Legendary Dallas-Fort Worth weathercaster, Troy Dungan Remembers JFK

TroyDunganI am a native Texan. In fact I grew up just about 60 miles South of Dallas in Hillsboro. So Dallas was to our family the big city where one went for shopping, entertainment and nice restaurants. I remember my dad driving us through the Triple Underpass many times when I was a youngster. He also liked to drive past the nearby Dallas Morning News building and have me read the George Bannerman Dealey quote on the facade that begins with, “Build the news upon the rock of truth….”  Dallas was a big part of my life.

But after graduating from Baylor and working a couple of years at a small TV station in Bryan, I wanted to broaden my horizons. Thus, on November 22, 1963 I was living in Orlando, Florida, just a few months into my career in television weather at WDBO-TV the local CBS affiliate. I was also what we called in those days a”booth announcer”. The person in that position kept the station log, did live station breaks and sometimes commercials.

My announcing shift was from 6 AM till Noon. I would go home for a nap and then come back to the station in the late afternoon to do the 6 PM weathercast. Thus, at 1:30 PMEastern time on that fateful day I was, as usual, asleep. I did not find out what happened until a couple of hours later. By that time it had been confirmed that President Kennedy was dead. It was Friday afternoon. I immediately went to the TV station. But, of course, there was no local news or weather that evening. In fact regular television programming did not resume until after President Kennedy’s funeral on Monday.

Saturday was my day off. So I watched TV from home along with everybody else in the country. Network programming was continuous with coverage of the events following the assassination punctuated with periods  of symphony orchestras playing classical music.

Sunday morning I was back in the announcer’s booth at WDBO-TV watching along with the rest of the country as suspected assassin Lee Harvey was escorted from his holding cell through the basement of Dallas Police Headquarters to be moved to another venue. Channel 4 (then KRLD-TV) news reporter Bob Huffaker, a dear friend of mine from my time in Bryan, was in that basement along with CBS News correspondent Nelson Benton. Benton told Bob that, since nothing interesting was likely to happen down there, he was going to go outside to report as the car carrying Oswald pulled out onto the street. He couldn’t have been more mistaken.

So it was that Bob Huffaker, now representing CBS, was standing only a few feet away from Oswald and Dallas Police Detective Jim Leavelle when Jack Ruby lunged at Oswald and shot him at very close range. I watched in shocked disbelief as Huffaker quickly gathered his wits and announced to the nation that Lee Harvey Oswald had been shot.

Fifty years later that memory is firm in my mind.

We all have memories of the funeral coverage, such as little John John saluting and later standing beside his mom an she bent to kiss the President’s casket. But my most vivid memory of that day came as the horse drawn caisson carrying the President’s casket was approaching Arlington Cemetery. Arthur Godfrey was covering that part of the funeral for CBS. As the casket passed Godfrey said, “President Kennedy now belongs to the ages”.

Watch “JFK 50: A Texas Tribute”, streamed LIVE on ktxdtv.com; Friday, November 22nd from 7am-7pm CST (UTC-6 Hours). This special 12 hour broadcast will feature rare video of President Kennedy’s trip to Dallas, live interviews with people who have first-hand connections to some of the darkest days in our country’s history, and live coverage of the observance in Dallas’ Dealey Plaza celebrating the remarkable life, legacy, and leadership of our 35th President. Follow the conversation about the broadcast on social media by following our twitter page at http://www.twitter.com/JFK50Texas and liking our Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/JFK50Texas.

Former Senior Investigative Reporter and Anchor on “The Texas Daily”, Robert Riggs Remembers JFK

RiggsOn the 50th Anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, the inevitable questioned will be asked, “Where were you when you heard the president had been shot?” Among baby boomers the dominant answer is: “I was in school.”

It was a watershed event for American school children who were 17 and under on that tragic day. In hindsight, the assassination appears to have ushered in the turbulent decade of the Sixties, the protest on Vietnam, the murders of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Bobby Kennedy, and a growing distrust of government which feeds conspiracy theories until this day.

And then came Watergate which left our confidence in all institutions shaken.

