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
November 22, 2018 10:41 pm

Thanksgiving overshadowed the anniversary of Kennedy’s assassination. Was it last year that the details were supposed to come out but someone talked Trump out of it?

mark
mark
  Mary Christine
November 24, 2018 5:16 pm

If the 20,000 documents would prove the Warren Report they would have been released a long time ago.

Some speculate Trump is using the release as bargaining chip but who knows?

TampaRed
TampaRed
November 24, 2018 4:28 pm

a conspiracy theorist about the jfk killing changes his mind–

https://quillette.com/2018/11/22/my-misspent-years-of-conspiracism/

mark
mark
  TampaRed
November 24, 2018 5:21 pm

TR,

I have saved this and will read and ponder it in its entirety, good find. But if this were a game of Clue I would say:

“No matter who pulled the trigger(s) the bankers did it with help from individuals from the CIA and the Secret Service.”

One of them was hiding in the Bushes…every pun intended.