Phil Willis Slide #8 (Willis 6)

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Phil Willis Slide #8 (Willis 6)

Original 35mm color slide taken by assassination witness Phil Willis showing the end of the motorcade right after the Kennedy assassination. Several males can be seen running west on the south side of Elm Street, towards the triple underpass. A number of vehicles can be seen, including the front end of the White House press bus on the right edge of the image. A station wagon is stopped on Elm Street with the driver's side rear door open. This image is commonly known as "Willis 6" by assassination researchers.

Object Details
Object title:

Phil Willis Slide #8 (Willis 6)

Date:

11/22/1963

Medium:

Film

Dimensions:

2 × 2 in. (5.1 × 5.1 cm)

Credit line:

Phil Willis Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

Object number:

2002.040.0008

Curatorial Note:

Phil Willis' entire family joined him in Dealey Plaza to see the president's motorcade: his wife, Marilyn, their daughters Linda and Rosemary, and Marilyn's parents, Mr. & Mrs. William H. Stubblefield. Neither Rosemary nor the Stubblefields were questioned by the Warren Commission, although the other members of the family were interviewed. - Gary Mack, Curator

In addition to witnessing the assassination of President Kennedy, Phil Willis was also present at another historic event: the bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. A second lieutenant in the Army Air Corps, Willis was assigned to the 86th Observation Squadron at Bellows Field in Oahu, Hawaii, during the Japanese attack. During World War II, he flew a total of 52 combat missions. Mr. Willis passed away in January 1995, before he could record an oral history with the Museum. However, his wife, Marilyn Willis, participated in a videotaped group interview with other assassination eyewitnesses on November 22, 1996. - Stephen Fagin, Curator

Phil Willis took this photograph approximately thirty seconds after the fatal shot was fired. Seen from behind, the running man with the crewcut in the near-center of this photograph is eyewitness Pierce Allman, program director at WFAA Radio. Shortly after this photo was taken, Allman believes that he encountered Lee Harvey Oswald exiting the Texas School Book Depository. Allman went inside, claimed a telephone, and made a now-famous breathless live report on the president's shooting from inside the Depository. -- Stephen Fagin, Curator

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Phil Willis Slide #8 (Willis 6)

Original 35mm color slide taken by assassination witness Phil Willis showing the end of the motorcade right after the Kennedy assassination. Several males can be seen running west on the south side of Elm Street, towards the triple underpass. A number of vehicles can be seen, including the front end of the White House press bus on the right edge of the image. A station wagon is stopped on Elm Street with the driver's side rear door open. This image is commonly known as "Willis 6" by assassination researchers.

Object Details
Object title:

Phil Willis Slide #8 (Willis 6)

Date:

11/22/1963

Terms:

Elm Street

Dealey Plaza

Crowds

Grassy knoll

Triple underpass

Motorcade

Assassination

Photographs

White House press bus

Eyewitnesses

Kennedy, John F.

Willis, Phil

Dallas

Medium:

Film

Dimensions:

2 × 2 in. (5.1 × 5.1 cm)

Credit line:

Phil Willis Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

Object number:

2002.040.0008

Curatorial Note:

Phil Willis' entire family joined him in Dealey Plaza to see the president's motorcade: his wife, Marilyn, their daughters Linda and Rosemary, and Marilyn's parents, Mr. & Mrs. William H. Stubblefield. Neither Rosemary nor the Stubblefields were questioned by the Warren Commission, although the other members of the family were interviewed. - Gary Mack, Curator

In addition to witnessing the assassination of President Kennedy, Phil Willis was also present at another historic event: the bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. A second lieutenant in the Army Air Corps, Willis was assigned to the 86th Observation Squadron at Bellows Field in Oahu, Hawaii, during the Japanese attack. During World War II, he flew a total of 52 combat missions. Mr. Willis passed away in January 1995, before he could record an oral history with the Museum. However, his wife, Marilyn Willis, participated in a videotaped group interview with other assassination eyewitnesses on November 22, 1996. - Stephen Fagin, Curator

Phil Willis took this photograph approximately thirty seconds after the fatal shot was fired. Seen from behind, the running man with the crewcut in the near-center of this photograph is eyewitness Pierce Allman, program director at WFAA Radio. Shortly after this photo was taken, Allman believes that he encountered Lee Harvey Oswald exiting the Texas School Book Depository. Allman went inside, claimed a telephone, and made a now-famous breathless live report on the president's shooting from inside the Depository. -- Stephen Fagin, Curator