Saturday, November 22, 2025

62 YEARS AGO TODAY

Chilling photos from JFK's assassination as 62nd anniversary of attack that changed history is marked

 

By James Cirrone 

 

Daily Mail

Nov 22, 2025

 

 

President John F. Kennedy smiles at the crowd that had gathered along the presidential motorcade route in Dallas, Texas, on November 22, 1963

President John F. Kennedy smiles at the crowd that had gathered along the presidential motorcade route in Dallas, Texas, on November 22, 1963

 

Sixty-two years ago today, President John F. Kennedy was fatally shot as thousands of supporters watched his motorcade pass through Dealey Plaza in Dallas, Texas.

It's an event so thoroughly etched into the collective American psyche that even people who were born decades after November 22, 1963, have a vivid understanding of what happened that day.

Kennedy's death put a brutal end to the tenure of the youngest person ever elected to the world's most powerful office, a tragedy that retraumatized a nation that hadn't dealt with a presidential assassination since William McKinley was killed in 1901.

After the two attempts on Donald Trump's life last year - one of which involved a bullet grazing his ear during a campaign rally - Americans have once again been served the uncomfortable reminder that presidents, even with their Secret Service protection, are vulnerable to attacks.

The effects of the Kennedy assassination reverberated long after the day it happened. From then on, people were much more willing to entertain conspiracy theories thanks to widespread skepticism over the 'single bullet theory' and inconsistences with Kennedy's autopsy.

There's also the fact that just 29 percent of Americans believe Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone, according to a 2023 Gallup poll. Sixty-five percent believe there was a conspiracy involved.

What made Kennedy's murder different from McKinley's, James A. Garfield's and  Abraham Lincoln's, was that there were high-definition photos capturing the moments before, during and after the two bullets struck.

Pictures taken by reporters and bystanders show a startling juxtaposition that day. Jubilant crowds welcomed the 35th president one second, and the next, panicked throngs dove to the ground as First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy cradled the mangled head of her husband.

 

There were up to 200,000 people who came out to see Kennedy pass by that day. It was a Friday

There were up to 200,000 people who came out to see Kennedy pass by that day. It was a Friday

First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy was in the limousine seated to her husband's left

First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy was in the limousine seated to her husband's left 

Texas Governor John Connally and his wife, Nellie, were seated in the middle row of the dark blue, modified 1961 Lincoln Continental convertible. In the front row were two Secret Service agents

Texas Governor John Connally and his wife, Nellie, were seated in the middle row of the dark blue, modified 1961 Lincoln Continental convertible. In the front row were two Secret Service agents 

Picture Just After John Kennedy
President Kennedy slumps over just after being shot. Jackie Kennedy can be seen trying to help him

A news crew tries to capture the assassination while a couple and their toddler get down as the shots ring out

A news crew tries to capture the assassination while a couple and their toddler get down as the shots ring out

The view from the sixth floor window of the Texas School Book Depository in Dallas, from which Lee Harvey Oswald is believed to have assassinated Kennedy

The view from the sixth floor window of the Texas School Book Depository in Dallas, from which Lee Harvey Oswald is believed to have assassinated Kennedy

 

1 comment:

bob walsh said...

A lot of very interesting history turned on this event. That was when TV news overtook print news as the prime source of news to the U.S. public. It was also when live on-the-scene TV news became common. Much before then the equipment was only barely portable. Other interesting things happened. Legally it was a simple local murder case. Had Oswald not been murdered his prosecution would have been more than a little muddled due to the evidence (the body) being unavailable. Thats when the federal law changed making assassination of certain public officials a federal crime and not a local one. Plus that was the first time a lot of people saw a real murder (Oswald) live on television. A lot more people saw that live than saw the motorcade shooting live. I am not even sure the motorcade was televised live.