For me, the an age of 1950’s innocence came to an abrupt end. One year earlier the world had been on the brink of nuclear war over the Cuban Missile Crisis.

In the wake of the assassination, the concern among our families and friends in Paris, Texas centered on whether the Soviets had killed our president. Would the U.S. launch a retaliatory nuclear strike or had the Ruskies already launched after decapitating our political leadership?

Were we on the brink of World War III? That was the discussion as we gathered around the dinner table to watch news coverage in black and white.

Time was frozen. I sat in front of the TV mesmerized. My dad and I were watching when Jack Ruby shot Lee Harvey Oswald to death on live television as the accused assassin was being transferred to the Dallas County Jail.

The assassination marked a dramatic turning point for journalism. The entire nation simultaneously shared the experience of one story as they watched it unfold live on television.

Television suddenly became the place where the majority of Americans got their news. That era has now been washed away by the Internet.

So where was I when I heard the President had been shot? Sitting in the 9th grade history class of Mrs. Muse at the newly opened Crockett Junior High School. I remember that we had been studying events in Vietnam and the Buddhist monk who had burned himself to death in Saigon protesting the policies of the Diem government. President Kennedy had reacted to the Pulitzer Prize winning photograph saying, “No news picture in history has generated so much emotion around the world as that one.”

I asked my classmates on Facebook to fill in the blanks from that day. In effect, we crowdsourced the collective memory of November 22, 1963.

Here are their posts in response to my question:

Johnny Williams I was a sophomore at Paris High School. We had a pickup football game going during the lunch hour between 3rd and 4th period. Another student walked by and told us President Kennedy had been shot in Dallas. A short time later in 4th period English class, PHS Principal Dee Cunningham came in and talked with our teacher. She immediately broke down and started crying. Mr. Cunningham then announced that President Kennedy was dead. School was dismissed early. Paris High had a District football game scheduled that night in Sulphur Springs. The game was played but if I remember correctly, only two numbers were played by the bands. SSHS band played the National Anthem and the PHS band played Hail To the Chief. The mood throughout the game was very subdued. Oddly enough, I don’t remember who won.

Ida Bray Deats I was in Crockett Jr High study hall(home room) after lunch. Announcement came over PA from our principal, Felix Gibson. Went home regular time i think ; no one could drive so buses ran regular time, some were picked up early by parents. Very quite and many tears. Paris was a largely Democratic town at that time. Kennedy had won his election by a huge margin in Lamar County. School closed day the of the service and I think day before as well. All activities were canceled that I knew off. I know my dad shut his construction company down which never happened if weather permitted Remember watching the shooting of Oswald on the big tv in our den. Sad and changing time for our country. Watched the swearing in of Pres. Johnson, the surreal look on Mrs. Kennedy’s face, the body lying in state in the Rotunda, the processional and the service. The lighting of the flame representing eternal life. So much in such a short time. Texas had a President but our country lost an incredible leader. Wonder what he would think today?

Tony Booth I was pulled from class at Paris High School and told to go to Principal Dee Cunningham’s office. Couldnt’ imagine what I had done. When he ask if I would call KFTV, where I was the afternoon DJ at 14, to see if the rumors from Dallas were true. The phone lines were busy and I ask if I could have permission to go up and see what was going on. I was granted permission and, when I got to the station, I have never see six folks walking around in ‘shock’ and, yet, acting as professionals reading all the information from UPI wire service. I called back to PHS and reported the news.

Paul Hutchins As a Junior at PHS, I was playing sandlot football (during our lunch hour) between the school and the Band Hall. A boy came running up to where we were playing hollering, “Goldwater in 64!”. We asked him what was the deal and he informed us that the President had been shot. Went inside for fourth period and they announced that he had died and they dismissed all schools for the rest of the day. Sad surreal day.

Larry McGee How well I remember. I was in my Junior year & working afternoons at The Paris News. I was leaving the north entrance to Paris High on my way to work. Someone had heard it on their radio on the way back from lunch & was conveying the message to everyone leaving by the North entrance. Upon arriving for work at the newspaper, I got the entire story along with AP photos, etc. We then started gearing up for publication of the only EXTRA edition that I experienced in my 10 years working there. What a somber, tragic, and painful time for everyone…especially for us Texans!

