Read The Day Kennedy Was Shot Online
Authors: Jim Bishop
Teague, Olin, 103
Teamsters Union, 91
Temple Shearith Israel (Dallas), 427, 465, 562â565
Texas Industries, 206
Texas School Book Depository (Dallas), 33â36, 48â49, 56â60, 68, 74â75, 125â129, 154â155, 160â161, 162â173, 175â176, 179â185, 189, 192â194, 207, 221â222, 227â228, 252â256, 302â303, 325â326, 344, 349, 422â423, 687, 689
Texas Theatre (Dallas), 273â281, 462, 586
Thomas, Albert, 118, 203, 262, 337
Thomas, George, xv, 4â5, 17, 22, 55, 87, 412â413, 559
Thomas, Walter E., 640
Thompson, Father James, 116, 204, 222â225
Thompson, Josiah, xvii
Thompson, Tommy, 505â508
Thornberry, Homer, 203, 250, 262
Time
magazine, 266
Tippit, John D., 50â51, 54, 149â150, 225, 256â260, 263â264, 279, 280, 281, 322, 324, 333â334, 389, 473, 480â481, 484â485, 504â505, 523, 585, 630, 646, 689â690
Todd, Elmer, 470
Tower, John, 63, 539
Trade Mart (Dallas), 9â11, 35, 52, 58â59, 64, 66, 75, 76, 84, 88, 93â95, 113â114, 118â121, 135, 150, 155â157, 170, 188â190, 204â206, 255, 301â302, 394â395
Tropic of Cancer
(Miller), 147
Truly, Roy, 33â34, 59â60, 127, 154â155, 162â163, 180, 182, 228, 303, 422, 463, 674, 689, 690
Truman, Harry S, 249, 454â455, 547, 550, 556
Truth About the Assassination, The
(Roberts), xvii
Tuckerman, Nancy, xiv, 236
Tumulty, Joseph, 43
Turner, Patrolman F. M., 130
Turnure, Pamela, 42, 117, 246â247, 357, 408
u
Udall, Sec. Stewart, 137, 212, 616
United Nations, 26, 282â283, 372, 487
United Press International (UPI), 42, 109, 132, 133, 181â182, 191â192, 212â213, 310, 355â356
United States Supreme Court, 89â90
University of Dallas, 145
Uzee, Norris, 244â245
V
Valachi, Joseph, 92
Valenti, Jack, 307, 318, 337, 354, 396, 463â464, 531â532, 543, 560, 595â596, 616, 663, 690
Van Haesen, John, 609, 647â648
Vegas Club (Dallas), 151, 565, 575â576, 633â634, 634, 658
Victoria, Queen, 338, 346, 488
Vienna Summit Conference, 24, 44
Viet Nam, 25, 79, 81, 136â138
Vogelsinger, Sue, 619
Volpert, Ann, 526
Volstead Act, 136
w
Wade, District Attorney Henry, 283â284, 290, 330â331, 377, 471â473, 521, 526, 569â570, 586â592, 614â615, 617â619, 626â635, 643â644, 650, 654, 659
Waldman, William J., 675â676
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (New York), 72
Waldo, Thayer, 589
Walker, C. T., 263â265, 277â278, 281
Walker, Gen. Edwin, 14, 160, 325, 495, 541, 688
Walker, Roy, 50â51
Walsh, Dr. John, 412
Walter Reed Hospital (Washington, D.C.), 357
Walther, Carolyn, 165
Walton, William, 489â490, 551, 637â638
Ward, Judge Theron, 288, 290
Warren, Sgt., 645, 655
Warren Commission Report, xvi, 656
n
, 686, 690â691
Warren, Earl, 144, 409, 414â415
Washington Cathedral, 436â437
Washington, George, 37, 681
Washington Hotel Building (Washington, D.C.), 337, 523
Washington Post
, 23â24
Weatherford, Harry, 361
Webster, Chuck, 604, 628
Webster, Jane Carolyn, 243
Wehle, Gen. Philip, 439, 452, 453, 487
Weissman, Bernard, 98â100, 151, 644
Weitzman, Deputy Constable Seymour, 183, 207â208
Wells, Lt. T. P., 456â457, 484â485
West, Bernard, 36â37, 466
Westbrook, Capt. W. R., 188â189
Western Union, 133
Westinghouse Broadcasting Company, 310, 318
Westminster Cathedral (London), 667
Westphal, Roy, 95
West, Troy, 56â58
Whalen, Tom, 297
Whaley, William, 217â219
While England Slept
(J. F. Kennedy), xvâxvi
White, Byron, 579
White, Dr., 201
“White House switchboard,” 6
Wicker, Tom, 42, 265â266, 298, 333
Williams, Bonnie Ray, 57, 126â129, 154â155, 180â181
Williams, Doyle, 222
Wilson, Woodrow, 43, 436â437
Wirtz, Sec. Willard, 212, 343â344, 616
WNEW (New York City), 634â635
Wolf, Monsignor Vincent, 72â73, 78, 232
Worrell, James R., 172, 181
Wright, James (Jim), 61, 62, 79, 369
Wright, Lloyd, 636, 637
Wright, O. P., 244, 296â297
Wright, Zephyr, 518
Y
Yarborough, Senator Ralph, 20â21, 44â47, 61, 62, 70, 87â88, 100â103, 109, 117, 118, 123, 129â130, 132, 173, 175, 183, 196, 245
Youngblood, Rufus (Rufe), 47â48, 54, 132, 172, 173, 183, 195, 197â199, 248, 251, 261â262, 300, 311, 416, 433, 531â532, 542, 561, 595
z
Zangara (Assassin), 547
Zapruder, Abraham, xvii, 163, 174â175, 687
Zboril, Charles, 41
Zoppi, Toni, 120
JIM BISHOP
was a syndicated columnist and author of many bestselling books, including
The Day Lincoln Was Shot
,
The Day Christ Died
, and
A
Day in the Life of President Kennedy
. Born in Jersey City, New Jersey, Bishop died in 1987.
