Image of flowers in Dealey Plaza after the assassination, Slide #7

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Image of flowers in Dealey Plaza after the assassination, Slide #7

Original 35mm color slide taken by amateur photographer Jerry Mainer. Immediately after the assassination and in the following days and weeks, people left flowers and mementos in Dealey Plaza in honor of President Kennedy. This picture was taken on the afternoon of the day following President Kennedy's assassination. Image shows flowers and floral tributes on the south side of Elm Street in Dealey Plaza left by mourners.

Object Details
Object title:

Image of flowers in Dealey Plaza after the assassination, Slide #7

Date:

11/23/1963

Medium:

Film

Dimensions:

2 x 2 in. (5.1 x 5.1 cm)

Credit line:

Jerry Mainer Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

Object number:

2001.004.0004

Curatorial Note:

The slides are numbered sequentially starting at #4 and going through #36, skipping #20, for a total of 32 slides. They were donated to the Museum like this, and it is unknown what happened to the missing slides from this sequence. - Stephanie Allen-Givens, Collections and Exhibits Manager

Dealey Plaza was transformed into a memorial shrine during the weekend of the assassination as mourners left wreaths, floral displays and notecards in memory of President Kennedy. One plaza visitor, George Reid, recalled in his Museum oral history: "People were starting to leave things and then, by Sunday morning, there was quite a bit of stuff there--quite a lot of flowers.... And people were coming down there, and people were standing there crying. People just bawling and just talking to each other, hugging each other, you know. It was an emotional scene that day." - Stephen Fagin, Curator

The printed sign seen at far right in this photograph read in full: "In Prayerful Memory of Our Beloved President John Fitzgerald Kennedy. Men of St. Bernard's Church." St. Bernard of Clairvaux Catholic Church is still located in the Little Forest Hills section of Dallas near White Rock Lake on the site where it was originally established in 1947. The founding pastor, Monsignor John M. Wiewell, was still at St. Bernard's at the time of the assassination, serving the church from 1947 to 1968. - Stephen Fagin, Curator

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Image of flowers in Dealey Plaza after the assassination, Slide #7

Original 35mm color slide taken by amateur photographer Jerry Mainer. Immediately after the assassination and in the following days and weeks, people left flowers and mementos in Dealey Plaza in honor of President Kennedy. This picture was taken on the afternoon of the day following President Kennedy's assassination. Image shows flowers and floral tributes on the south side of Elm Street in Dealey Plaza left by mourners.

Object Details
Object title:

Image of flowers in Dealey Plaza after the assassination, Slide #7

Date:

11/23/1963

Terms:

Flowers

Memorials

Mourners

Dealey Plaza

Tributes

Crowds

Photographs

Dallas

Medium:

Film

Dimensions:

2 x 2 in. (5.1 x 5.1 cm)

Credit line:

Jerry Mainer Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

Object number:

2001.004.0004

Curatorial Note:

The slides are numbered sequentially starting at #4 and going through #36, skipping #20, for a total of 32 slides. They were donated to the Museum like this, and it is unknown what happened to the missing slides from this sequence. - Stephanie Allen-Givens, Collections and Exhibits Manager

Dealey Plaza was transformed into a memorial shrine during the weekend of the assassination as mourners left wreaths, floral displays and notecards in memory of President Kennedy. One plaza visitor, George Reid, recalled in his Museum oral history: "People were starting to leave things and then, by Sunday morning, there was quite a bit of stuff there--quite a lot of flowers.... And people were coming down there, and people were standing there crying. People just bawling and just talking to each other, hugging each other, you know. It was an emotional scene that day." - Stephen Fagin, Curator

The printed sign seen at far right in this photograph read in full: "In Prayerful Memory of Our Beloved President John Fitzgerald Kennedy. Men of St. Bernard's Church." St. Bernard of Clairvaux Catholic Church is still located in the Little Forest Hills section of Dallas near White Rock Lake on the site where it was originally established in 1947. The founding pastor, Monsignor John M. Wiewell, was still at St. Bernard's at the time of the assassination, serving the church from 1947 to 1968. - Stephen Fagin, Curator