Skipper Steely 4 Parisians were attending Kennedy that day….or taking photos. Crenshaw, Baxter, Walker and Beall. I was in the study hall when the news came, and we got in a car outside the school to listen to more.

Anna Townsley I was in Mrs. Early’s 5th grade class at Fourth Ward when Principal Tommy Duncan came over the recently installed speakers and gave us the news.

Emily O’Connor I remember being at Crockett, too. I was in Mr. Ralph Shelton’s science class. Everyone thought the snakes in Mrs. Topp’s class had escaped since all the teachers were out in the hall acting like something bad had happened. I think the teachers told us in the classrooms. Then I remember watching everything on TV at home. Robert, I wonder if you were in Mrs. Muse’s history class. I don’t remember Mrs. Rheudisal at Crockett.

Derald Bulls I too was at East Paris and remember being taken into the auditorium with two big black and white TV’s to watch quietly. I was in Mrs. LaRoe’s class.

Jack Pieper I was taking a midday nap on the couch after completing the am shift at KPLT. My wife came running into our apartment on Culbertson street to tell me to turn on the tv. And there it was. I returned to the station to do what I could with limited resources. We had A.P. at the time and the bulletins came fast and furious. Tried to call Dallas radio or tv with no luck. Finally reached somebody from WBAP tv in Fort Worth. He was a runner called in to help. But he stayed on the line with me almost an hour..talking with me as often as possible. We had on scene coverage which often beat the wire service during that crucial first hour or so. KPLT was music radio back then and when it was apparent the President had been assassinated we switched to appropriate somber music. I failed to save any of the A.P. copy.

Paula Morrow Walker Robert, we were in Mrs. Muse’ s class. I don’t believe school was dismissed. I do remember everyone being very quiet and somber. …which didn’t often happen in the ninth grade. We didn’t watch daytime TV at my home, but I remember being glued to that tiny set. I think we all realized that this tragic, horrific event would forever change our state and our country.

James Jeter I was at Crockett and the principal (Hoot Gibson??) asked me to lower the flag to half-staff.

Nancy Marlowe Reep I was in Ben Dickerson’s 8th grade math class with all of my good friends, and we had all just been lambasted for doing poorly on a big test…..Mr. Dickerson was called out of the room for a few minutes. He walked back in with really strange look on his face, and Anne Drake, who was never shy, said, “What’s wrong, did the president get shot or something?”…..he just looked at her for a long moment and said, “That’s exactly what has happened.” We didn’t believe him for a moment, but the truth and the shock finally hit us, and then the test scores were suddenly a lot less important. When the bell rang, there was bedlam out in the halls. Some kids were crying, but I heard one boy named Ronnie say that he was glad Kennedy had gotten shot. We had to go to PE next, and I remember that all sorts of rumors were flying about LBJ getting shot, too, and that Connally was dead. My mom picked me up after school and we talked about it all the way home….and for many, many days afterward.

Ron Ragan I was in school, Crockett Junior High. I was running projector in Ms Muse class. I remember next period seeing several men teachers weeping. For some reason seeing that put it all into perspective; the enormity of what just happened. Years later at Channel 8 in Dallas one of my first jobs as a brand new cameraman was to transfer hours (days actually) of video archives to fresh, new tape. I watched it happen all over again and it brought back those same Crockett memories. This year (50 years later) I was asked to photograph the School Book Depository Building window where Oswald shot JFK. It was removed from the building years ago. I spent many hours alone with the window, photographing every part of it in a large quiet room and as I imagined Oswald leaning through this same window I was leaning through, the whole tragic experience became real for me once again.

Dwight Woolston   I was sent to the library to listen to the radio and report back with all the information. I can’t remember whose class I was in, but I think it was Mrs Sherman. An unbelievable day! One thing on my mind was the question did Russia have anything to do with it and how was it going to affect the draft! Turns out it didn’t affect the draft immediately, they got me anyway, a couple of years later!

