November 22, 1963
By Mustang Bobby
Friday, November 22, 1963. I was in the sixth grade in Toledo, Ohio. I had to skip phys. ed. because I was just getting over bronchitis, so I was in a study hall when a classmate came up from the locker room in the school basement to say, "Kennedy's dead." We had a boy in our class named Kennedy, and I wondered what had happened -- an errant fatal blow with a dodgeball? A few minutes later, though, it was made clear to us at a hastily-summoned assembly, and we were soon put on the buses and sent home. Girls were crying.
Friday, November 22, 1963. I was in the sixth grade in Toledo, Ohio. I had to skip phys. ed. because I was just getting over bronchitis, so I was in a study hall when a classmate came up from the locker room in the school basement to say, "Kennedy's dead." We had a boy in our class named Kennedy, and I wondered what had happened -- an errant fatal blow with a dodgeball? A few minutes later, though, it was made clear to us at a hastily-summoned assembly, and we were soon put on the buses and sent home. Girls were crying.
There was a newspaper strike at The Blade, so the only papers we could get were either from Detroit or Cleveland. (The union at The Blade, realizing they were missing the story of the century, agreed to immediately resume publication and settle their differences in other ways.) Television, though, was the medium of choice, and I remember the black-and-white images of the arrival of Air Force One at Andrews, the casket being lowered, President Johnson speaking on the tarmac, and the events of the weekend -- Oswald, Ruby, the long slow funeral parade, "Eternal Father, Strong to Save" -- merging into one long black-and-white flicker, finally closing on Monday night with the eternal flame guttering in the cold breeze.
I suspect that John F. Kennedy would be bitterly disappointed that the only thing remembered about his life was how he left it and how it colored everything he did leading up to it. The Bay of Pigs, the steel crisis, the Cuban missle crisis, the Test Ban Treaty, even the space program are dramatized by his death. They became the stuff of legend, not governing, and history should not be preserved as fable.
I never thought I'd be old enough to look back forty-seven years to that time. And according to NPR, sixty percent of Americans alive today were not yet born on that day. Today the question is not do you remember JFK, but what did his brief time leave behind. Speculation is rife as to what he did or did not accomplish. Would we have gone in deeper in Vietnam? Would he have pushed civil rights? Would the Cold War have lasted? We'll never know, and frankly, pursuing such questions is a waste of time. Had JFK never been assassinated, chances are he would have been re-elected in 1964, crushing Barry Goldwater, but leading an administration that was more style than substance, battling with his own party as much as with the Republicans, much like Clinton did in the 1990s. According to medical records, he would have been lucky to live into his sixties, dying from natural causes in the 1980s, and he would have been remembered fondly for his charm and wit -- and his beautiful wife -- more than what he accomplished in eight years of an average presidency.
But it was those six seconds in Dealy Plaza that defined him. Each generation has one of those moments. For my parents it was Pearl Harbor in 1941 or the flash from Warm Springs in April 1945. Today it is Challenger in 1986 and of course September 11, 2001. And in all cases, it is what the moment means to us. It is the play, not the players. We see things as they were, contrast to how they are, and measure the differences, and by that, we measure ourselves.
(Previously published, with minor edits, at Bark Bark Woof Woof on November 22, 2003.)
Labels: John F. Kennedy, U.S. history
4 Comments:
I was in my 8th grade civics class when the principal lowered the flag to half mast. Nowadays, I doubt if kids know much about what JFK stood for since they don't teach civics any more. Good article!!
By Anonymous, at 8:18 PM
Me? 6th grade "home-room", Barnard Elementary, Tulsa, OK. The principal came over the intercom to announce JFK's death. School was dismissed.
By Unknown, at 2:25 AM
I was a college freshman working in the campus radio station. I remember bells ringing on the teletype machines and yards of yellow paper unrolling. Nobody went to any more classes that day. I knew Kennedy had been pronounced dead when I heard someone say "Oh my God - it's going to be Johnson."
We hear a lot less this anniversary than we used to. Like the "Date that will live in infamy" it's fading from memory and eventually, like Pearl Harbor, people who tell you they're educated won't remember what century it was in.
By Capt. Fogg, at 10:20 AM
Sorry so late.
I was in 5th grade McCollum elementary in Albuquerque. Mrs. Hinton always rolled in the tv for us to watch Kennedy's press conferences. She turned it on just as the news hit. I've never seen that many adults crying before or since.
In college as I studied his place in history it's pretty clear that J Edgar wanted him out of the way for numerous reasons, and he always got what he wanted. Both Kennedy's and MLK assassinated - too much coincidence.
By P M Prescott, at 7:06 PM
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