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Timeline of the John F.

Kennedy assassination
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John F. Kennedy This article considers the detailed timeline of events before, during, and after the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the 35th President of the United States. A presidential visit to the state of Texas was first agreed upon by John F. Kennedy, by his vice president and Texas native Lyndon Baines Johnson, and by Texas native Governor John Connally while all three men were together in a meeting in El Paso, Texas on June 6, 1963. (In 1978 Connally testified to the House Select Committee on Assassinations that in the Spring of 1962 "Vice President Johnson told me then that President Kennedy wanted to come to Texas, he wanted to come to Texas to raise some money, have some fundraising affairs over the State.") President Kennedy later decided to embark on the trip with three basic goals in mind: the president wanted to help raise more Democratic Party presidential campaign fund contributions; he wanted to begin his quest for reelection in November 1964; and, because the Kennedy-Johnson ticket had barely won Texas in 1960 (and had even lost in Dallas), President Kennedy wanted to help mend political fences among several leading Texas Democratic party members who appeared to be fighting politically amongst themselves. President Kennedy's trip to Dallas was first announced to the public in September 1963. The exact motorcade route was finalized on November 18, and announced to the public a few days before November 22. During the third week of October 1963 Lee Harvey Oswald started working a seasonal, full-time job at the Texas School Book Depository as a $1.25-per-hour manual laborer, filling customer orders for books. Oswald had secured the job after a referral by Ruth Paine, with whom Lee's wife, Marina Oswald, and the Oswald children were living, after a marriage separation. Ruth had also separated from her husband, Michael Paine, at about the same time. On October 24, 1963, when on a visit to Dallas to mark U.N. Day, U.N. Ambassador Adlai Stevenson was jeered, jostled, hit by a sign, and spat upon. Dallas Police were fearful that similar demonstrations were going to 1

happen to Kennedy when he visited Dallas; therefore, they increased the level of security during his visit, putting into effect the most stringent security precautions in city's history.

Contents
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1 November 22: Before the assassination o 1.1 Motorcade vehicles and personnel 2 November 22: Assassination 3 Immediate aftermath: Lee Harvey Oswald 4 Immediate aftermath: Kennedy 5 Return to Washington

6 Oswald: Charges laid [edit]

November 22: Before the assassination


On Friday, November 22, 1963, at 11:40 a.m. CST, Kennedy, his wife Jacqueline, and the rest of the presidential entourage arrived at Love Field in Dallas, Texas, aboard Air Force One after a very short flight from nearby Ft. Worth. The motorcade cars had been lined up in a certain order earlier that morning but, just prior to Kennedy's arrival, the order of the vehicles was changed. The original schedule was for the president to proceed in a long motorcade from Love Field through downtown Dallas, and end at the Dallas Business and Trade Mart. The motorcade was scheduled to enter Dealey Plaza at 12:25 p.m., followed by a 12:30 p.m. arrival at the Dallas Business and Trade Mart so President Kennedy could deliver a speech and share in a steak luncheon with Dallas government, business, religious, and civic leaders and their spouses. [edit]

Motorcade vehicles and personnel

The lead car, an unmarked white Ford: o Dallas Police Chief Jesse Curry (driver) o Secret Service Agent Winston Lawson (right front) o Sheriff Bill Decker (left rear) o Agent Forrest Sorrels (right rear) SS 100 X, a 1961 Lincoln Continental: o Agent Bill Greer (driver) o Agent Roy Kellerman (right front), o Nellie Connally (left middle) o Texas Governor John Connally (right middle) o First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy (left rear) o President John F. Kennedy (right rear) Halfback, a convertible: o Agent Sam Kinney (driver), Agent Emory Roberts (right front) 2

o o o o o o o o

Agent Clint Hill (left front running board) Agent Bill McIntyre (left rear running board) Agent John Ready (right front running board) Agent Paul Landis (right rear running board) Presidential aide Kenneth O'Donnell (left middle) Presidential aide David Powers (right middle) Agent George Hickey (left rear) Agent Glen Bennett (right rear)

1964 Lincoln four-door convertible: o State highway patrol officer Hurchel Jacks (driver) o Agent Rufus Youngblood (right front) o Senator Ralph Yarborough (left rear) o Mrs. Claudia Alta Taylor Johnson (center rear) o Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson (right rear) Varsity, a hardtop: o A Texas state policeman (driver) o Vice Presidential aide Cliff Carter (front middle) o Agent Jerry Kivett (right front), o Agent Woody Taylor (left rear) o Agent Lem Johns (right rear) Press pool car, (on loan from the telephone company): o Telephone company employee (driver) o Malcolm Kilduff, White House assistant press secretary (middle front) Kilduff was acting as press secretary because Pierre Salinger was traveling to Japan with several cabinet officers, including Secretary of State Dean Rusk o Merriman Smith, UPI (right front) o Jack Bell, AP o Robert Baskin, The Dallas Morning News o Bob Clark, ABC (rear) Press Car: o Bob Jackson, The Dallas Times Herald o Tom Dillard, The Dallas Morning News o Mal Couch, WFAA-TV/ABC

The presidential motorcade traveled nearly its entire route without incident, stopping twice so President Kennedy could shake hands with some Catholic nuns, then, some school children. Shortly before the limousine turned onto Main Street a male ran towards the limousine, but was thrust to the ground by a Secret Service agent and hustled away.