The Kennedy assassination marks a defining moment in life for boomers, but it appears to be a mere historical footnote for younger generations who did not hear the news at school.

As a baby boomer, I suspect no one in our generation will ever be totally satisfied that Oswald acted alone. CBS journalist Bob Schieffer who covered the assassination as the Fort Worth Star Telegram’s 26-year old crime reporter concluded in a recent story for AARP The Magazine, “…there are still questions about the details of Lincoln’s assassination. For that matter, there are still questions about the assassination of Julius Caesar.”

Watch “JFK 50: A Texas Tribute”, streamed LIVE on ktxdtv.com; Friday, November 22nd from 7am-7pm CST (UTC-6 Hours). This special 12 hour broadcast will feature rare video of President Kennedy’s trip to Dallas, live interviews with people who have first-hand connections to some of the darkest days in our country’s history, and live coverage of the observance in Dallas’ Dealey Plaza celebrating the remarkable life, legacy, and leadership of our 35th President. Follow the conversation about the broadcast on social media by following our twitter page at http://www.twitter.com/JFK50Texas and liking our Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/JFK50Texas.

Host of “The Texas Daily”, Jeff Brady Discusses JFK50

Watch “JFK 50: A Texas Tribute”, streamed LIVE on ktxdtv.com; Friday, November 22nd from 7am-7pm CST (UTC-6 Hours). This special 12 hour broadcast will feature rare video of President Kennedy’s trip to Dallas, live interviews with people who have first-hand connections to some of the darkest days in our country’s history, and live coverage of the observance in Dallas’ Dealey Plaza celebrating the remarkable life, legacy, and leadership of our 35th President. Follow the conversation about the broadcast on social media by following our twitter page at http://www.twitter.com/JFK50Texas and liking our Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/JFK50Texas.

Dallas News Anchor John Criswell Remembers JFK

CriswellAs the 21 year old News Director of a small radio station in Springfield, Missouri I was accustomed to the clattering sound of the teletypewriter just outside my cubby-hole door, less so to the ringing of the bell that signaled a weather bulletin, or other emergency transmission.

It was half past lunch-time when the machine grew silent then there were five quick bells and more silence.

I don’t remember hurrying as the machine began typing again it was bright outside and there had been nothing in the forecast for our area.

I can still see the yellow paper in the machine and the words “shots fired at President Kennedy’s motorcade in Downtown Dallas”. Before I could rip the paper message off the machine, the bell started ringing furiously again, this time 10 or more, and the words began immediately; “Flash. Kennedy seriously wounded perhaps seriously, perhaps fatally by assassins bullet.

It never occurred to me that I had no training in this, I was the news director of a one person news department with a couple of college kid interns who got credit for coming in at night to read what I assigned them. Hell, I was only a couple of years older than either of them.

But it did occur at that moment standing there that I was about to announce the most important story of my young career and people listening on the radio needed to hear it.

It was then that I ran to the studio and gathered myself to read the bulletin and all that would follow to my small-city audience in Southwest Missouri.

The rest of the afternoon became a monotony of the same words, over and over and I remember only bits and pieces of it.

Calling the college library to obtain classical music albums to play, instead of rock and roll the station’s usual format.

Contacting the school’s history professor looking for insight into presidential succession.

An unsuccessful try to find historical audio material on President Kennedy.

Contacting a Greene County, Missouri Democratic Party official to see if they had any insights on the Dallas story.

And answering the phones, it seemed endlessly, confirming that what people were hearing indeed was true and not a terrible joke gone awry.

Four months later, I was living in Dallas, working for WFAA Radio/TV and sitting in Judge Joe Brown’s court room near Jack Ruby.

Watch “JFK 50: A Texas Tribute”, streamed LIVE on ktxdtv.com; Friday, November 22nd from 7am-7pm CST (UTC-6 Hours). This special 12 hour broadcast will feature rare video of President Kennedy’s trip to Dallas, live interviews with people who have first-hand connections to some of the darkest days in our country’s history, and live coverage of the observance in Dallas’ Dealey Plaza celebrating the remarkable life, legacy, and leadership of our 35th President. Follow the conversation about the broadcast on social media by following our twitter page at http://www.twitter.com/JFK50Texas and liking our Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/JFK50Texas.

