Authors: Thurston Clarke
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Presidents & Heads of State, #History, #United States, #20th Century
Nerves may have caused him to flub
:
Houston speech transcript, JFKL Web site.
Kennedy chewed her out for a slip-up
:
Gallagher, pp. 316–17.
They could not sleep in the same bed
:
Leaming (
Mrs. Kennedy
), p. 333.
“You were great today”
:
Manchester (
Death
),
p. 87.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22
Kennedy woke to hear
:
Bishop (
The Day
), p. 5.
Then he slipped on the white shirt
:
Manchester (
Death
), p. 112.
“Gosh, just look at the crowds”
:
Gallagher, p. 318.
“Just look at the platform”
:
Lawrence O’Brien, pp. 156–57.
He showed O’Brien the front page
:
Dallas Morning News,
November 22, 1963.
“Christ, I come all the way down here”
:
Gillon, p. 20.
“I don’t care if you have to throw”
:
Lawrence O’Brien, p. 156.
“Some Texans, in taking account”
:
Chicago Sun-Times,
November 22, 1963.
“And weren’t the crowds great”
:
Manchester (
Death
), p. 112.
Speech at the parking lot rally
:
JFKL Web site.
“These are my kind of people”
:
Manchester (
Remembering
), p. 18.
“Things are going much better”
:
Brandon (
Special
), p. 196.
339
As Jackie walked into the ballroom
:
Speech in Hotel Texas ballroom:
JFKL Web site; film at Sixth Floor Museum, Dallas.
Back in their suite she said
:
Bergquist and Tretick, p. 172; O’Donnell and Powers, p. 24.
Ted Dealey, had come to the White House
:
Manchester (
Death
), pp. 48–49.
Kennedy fired back
:
Ibid.;
NYT,
November 5, 1961.
He answered Dealey again
:
Schlesinger (
Thousand
), p. 753.
“Oh, you know, we’re heading”
:
O’Donnell and Powers, p. 25; Manchester (
Death
), p. 121;
ES,
November 22, 1963.
Some residents of “nut country” had woken
:
Manchester (
Death
), p. 64.
“You know, last night”
:
Ibid., p. 121.
He and Jackie had been in the suite
:
Ibid., pp. 120–21; Pottker, p. 213; William Manchester Papers (
Death of a President
), Box 43, Wesleyan Library.
“Isn’t this sweet, Jack”
:
Ibid.
Instead, he grabbed a telephone book
:
Ibid.
“You can be sure of one thing”
:
Wicker, p. 158; Reston, p. 273.
Secret Service
Agent Roy Kellerman told
O’Donnell
:
O’Donnell and Powers, p. 25.
“They put me in a bubble top thing”
:
Martin (
Seeds
), pp. 452–53.
he thought the space program “needed a boost”
:
Logsdon, p. 218.
“Equal choice / not any reflection”
:
JFKPP (addition 2005), Box 50, JFKL.
“How can anyone say no”
:
O’Donnell and Powers, p. 26.
“Please, when we go to Dallas”
:
McHugh, JFKLOH.
When he landed at Love Field in 1961
:
Manchester (
Death
), p. 47.
“This trip is turning out”
:
O’Donnell and Powers, p. 26.
“You two look like Mr. and Mrs. America”
:
Ibid.
A reporter watching her emerge
:
MacNeil, p. 187.
This was the first time that most at Love Field
:
Jerry Crow, OH, Sixth Floor Museum archives.
A Dallas woman said she was amazed
:
Van Buren, p. 74.
“I can see his suntan”
:
Bugliosi, p. 27.
“He’s broken away from the program”
:
Film archives, Sixth Floor Museum.
The Texas journalist Ronnie Dugger
:
Manchester (
Death
), p. 131.
It was the first time
:
Lieberson, p. 222.
Sorensen’s observation
:
Sorensen (
Counselor
), p. 102.
Laura Bergquist’s “fascinating human animal”
:
Bergquist Papers, Boston University Library.
what Sidey called “a serious man”
:
John F. Kennedy (
Prelude
), p. xxii.
A local broadcaster called his welcome
:
Film archives, Sixth Floor Museum.
Some high school students
:
Manchester (
Death
), p. 128.
“You’re a traiter”
:
Ibid.
“Help JFK Stamp Out”
:
Ibid.
“Mr. President, because of your”
:
ES,
November 23, 1963.
“It’s wonderful”
:
Roberts, JFKLOH; MacNeil, p. 186.
As they were pulling away, Kennedy noticed
:
Jerry Crow, OH, Sixth Floor Museum.
Connally had wanted him to speak
:
Bruno and Greenfield, pp. 89–92.
Connally might have forgotten
:
John Connally, “Why Kennedy Went to Texas,”
Life,
November 22, 1967; testimony of John and Nellie Connally to House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA), available on National Archives Web site.