The route taken by the motorcade within Dealey Plaza. North is towards the almost direct-left At 12:29 p.m. CST, the presidential limousine entered Dealey Plaza after a 90-degree right turn from Main Street onto Houston Street. Over two dozen known and unknown amateur and professional still and motionpicture photographers captured the last living images of President Kennedy. Just before 12:30 p.m. CST, President Kennedy slowly approached the Texas School Book Depository head-on, then the limousine made the 120-degree left turn directly in front of the depository, now only 65 feet (20 meters) away. [edit]

November 22: Assassination


According to witnesses, the shooting began shortly after the limousine made the turn from Houston onto Elm Street. It is not known with certainty, when each shot was fired, but most experts agree that the President had been hit no later than the point at which he can be seen in the Zapruder film, first emerging from behind the Stemmons Highway sign. Several seconds later, he suffered a massive and fatal head wound and after being rushed to Parkland Hospital, was officially pronounced dead at 1:00 p.m. During this time Governor Connally was also hit, although he survived after being treated at Parkland for wounds in the back, chest, wrist and left thigh. Although there is controversy about exactly when he was wounded, analysts from both the Warren Commission and H.S.C.A. (House Select Committee on Assassinations 1978) believed that his first reactions were simultaneous with President Kennedy's and consistent with their theory that the two men were struck by a single bullet. Like many other aspects of this case, this issue is highly controversial, and many critics have disputed those findings. [edit]

Immediate aftermath: Lee Harvey Oswald


Lee Harvey Oswald was confronted by an armed Dallas policeman, Marion Baker, in the depository second floor lunchroom only 74 to 90 seconds (according to a Warren Commission time recreation) after the last shot. Baker first testified that the shots he remembered hearing as he approached the depository originated from the "building in front of me, or, the one to the right". In the second floor lunchroom Oswald was identified by the superintendent of the building, Roy Truly, then released. Both Baker and Truly testified that Oswald appeared 4

completely "calm, cool, normal, and was not out of breath in any way" and was not sweating. According to the Warren Commission, when Oswald was next seen - by a depository secretary on the first floor - he was carrying a soda bottle as he left the Texas School Book Depository at approximately 12:33 p.m. through its front door. The Warren Commission concluded that Oswald had traveled a minimum 346-foot distance from the sixth floor easternmost window, and hid an 8 pound, Italian-made 1938 Mannlicher-Carcano, 6.5 millimeter rifle equipped with a four-power scope along the way. The rifle was reported discovered by a Dallas police detective at 1:22 p.m., having been placed sometime sitting balanced upright on its bottom edges. After being discovered the rifle was photographed before being touched. Authorities did not seal the Texas School Book Depository until 12:39 or 12:40 p.m.. Before that, policeman, detectives, witnesses, and others were first directed by persons to search the grassy knoll, parking lot, and railroad yard from 12:30 to 12:39 p.m.. The Dealey Plaza immediate area streets and blocks were never sealedoff either, and within only nine minutes of the assassination, photographs show that vehicles were driving down Elm Street, through the crime scene kill zone. At 1:00 p.m., after a bus and taxi ride (a taxi ride that he was witnessed offering first to an elderly woman), Oswald arrived back at his boarding room and according to his landlady, left at 1:03 or 1:04 p.m. when she last saw him standing and waiting at a bus stop. At 1:15 to 1:16 p.m. (one nearby witness who actually looked at his watch stated 1:10 p.m.), Dallas police officer J. D. Tippit was shot dead 0.88 miles from Oswald's rooming house. Thirteen people witnessed Oswald either shooting Tippit or fleeing the immediate scene. After the Tippit murder, Oswald was witnessed traveling on foot toward the Texas Theatre. At about 1:35 p.m. Johnny Calvin Brewer, who worked as a manager at "Hardy's Shoe Store" nearby the "Texas Theatre" saw Oswald turning his face away from the street and duck into the entranceway of the shoe store as Dallas squad cars sirened up the street. When Oswald left the store, Brewer followed Oswald and watched him go into the Texas Theater movie house without paying while the ticket attendant was distracted. Brewer notified the ticket taker, who in turn informed the Dallas Police at 1:40 p.m.. Inside the theater, several witnesses saw Oswald shift to several different seat locations to sit next to different patrons. Almost two dozen policeman, sheriffs, and detectives in several patrol cars arrived at Texas Theatre because they believed Tippit's killer was inside. (Minutes beforehand they had raided a nearby library on a similar, but mistaken report.) When an arrest attempt was made at 1:50 p.m. inside the theater, Oswald resisted arrest and, according to the police, attempted to shoot a patrolman after yelling once, "Well, it's all over now!" then punching a patrolman. A policeman was witnessed to immediately yell, "Kill the president, will ya?!!" At 3:01 p.m. Dallas time, only an hour after Oswald was taken into the Dallas jail, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover wrote a memo to his assistant directors in which he stated, "I called the Attorney General at his home and told him I thought we had the man who killed the President down in Dallas, at the present time". [edit]