First African-American news anchor for a Dallas television station, Iola Johnson Remembers JFK

Iola Johnson

It was around noon on Friday and we were heading home after going downtown to shop. We simply had to have hats to be properly attired for a funeral later that afternoon. It was a beautiful, bright, sunny, warm day, but nothing out of the ordinary for late November in southern Arizona.

Despite the perfect weather, there was a sense of gloom in the car. There was very little conversation as we drove along listening to the radio, when a voice interrupted the music with a special bulletin. President Kennedy had been shot in Dallas, Texas.

It was unbelievable. It must be a mistake. No one would want to hurt our young, good looking and much beloved president. John Fitzgerald Kennedy was an American hero. My mother, my sister and I all broke into tears.

At home we turned on our Sylvania Silver Screen TV and watched and continued crying.

Then came the worst possible news, President Kennedy was dead. Hearing that, my whole world came to a abrupt halt.

Prior to hearing about the assassination, I was already in a mild state of shock. One of my class mates had been killed in an automobile accident. I had never before know a young person to die and I was not quite sure how to deal with her death.

We were glued to the television, but pulled ourselves away to attend the funeral that afternoon. Then it was right back to the non-stop coverage. One shocking story after another, a new president sworn in, a Dallas policeman killed, the assassin arrested and paraded before cameras. Then live as we watched, Jack Ruby shoots and kills the assassin. Finally, the funeral.

Like most African-Americans, I recognized President Kennedy’s humanity and compassion for the oppressed and had high hopes for what he would do to aid our cause. My heart sank when I heard the news and I had an overwhelming feeling of loss and fear. I had been filled with such hope when JFK was elected, then in an instant it was gone. My hopes and dreams seemed to die with our young president.

Such a horrible tragedy was not suppose to befall such a young leader, one so full of promise. It seemed like the end to our hopes and dreams for a better, more equitable future.

My mother told us that we would have to worked even harder now that President Kennedy was dead.

I had always been a political junkie! I wanted to be a freedom rider, but was too young. I watched political conventions on television from gavel to gavel as a child and considered the things my two sisters watched on TV trivial.

All the talk of a conspiracy by the Russians, Cubans and many here at home, made me want to know more about politics and how the system worked. I had a double major in political science and journalism in college.

Watch “JFK 50: A Texas Tribute”, streamed LIVE on ktxdtv.com; Friday, November 22nd from 7am-7pm CST  (UTC-6 Hours). This special 12 hour broadcast will feature rare video of President Kennedy’s trip to Dallas, live interviews with people who have first-hand connections to some of the darkest days in our country’s history, and live coverage of the observance in Dallas’ Dealey Plaza celebrating the remarkable life, legacy, and leadership of our 35th President. Follow the conversation about the broadcast on social media by following our twitter page at www.twitter.com/JFK50Texas and liking our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/JFK50Texas.

Where were you when JFK was shot? @JFK50Texas Twitter Followers Remember

We reached out to people on Twitter and asked them to tell us in a tweet what
they were doing on November 22, 1963.  Here’s what some of them had to say as we
continue to remember the remarkable life, legacy and leadership of John F.
Kennedy.

Let us hear from you! We are interested in where you were when JFK was shot.
Send it to us @jfk50Texas on Twitter or post it on our Facebook Page at www.facebook.com/JFK50Texas

Watch “JFK 50: A Texas Tribute”, streamed LIVE on ktxdtv.com; Friday, November 22nd from 7am-7pm CST  (UTC-6 Hours). This special 12 hour broadcast will feature rare video of President Kennedy’s trip to Dallas, live interviews with people who have first-hand connections to some of the darkest days in our country’s history, and live coverage of the observance in Dallas’ Dealey Plaza celebrating the remarkable life, legacy, and leadership of our 35th President. Follow the conversation about the broadcast on social media by following our twitter page at www.twitter.com/JFK50Texas and liking our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/JFK50Texas.

