Image of presidential motorcade turning from Lemmon Ave to Turtle Creek Blvd

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Image of presidential motorcade turning from Lemmon Ave to Turtle Creek Blvd

Original 35mm black and white negative taken by photographer Tom C. Dillard from The Dallas Morning News. The image shows the back of Camera Car #2 with a number of national news photographers as they rode in the presidential motorcade in Dallas, Texas on Friday, November 22, 1963. The image was taken as the motorcade was turning from Lemmon Avenue onto Turtle Creek Boulevard. Dillard was in the front passenger seat of Camera Car #3 riding with fellow local news photographers. There are several police motorcycles visible, and people are lining both sides of the road smiling as the motorcade passes.

Object Details
Object title:

Image of presidential motorcade turning from Lemmon Ave to Turtle Creek Blvd

Date:

11/22/1963

Medium:

Film

Dimensions:

1 × 1 1/2 in. (2.5 × 3.8 cm)

Credit line:

Tom C. Dillard Collection, The Dallas Morning News/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

Object number:

1994.003.0001.0002

Curatorial Note:

The occupants of Camera Car #2, seen from behind in this photograph, included Clint Grant of The Dallas Morning News, Frank Cancellare of UPI, Art Rickerby of Life Magazine, Henry Burroughs of AP, and Cecil Stoughton, the official White House photographer. The Dallas police motorcycle officer on the left is H.B. McLain. During the House Select Committee on Assassination investigations in the 1970s, McLain was thought to be the officer with the open or stuck microphone that might have inadvertently recorded the assassination. McLain always denied that his microphone was responsible for the controversial acoustics evidence. The motorcycle officer on the right is Marrion Baker. Baker was the first law enforcement official inside the Texas School Book Depository following the assassination. Alongside building manager Roy Truly, Baker famously encountered Lee Harvey Oswald in the second-floor lunchroom within approximately ninety seconds of the last shot. Baker did not detain Oswald after Truly identified him as a building employee. -- Stephen Fagin, Curator

Image of presidential motorcade turning from Lemmon Ave to Turtle Creek Blvd

Original 35mm black and white negative taken by photographer Tom C. Dillard from The Dallas Morning News. The image shows the back of Camera Car #2 with a number of national news photographers as they rode in the presidential motorcade in Dallas, Texas on Friday, November 22, 1963. The image was taken as the motorcade was turning from Lemmon Avenue onto Turtle Creek Boulevard. Dillard was in the front passenger seat of Camera Car #3 riding with fellow local news photographers. There are several police motorcycles visible, and people are lining both sides of the road smiling as the motorcade passes.

Object Details
Object title:

Image of presidential motorcade turning from Lemmon Ave to Turtle Creek Blvd

Date:

11/22/1963

Terms:

Police

Motorcycles

Crowds

Press

Reporter

Trip to Texas

Motorcade

Photographs

Lemmon Avenue

Turtle Creek Boulevard

Dillard, Tom C.

The Dallas Morning News

Dallas

Medium:

Film

Dimensions:

1 × 1 1/2 in. (2.5 × 3.8 cm)

Credit line:

Tom C. Dillard Collection, The Dallas Morning News/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

Object number:

1994.003.0001.0002

Curatorial Note:

The occupants of Camera Car #2, seen from behind in this photograph, included Clint Grant of The Dallas Morning News, Frank Cancellare of UPI, Art Rickerby of Life Magazine, Henry Burroughs of AP, and Cecil Stoughton, the official White House photographer. The Dallas police motorcycle officer on the left is H.B. McLain. During the House Select Committee on Assassination investigations in the 1970s, McLain was thought to be the officer with the open or stuck microphone that might have inadvertently recorded the assassination. McLain always denied that his microphone was responsible for the controversial acoustics evidence. The motorcycle officer on the right is Marrion Baker. Baker was the first law enforcement official inside the Texas School Book Depository following the assassination. Alongside building manager Roy Truly, Baker famously encountered Lee Harvey Oswald in the second-floor lunchroom within approximately ninety seconds of the last shot. Baker did not detain Oswald after Truly identified him as a building employee. -- Stephen Fagin, Curator