Yarborough might not have remembered thinking
:
Yarborough, JFKLOH.
Nor would John and Nellie Connally have recalled
:
Connally, “Why Kennedy Went to Texas,”
Life,
November 22, 1967; testimony of John and Nellie Connally to HSCA, available on National Archives Web site.
or that he had stopped to greet some children
:
Ibid.
or that a teenaged boy had darted
:
Sixth Floor Museum archives.
“Thank you, thank you”
:
Connally, “Why Kennedy Went to Texas,”
Life,
November 22, 1967.
they had spilled into the street
:
Clint Hill, OH, Sixth Floor Museum.
“How pleasant that cool tunnel”
:
Manchester (
Death
), p. 154.
“You sure can’t say that”
:
Nellie Connally and Herskowitz, p. 7; Manchester (
Death
), p. 154.
“No, you can’t”
:
Manchester (
Death
),p. 154.
He heard some loud bangs
:
Trask, p. 32.
Nellie Connally remembered his eyes
:
Nellie Connally and Herskowitz, p. 7.
Agent Kellerman thought he said
:
Manchester (
Death
), p. 157.
His back brace kept him upright
:
Dallek (
Unfinished
), p. 694; James Reston, Jr., “That ‘Damned Girdle’: The Hidden Factor That Might Have Killed Kennedy,”
Los Angeles Times,
November 22, 2004.
Jackie cried out
:
Nellie Connally and Herskowitz, p. 8.
AFTER DALLAS
Jackie wept first
:
Semple, p. 27; Manchester (
Death
), p. 163.
In New York, there was a murmur
:
Fries and Wilson, p. 13.
Advertising men in tailored suits hurried
:
Reaction in New York City:
NYT,
November 23, 1963.
Chorus girls rehearsing
:
Fries and Wilson, p. 162.
a rookie police officer wept
:
Van Buren, p. 9.
In his Senate office, Senator Hubert Humphrey
:
Fries and Wilson, p. 226.
Senator Fulbright jumped up
:
Fleming, pp. 23–24.
“That Dallas!”
:
McKeever, p. 539.
Medgar Evers’s widow thought
:
Fleming, p. 158.
In Chicago, Mayor Richard Daley
:
Semple, p. 83.
in the Solomon Islands
:
Hamilton, p. 602.
At Harvard, a girl wept
:
Salinger and Vanocur, p. 153.
When the captain of a transatlantic jet
:
Manchester (
Death
), p. 498.
When Rusk announced
:
Salinger, p. 8.
President
Truman cried so much
:
Louchheim, p. 120.
A poem by the columnist
:
Ibid., p. 32.
The cartoonist Bill Mauldin
:
Ibid., p. 39.
A twelve-year-old girl in Oregon
:
Van Buren, p. 140.
A girl remembered her mother
:
Ibid., p. 48.
schoolchildren in Texas cheering
:
Bob Moser, “Welcome to Texas, Mr. Obama,”
Texas Observer,
August 4, 2010.
Schlesinger was appalled by Stevenson’s reaction
:
Schlesinger (
Journals
), p. 208.
Algeria declared a week of official mourning
:
Dear Abby, pp. 92–105.
Thousands of Poles
:
United States Information Agency, Box 2, JFKL.
Khrushchev instructed his wife
:
Sergei Khrushchev, p. 698.
The woman narrating a documentary
:
NYT,
November 25, 1963.
tears filled Gromyko’s eyes
:
Semple, p. 218.
Yevgeny Yevtushenko was reading
:
Stein, p. 198.
“People cried in the street”
:
Douglas, p. 366; Manchester (
Death
), p. 557.
Sir Laurence Olivier interrupted
:
Manchester (
Death
), p. 497.
“There has never been anything like it”
:
Joseph Alsop Papers, Box 19, folder 6, LOC.
“openly crying in the street”
:
Manchester (
Death
), p. 498.
Sixty thousand West Berliners
:
Ibid.
Workmen in Nice
:
United States Information Agency, Box 2, JFKL.
“Never, perhaps, has the death”
:
Manchester (
Death
), p. 498.
“he [Kennedy] reestablished”
:
Walt Rostow, JFKLOH.
A postman in a Connecticut
:
Semple, p. 78.
A Detroit housewife said
:
Ibid., p. 383.
Jimmy Carter cried
:
Fleming, p. 104.
McGeorge Bundy admitted
:
Alsop, p. 512.
Roswell Gilpatric believed
:
Gilpatric, JFKLOH.
The columnist Joe Alsop said
:
Alsop, p. 511.
In a condolence letter
:
William Manchester Papers (
Death of a President
), Box 42, Wesleyan Library.