Veteran Dallas Sports Anchor Scott Murray Remembers JFK

Scott MurrayI remember, well, where I was on November 22, 1963.

It was a Friday and I had just finished lunch at school. I was a drummer in the school band and this was the weekend I was going to get my first set of drums, thanks to my generous grandmother, who lived in Canada.  As a result, I was most excited, almost like a young boy on Christmas morning.

It was early afternoon on this Friday and I was down in the band room, adjacent to the stage in the school auditorium talking with our conductor, Mr. Robards, when the principal came over the PA system and said the following.  “Students… please return to your homeroom.  We have received word that President Kennedy has been shot.  Therefore, we might be dismissing all students from school earlier than normal.  Please return to your homeroom immediately.”

Pandemonium instantly erupted in the halls as everyone hustled to their homeroom.  As it turned out, we were dismissed early.  I remember squeezing into one seat of the packed school bus with my two younger sisters as we headed home, bringing them up to date on what had happened to the President.

When we exited the bus, I remember seeing my mother standing behind the large picture window of our living room, expressionless.  She tells the story to this day how the three of us slowly walked towards the house, heads hung low, obviously in great disbelief.  She knew then we had heard the news.

As we reached the door, we were greeted with hugs and her motherly suggestion to come into the kitchen while she made us all hot chocolate.  I reminded her of the school paper I had written just weeks earlier about the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.  And, now this!

It wasn’t long before my Dad arrived home early from his office, as we were headed to Canada for the weekend.  As you can imagine, all the conversation in the car centered around the President, as it did throughout the weekend.

And then, early Sunday afternoon, following church, we all watched live in utter shock as Jack Ruby shot Lee Harvey Oswald to death.  How could this be?!? It was 1963.  Things like this just didn’t happen, especially to our President.

I recently returned to the same school I grew up in to address the student body.  As I began to speak, I shared with the students that close to 50-years ago, I stood right there (pointed to spot) and heard the announcement that President Kennedy had been shot.  Chills raced up my back! It was a reminder of a distant event that, forever, changed our nation, yet a reminder of an event, that, seems like just yesterday, that it actually took place.

Watch “JFK 50: A Texas Tribute”, streamed LIVE on ktxdtv.com; Friday, November 22nd from 7am-7pm CST  (UTC-6 Hours). This special 12 hour broadcast will feature rare video of President Kennedy’s trip to Dallas, live interviews with people who have first-hand connections to some of the darkest days in our country’s history, and live  coverage of the observance in Dallas’ Dealey Plaza celebrating the remarkable life, legacy, and leadership of our 35th President. Follow the conversation about the broadcast on social media by following our twitter page at www.twitter.com/JFK50Texas and liking our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/JFK50Texas.

20 Famous JFK Quotes

Quote

1) “The cost of freedom is always high, but Americans have always paid it. And one path we shall never choose, and that is the path of surrender, or submission.”

2) “An economy hampered by restrictive tax rates will never produce enough revenue to balance our budget, just as it will never produce enough jobs or enough profits.”

3) “If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich.”

4) “If we cannot end our differences at least we can make the world safe for diversity.”

5) “A child miseducated is a child lost.”

6) “If scientific discovery has not been an unalloyed blessing, if it has conferred on mankind the power not only to create but also to annihilate, it has at the same time provided humanity with a supreme challenge and a supreme testing.”

7) “I am deeply touched not as deeply touched as you have been coming to this dinner, but nevertheless it is a sentimental occasion.”

8) “It is time for a new generation of leadership to cope with new problems and new opportunities. For there is a new world to be won.”

9) “Economic growth without social progress lets the great majority of people remain in poverty. While a privileged few reap the benefits of rising abundance.”

10) “The very word ‘secrecy’ is repugnant in a free and open society; and we are as a people inherently and historically opposed to secret societies, to secret oaths, and to secret proceedings.”

kennedy-john-f-presidential-portrait

11) “The human mind is our fundamental resource.”