Immediate aftermath: Kennedy


Meanwhile, the situation at Parkland Hospital had deteriorated. Even as the press contingent grew, a Roman Catholic priest had been summoned to perform the last rites for President Kennedy. Doctors worked frantically to save his life, but his wounds were too great. At 1:00 p.m., after all the heart activity had ceased, and after the priest administered the last rites, President Kennedy was pronounced dead. Personnel at Parkland Hospital 5

trauma room #1 who treated the president observed that the president's condition was "moribund", meaning, he had no chance of survival upon arrival at the hospital. "We never had any hope of saving his life," one doctor said. The priest who administered the last rites to the president told The New York Times that the president was already dead upon arrival at the hospital and had to draw back a sheet covering the president's face so that the last rites could be given. Governor Connally, meanwhile, was soon taken to emergency surgery where he underwent two operations that day. The news of Kennedy's death was made public at 1:38 p.m. CST. CBS News anchorman Walter Cronkite passed along word of the assassination. The television transmissions had been first interrupted at 12:40 p.m. CST (during the timeslot of top-rated soap opera As the World Turns, which over 12 million viewers watched regularly), nearly an hour before the death announcement, after which regular programming was briefly resumed. Walter Cronkite read several more news reports and then, around 1 p.m. CST, the affiliates joined Cronkite in the news room. After news footage was shown of a luncheon in Dallas where Kennedy was supposed to speak, Cronkite announced on air: "From Dallas, Texas, the flash, apparently official--(reading AP flash) President Kennedy died at 1:00 PM Central Standard Time, 2:00 Eastern Standard Time, some 38 minutes ago.[Brief Pause Cronkite clears his throat, adjusts to the shock of the news] Vice President Lyndon Johnson has left the hospital in Dallas, but we do not know to where he has proceeded. Presumably, he will be taking the oath of office shortly and become the thirty-sixth President of the United States." The new president of the United States, Lyndon Johnson, ordered that the announcement be made only after he left the hospital. He recalled: "I asked that the announcement be made after we left the room...so that if it were an international conspiracy...they would destroy us all." A few minutes after 2:00 p.m. CST, and after a ten to fifteen minute confrontation between cursing and weapons-brandishing Secret Service agents and doctors, President Kennedy's body was removed from Parkland Hospital and driven to Air Force One. According to some Assassination Researchers, this removal may have been illegal, as the body was removed before undergoing a forensic examination by the Dallas coroner, and against Texas state laws; The murder of the president was, at that time, listed on the books as a State-Level crime and not a Federal-Level one, and as such legally occurred under Texas jurisdiction. To this date, however, no official legal body has ruled on this matter, quite possibly as the point is now somewhat moot. [edit]

Return to Washington
Once back at Air Force One, and only after Mrs. Kennedy and President Kennedys body had also returned to the plane, Lyndon Johnson was sworn in by Sarah T. Hughes as the thirty-sixth President of the United States of America at 2:38 p.m. CST. At about 6:00 p.m. EST Air Force One arrived at Andrews Air Force Base near Washington D.C. where Kennedy's casket was loaded into a light gray US Navy ambulance for its transport to the Bethesda Naval Hospital for an autopsy and mortician's preparations. When Jackie Kennedy stepped off the plane, her pink suit and legs were still stained with her husband's blood. All that long afternoon and into the early morning hours of the next day, the widow objected to leaving her husband's body, except for the swearing in of Johnson. She also refused to change out of her blood-stained suit. Let them see what theyve done she has been quoted by several persons as saying. [edit] 6

Oswald: Charges laid


At 7:05 p.m. CST Lee Harvey Oswald was charged with "murder with malice" in the killing of police officer J.D. Tippit. At 11:36 p.m. CST Oswald was charged with the murder of President Kennedy[1] (there being no crime of "assassination" at that time). On November 24, 1963, in a memo J. Edgar Hoover wrote for the record, Hoover stated, "The thing I am most concerned about, and so is Mr. Katzenbach, is having something issued so that we can convince the public that Oswald is the real assassin." On November 24, 1963, at 11:21 am CST, Lee Harvey Oswald was shot and killed by local nightclub owner Jack Ruby On a November 26, 1963 memo from Courtney Evans, the Assistant FBI Director (Mafia Section), to Assistant to the FBI Director, Alan Belmont, the F.B.I. Director J. Edgar Hoover hand-wrote in the memo's margin, "Just how long do you estimate it will take? It seems to me we have all the basic facts now." On December 9, 1963, only 17 days after the assassination, the FBI report was turned over to the Warren Commission theorizing that only three bullets were fired during the assassination; that the first shot hit Kennedy, the second shot hit Governor Connally, and the third shot hit Kennedy in the head, killing him. The FBI theorized that Lee Harvey Oswald fired all three shots.

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