Recently, my travels with my job landed me in a Podunk little town of Killeen, Texas. When I found out I was going there (and for two weeks, giving me a weekend) I quickly searched nearby towns. Dallas was a little over two hours north, and Austin was about an hour south, leaving me with a host of options. Day one, was Dallas, mostly around the area of John F. Kennedy’s assassination.
I knew there was a museum, and a Google search quickly found it. Located right at the corner of Dealy Plaza, and convenient to Interstate 35, it houses a one-floor collection, mostly centering around the timeline of the assassination of JFK and the investigation surrounding it.
The museum starts with the introduction of JFK formally into the political limelight, and the culture that was coming of age. Touching on the uniqueness of the Kennedy’s and their youth in the White House, it addresses political strife as well as successes. The sections about visiting Dallas and Texas that fateful November are extraordinarily detailed. In an excellent move of putting the pieces together, the curators put his less popular agendas close to the start of the section on Dallas. There are several advertisements of dissent and pamphlets against Kennedy that were handed out in the days approaching his visit. Also is a copy of a newspaper with a detail of the order of the motorcade that would be going through Dallas that day. Photographs of supporters and dissenters are also blown up on the wall, as well as a newsreel of the news in the days before about security concerns and excitement approaching the President’s visit.
The walls go black with stills from the Zapruder film on the walls. At the end of the hall is a still of a clearly murdered Kennedy slumped over and Jackie climbing, trying to get out of the car. The next section has a lot of information about how the news changed that day. Several original AP wires are on the wall, as well of photographs of people as they heard what happened, or even saw what happened. The first preserved corner (or rather re-done to extreme detail) is “the sniper’s nest” where Lee Harvey Oswald perched himself to shoot. There is some detail about the shooter, but the best part is a minute-by-minute account of the time between the shooting and the funeral of JFK in Washington, DC.
After a short film about the mourning of the world following JFK’s death, the investigation begins. There are samples of some of the cameras that witnessed the assassination, as well as criticisms of the investigations that took place, with a large model of Dealy Plaza, and criticisms in the forensics of the reports. It also addresses the different investigations that have taken place over the years and what they have proved and disproved. The museum closes with a film about what policies of Kennedy’s went through under the Johnson administration, and reflections on Kennedy by interview of everyday people.
What is well done about the museum is how it provides an evenhanded view about the Kennedy presidency. People tend to remember him as a very popular president and while that is true to a extent, if it were totally true, he wouldn’t have been assassinated. They do not go into an extreme amount of detail about the investigation, but by doing that, they encourage the visitor to make their own decision on the situation. They present a fair amount of physical evidence, but I’ve still seen more on websites. Another corner is preserved, which is the corner with the staircase that Oswald ran down after the shooting. Throughout the exhibit, a provided audio provides some additional background, and I actually found it helpful in places, but in others I just shut it off.
Right outside is Dealy Plaza, where two white Xs indicate the two locations where Kennedy was shot. There are several conspiracy theorists who I am sure are there every day selling pamphlets and books about the shooting. Dealy Plaza and the Sixth Floor Museum are can’t-misses when in Dallas.