12) “I am certain that after the dust of centuries has passed over our cities, we, too, will be remembered not for victories or defeats in battle or in politics, but for our contribution to the human spirit.”

13) “Mothers all want their sons to grow up to be president, but they don’t want them to become politicians in the process.”

14) “Tolerance implies no lack of commitment to one’s own beliefs. Rather it condemns the oppression or persecution of others.”

15) “One person can make a difference, and everyone should try.”

16) “Politics is like football; if you see daylight, go through the hole.”

17) “As we express our gratitude, we must never forget that the highest appreciation is not to utter words, but to live by them.”

18) “Do not pray for easy lives, pray to be stronger men.”

19) “Let us never negotiate out of fear, but let us never fear to negotiate.”

20) “Ask not what your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for your country.”

Watch “JFK 50: A Texas Tribute”, streamed LIVE on ktxdtv.com; Friday, November 22nd from 7am-7pm CST  (UTC-6 Hours). This special 12 hour broadcast will feature rare video of President Kennedy’s trip to Dallas, live interviews with people who have first-hand connections to some of the darkest days in our country’s history, and live coverage of the observance in Dallas’ Dealey Plaza celebrating the remarkable life, legacy, and leadership of our 35th President. Follow the conversation about the broadcast on social media by following our twitter page at www.twitter.com/JFK50Texas and liking our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/JFK50Texas.

Dallas News Anchor Midge Hill Remembers JFK

Midge HillWe were scurrying around our little starter apartment, my two baby boys and I, just another normal day of mayhem, open mouths and dirty bottoms, TV as background. A glance out the dusty window: another cold, gray November day in the coal mines and steel mills along the Ohio River Valley. Our hometown was called Bellaire. Bellaire, with its soot dusted snow and rust tinged skies.

Early in the afternoon, the pall that always hung over town deepened. Walter Cronkite interrupted the soap opera “As the World Turns” with a bulletin. President Kennedy was shot as he rode in his motorcade in Dallas. It was a thousand, two hundred miles away but TV brought the tragedy home.

The shock was palpable; it simply was not to be believed. But it was true. And it wasn’t very long before there were no soaps, no game shows, and no old movies on TV. It was Dallas and only Dallas.

My sisters and brothers, my mom and dad phoned, visited, and prayed together. We took a special pride in our President. He was, like us, Irish Catholic. He gave us verification. He was one of us.

We knew there were political foes, but this could not be happening. We watched the chaos; sirens howling, cars speeding the President to Parkland hospital, along with Texas Governor John Connally. We saw secret service agents scrambling, people ducking for cover.

We ached while the throngs outside the emergency room cried and waited for word from a doctor, a nurse, anybody who was in the room with the President to tell us he was not badly hurt. That was not to be. It was the first time I could remember the whole country binding together at one point, with one hope, one prayer.

We watched as Dallas Police Officer J.D. Tippit was shot and killed, as Jack Ruby shot Lee Harvey Oswald, and it was live. It was the whole world gone under.

Dallas wasn’t on my radar, never thought it was in my future. But I have to say I don’t now and didn’t then think ill of the city, and really, I never heard anyone in my hometown circle of friends harbor ill will for Dallas.

Those are bleak days America and I won’t ever forget.

Watch “JFK 50: A Texas Tribute”, streamed LIVE on ktxdtv.com; Friday, November 22nd from 7am-7pm CST  (UTC-6 Hours). This special 12 hour broadcast will feature rare video of President Kennedy’s trip to Dallas, live interviews with people who have first-hand connections to some of the darkest days in our country’s history, and live coverage of the observance in Dallas’ Dealey Plaza celebrating the remarkable life, legacy, and leadership of our 35th President. Follow the conversation about the broadcast on social media by following our twitter page at www.twitter.com/JFK50Texas and liking our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/JFK50Texas.

Legendary Dallas TV News Anchor Tracy Rowlett Remembers JFK

Tracy RowlettIt was night time in Tripoli, Libya, the afternoon that President Kennedy was murdered in Dallas.  I was in the Air Force, stationed at Wheelus Air Base in Tripoli, and working for the U.S. Armed Forces Radio and Television Service.