Visit
www.AuthorTracker.com
for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins authors and artists.
A Bishop's Confession
The Birth of the United States
Mother Tongue
FDR's Last Year
The Days of Martin Luther King, Jr.
A Day in the Life of President Johnson
Jim Bishop: Reporter
A Day in the Life of President Kennedy
Honeymoon Diary
The Murder Trial of Judge Peel
The Day Christ Was Born
Some of My Very Best
Go with God
Fighting Father Duffy
The Golden Ham
The Girl in Poison Cottage
Parish Priest
The Mark Hellinger Story
The Glass Crutch
Cover design by Nicholas Bilardello
Cover photograph © Bettmann/Corbis
A hardcover edition of this book was published in 1968 by Funk & Wagnalls.
THE DAY KENNEDY WAS SHOT.
Copyright © 1968 by Jim Bishop. All rights reserved. under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
The following have granted permission to use copyrighted material:
From “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” from
Complete Poems
by Robert Frost. Copyright 1923 by Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc. Copyright 1951 by Robert Frost. Reprinted by permission of Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc.
From
Camelot.
Copyright 1960 by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe. Used by permission of Chappell & Co., Inc., New York.
First Harper Perennial edition published 1992, reissued 2013.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available upon request.
ISBN 978-0-06-229059-5
EPub Edition November 2013 ISBN 9780062319937
13 14 15 16 17
OV/RRD
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*
This book was originally under contract with Random House, but for reasons completely apart from the Kennedys' pressure on that publisher, I decided to have Funk & Wagnalls bring it out.
*
Washington time is one hour later than at Dallas.
*
Within a year, George Jackson was dead of cancer.
*
On October 26, 1963, while showing the private quarters of the Kennedy family to the author and his wife.
*
He brought it up to the author at the White House, October 28, 1963.
*
Mr. Kennedy referred to this matter obliquely several times during the author's stay at the White House.
*
Nixon confided these plans to me at the Key Biscayne Hotel, Miami, Fla., in January 1963.
*
It has been suggested that, in a group of carts, this bullet may have fallen from Kennedy's. The President was still lying on his cart at this time, and, of those carts at the elevator, Connally's was the only one involving a bullet wound.
*
Mr. O'Donnell denied that he was asked about
Air Force One
. There is no doubt that Johnson, thinking ahead, wanted to show that, even in tragedy, the continuity of government would be smooth. Therefore, from the start, he wanted to be aboard 26000 with his dead chieftain and the widow.
*
This was a lapse of memory on all sides. Although the Constitution of the United States does not require a time element, the oath should be taken as quickly as possible to ensure smooth continuity of government in the executive branch.
*
Cloy's alleged statement, “We were rehearsing for the funeral a week,” led to the ugly rumor that Defense Secretary McNamara had the army practicing for the burial of John F. Kennedy before the trip to Dallas.
*
The doctors complained bitterly that they were misquoted or
quoted out of context. In truth, they were incompetent to discuss the wounds of the President because they had not examined the body. They had no knowledge of the crime, the scene of it, the trajectory of projectiles, or whether wounds could be called entrance or exit. They could have drawn up a preliminary draft of treatment and given it to Dr. Burkley, the President's physician. Instead they chose to lend themselves to a press conference. As a result, Burkley could not discuss the President's wounds with competence at the Bethesda autopsy.
*
The spot where Oswald, who had shot two strangers, would be shot by one on Sunday morning.
*
The cost of the casket was $3900. Oneal sent bills to Mrs. Kennedy for a year. He says that the family never paid for it. A government agency got in touch with him fourteen months later and said it would give him $3400âno more. He accepted. The check came from the government. Because he demanded proper payment, his business in Dallas fell off 50 percent.
*
Four months after the assassination, I sat with Rose and Joe Kennedy at their home in Palm Beach. Mrs. Kennedy said: “I have not heard from âMrs. Kennedy' since the funeral.”
*
O'Brien and Bundy were the only Kennedy men who remained with Lyndon Johnson. Both, as noted by Charles Roberts in the
The Truth About the Assassination
, were branded by the Clan Kennedy as “traitors.” Bundy's response was that the presidency is bigger than any man. O'Brien shrugged and said: “You do what needs to be done.”
*
Throughout the book, all times given are Central Standard. At this time, it is 4:20
P.M.
in Dallas, 5:20
P.M.
in Washington.
*
After Oswald was shot to death by Jack Ruby on Sunday, November 24, 1963, the first cell was occupied by the nightclub owner.
*
A few months later, in Atlantic City, N.J., I saw O'Donnell holding a door open at the back of the limousine. Jokingly, I said: “Ah, you are now the Johnson door-opener.” He grinned. “Yeah,” he said. “I hold doors for him.” Shortly after, he quit to run for office in Massachusetts and lost.