One Fateful
Day in Dallas
by Martha Rogers
With the recent release of
records and documents concerning the assassination of John F. Kennedy,
speculations, questions, and theories rise to the surface. Many will still
believe it was a conspiracy, others will dispute what these records reveal, and
still others will form their own opinions.
Some say political advisors urged Kennedy to
cancel the Dallas trip, but he said no and took Jackie with him. She rarely
accompanied him on this type of political outing, but did so this time.

As they entered Dealey
Plaza, across from the Texas School Book Depository Building at 12:30 P.M.,
shots rang out across the plaza. Allegedly, three shots were fired from the
sixth floor wounding Connally and a fatally injuring Kennedy.
Jackie reached out to one of
the secret service men following the car and pulled him aboard to help her. Both
Connally and Kennedy were rushed to Parkland
Hospital where Kennedy was
pronounced dead thirty minutes later.
Several questions arose as
to how many shots were actually fired. Connally, sitting directly in front of
Kennedy sustained three wounds, and Kennedy was wounded in the back and neck. A
by-stander, James Tague was cut from the impact of a bullet on the concrete
curb directly in front of him. How did so many wounds come from three shots?
An inspection of the building revealed bullet shells
by a half-open window on the sixth floor. A rifle was also found. The bullet
shells had been fired from that rifle.
Investigations revealed that
the rifle had been purchased by mail order months earlier. The order was from a
name known as a pseudonym used by Lee Harvey Oswald. The handwriting on the
order matched Oswald’s, and it had been delivered to a post office box rented
by Oswald.
Oswald worked at the
depository building and had no legitimate alibi for his whereabouts at the time
of the shooting. Less than hour after Kennedy was shot, Oswald shot a police
officer, J.D. Tippit, who questioned Oswald near his rooming house in Dallas.
Thirty minutes later, Oswald was arrested in a movie theater. On November 23,
he was formally arraigned for the murder of Kennedy as well as that of Officer
Tippit.
In the mean time, Lyndon
Baines Johnson of Texas was sworn in by Judge Sarah Hughes aboard Air Force One
with Jackie Kennedy by his side still wearing her pink, blood-stained suit.

Few who witnessed the television
accounts of Kennedy’s funeral in our nation's Capitol will ever forget
the images of his children standing with Jackie.
The Warren Commission report
in 1964, concluded that neither man had been a part of a larger conspiracy, but
despite the firm conclusions of the report, it didn’t squelch the conspiracy
theory. In 1978, the House Select Committee on Assassinations concluded that
Kennedy was probably assassinated because of conspiracy and it may have involved
more than one shooter.
Now people are hoping for
more information to confirm or deny the findings of the commission.
Speculations and ideas will undoubtedly continue to arise no matter what these
newly released documents may reveal. Either Oswald acted alone or he didn’t.
Perhaps we’ll never know.
This is one of those events
where people are most likely to remember exactly where they were and what they
were doing. I was teaching a group of eighth grade in a homemaking class when
the announcement came over our loudspeaker that President Kennedy had been shot.
To say I was shaken was an understatement, and my girls cried and huddled together.
The loudspeaker then began a radio broadcast that lasted well into the
afternoon. Many parents arrived at school to take their children home. Our
nation had been rocked by one of the greatest tragedies of all time.
In the spring of 2000, my
sister and two cousins visited Arlington National Cemetery and the Eternal
Flame final resting place of John and Jackie.
I am giving away a copy of my Christmas Novella Mistletoe and Roses this month. Please leave a comment along with the answer to the posted question and your email address.
Question: What do you remember about the JFK assassination from what you've read or experienced?
Mikayla Pruitt returns home to help her
mother with settling her father’s estate and organizing their year-round
Christmas store in Mistletoe, Oklahoma. She finds herself embroiled not only in
a battle to keep the town as it is with all its quaintness and charm, but also
one for her heart between a long time friend and her current love interest in
Tulsa. She must make a decision that will affect not only her mother, but also
her own future and that of the town.
Martha
Rogers is a multi-published author and writes a weekly devotional for ACFW. Martha
and her husband Rex live in Houston,
Texas where they are active members of First Baptist Church. They are the
parents of three sons and grandparents to eleven grandchildren and
great-grandparents to four. Martha is a retired teacher with twenty-eight years
teaching Home Economics and English at the secondary level and eight years at
the college level supervising student teachers and teaching freshman English. She is the Director of the Texas Christian Writers
Conference held in Houston in August each year, a member of ACFW, ACFW WOTS
chapter in Houston, and a member of the writers’ group, Inspirational Writers
Alive.
Find Martha at: www.marthawrogers.com