We were broadcasting a base football game and I was the newsman on duty, a job that usually amounted to little more than reading a short half-time newscast.

But not this night.

Our wire services (for reasons I still can’t determine) came to us in a code which was little more than a rudimentary numbers to letters translation. Mystifying because it was a code that anyone could have easily figured out.

The young airman who was on engineering duty that night also had the responsibility of deciphering the wires and supplying me with the written translations.  Suddenly, he burst into the control room almost in a panic.  “President Kennedy has been shot in Dallas,” he was excited and shouting. “Here,” he said, “look at this.”  He handed me the first terse AP bulletin and then very abruptly turned and ran back to gather the news flashes that were now ringing the bells on the wire machines.

Tripoli was what was often called a “hyper-sensitive” area.  It was just next door to Egypt, then under the iron control of Gamal Abdel Nasser, the most revered figure in the Middle East. Increasingly, other Arab nations, including Libya, felt the pull of Nasser’s defiance of the Western powers, the first middle eastern ruler to suggest a mighty United Arab Republic.  It was imperative that those of us who represented the United States on radio and television did nothing to show disrespect for our host country or offend the Libyan people.

What could be more offensive than assassinating the very popular President Kennedy?

I paid no attention whatsoever to military protocol. Seeking permission from no one, I keyed the mike, interrupted our sports announcers, and began giving the news bulletins that were now rapidly being placed before me.  At first our sports announcers were equally stunned, but continued to call the game as best they could between my increasing interruptions.

In the stands at the game, fans who had carried portable radios began to share the information with their neighbors. And as I announced the terrible news that the President was dead, the game was stopped. People stood, some were openly crying, while some of the military personnel rushed back to their duty stations fearing what might happen as the word spread around the world of the assassination.

The only live link we had with the U.S. was the telephone, and our base lines were jammed with military commanders — Army, Navy, Marines and Air Force — getting their orders and more news from Washington.

Our small radio and television studios and offices were gradually filled by high ranking officers, CIA officials, embassy staff, US Information Agency personnel and others, all trying to see the wires as the stories came through.

I was no one’s friend that night, having broken protocol and failing to notify higher ups before going full throttle on whatever news I could report.   I was braced in the hall outside our control room and was loudly chewed out and threatened with disciplinary action before cooler heads prevailed and I was allowed to go back on the air to continue my broadcasts.

Between stories, we played heavy classical music, and the night wore on.  Through the haze of the next seemingly endless days and nights, grabbing only short naps when I could, I reported on both radio and television the events unfolding in Dallas and Washington:  Lee Harvey Oswald gunning down policeman J.D. Tippit, Oswald’s late night news conference, Jack Ruby shooting Oswald and, finally, the President’s funeral.

Reverberations from this incredible series of almost unbelievable events were felt around the world, and America was vilified in some quarters and defended in others.

Our broadcast signals reached deep into the middle east and southern Europe, and English speaking listeners and viewers responded with letters pouring into our offices.  I had never seen such impact, and realized our audience was depending on our stations for a clearer picture of JFK’s assassination and it’s terrible aftermath.

It was the recordings of our newscasts through that dark period that I used to land my first commercial broadcasting job after my military discharge less than a year later.  And 10 years later, I was hired in the city that the world would forever link to one of the saddest and darkest times in U.S. history.  I came to Dallas.

Watch “JFK 50: A Texas Tribute”, streamed LIVE on ktxdtv.com; Friday, November 22nd from 7am-7pm CST  (UTC-6 Hours). This special 12 hour broadcast will feature rare video of President Kennedy’s trip to Dallas, live interviews with people who have first-hand connections to some of the darkest days in our country’s history, and live coverage of the observance in Dallas’ Dealey Plaza celebrating the remarkable life, legacy, and leadership of our 35th President. Follow the conversation about the broadcast on social media by following our twitter page at www.twitter.com/JFK50Texas and liking our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/JFK50Texas.