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JFK Assassination Anniversary

Updated 4:25 PM EDT, Mon, Jan 26, 2009

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Saturday, November 22nd is the 45th anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

 

On Friday, Nov. 22, 1963, the First Lady of Texas, Nellie Connally, turned to President John F. Kennedy and said, “Mr. President, you can’t say Dallas doesn’t love you.”
 
Moments later, as their motorcade was passing through Dealey Plaza in Dallas, shots were fired killing Kennedy and wounding Nellie’s husband, Gov. John Connally. It was 12:30 p.m.
 
Pres. Kennedy was rushed to nearby Parkland Hospital where he was given last rites and pronounced dead at 1 p.m.
 
At 2 p.m., Kennedy’s body was removed from the hospital before the coroner could examine it, a violation of Texas state law (killing the president was not a federal offense at the time and the assassination happened under Texas jurisdiction).
 
Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson became the 36th commander in chief upon taking the oath of office at 2:38 p.m. The swearing-in took place aboard Air Force One, just moments before it took off from Love Field in Dallas.
 
A private autopsy was performed at Bethesda Naval Hospital that evening, and on Monday, Nov. 25, President John F. Kennedy was buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
 
The Warren Commission -- the official government report -- found that Lee Harvey Oswald, a former U.S. marine, killed Kennedy. Oswald had been arrested for killing a police officer just 80 minutes after Kennedy's assassination.

NBC's Coverage of JFK's Assassination

Watch Video

JFK's assassination paralyzed the world on November 22, 1963, and continues to fascinate people today.

However, Oswald would never stand trial. Two days later, while being transferred to the Dallas County Jail, Oswald was killed by Jack Ruby, the manager of a local nightclub.
 
Many people harbor doubts about the findings of the Warren Commission. Holes in the evidence (such as the burning of the original autopsy report) and contradictions in eyewitness reports have led to numerous conspiracy theories about who was really behind the Kennedy assassination.

The most well known footage of Kennedy’s assassination came from Abraham Zapruder, a clothing manufacturer who was filming the motorcade. The Zapruder film was sold to Life magazine with the specification that frame 313, which captured the fatal gunshot, would not be shown.
 
A digitally re-mastered version of the Zapruder film includes slow-motion, frame-by-frame, and close-up renditions of the original.

Comments (12)

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  • Antifraud Sunday, Nov 23 at 6:40 PM FLAG COMMENT It is a real shame that many of the same Establishment people are still in positions of power today, and that the government can still hold back information that would clear up the events about the JFK and other assassinations. It is a greater shame that we have given up our individual rights while the CIA has become illegally entrenched in local, state, and federal government I believe JFK was the last President to understa ... MORE >
  • William Rice Saturday, Nov 22 at 6:31 PM FLAG COMMENT Just over four month prior to the President's murder on a public street in America, He issued Executive Order 11110 which was to strip the Private Bankers of the Federal Reserve of their power to charge interest on our own 'Promise to Pay" National Debt. This act by a President who believed in the Constitution and that 'Only Congress shall have that power was enough to change the banking system over the entire world. When ... MORE >
  • Ben Saturday, Nov 22 at 10:31 AM FLAG COMMENT There's a lesson in this that may not be so visible. And that is: that dirty politics have dirty and sometimes publicly haneous reprocussions. We have no Idea of the "why" not for 45 years. People are smarter than you think and nobody has swallowed the "Oswald" explination that they have given us. So logically that means that someone of power had it done.
  • D Saturday, Nov 22 at 8:31 AM FLAG COMMENT Still cannot believe its the 45th annivesary....my Mom remembers everything about that day... so sad to watch. Rest in Peace JFK
  • John Borkowitz Saturday, Nov 22 at 8:14 AM FLAG COMMENT I was stationed in Koreain 63' working in a Comm Center with the Army Security Agency. I and my crew went to work early after being informed of the Presidents death. There was activity but not like I thought there would be. In fact we were never put on alert or restricted to base. WHY ? In a place like korea, with activity going on all the time, I was surprised. In January of 64' I traveled the same route as the president b ... MORE >

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