Back
Image of President and Jackie Kennedy greeting the crowd at Love Field
Original black and white 35mm negative by Dallas Morning News chief photographer Tom Dillard. The image shows the Kennedys greeting a crowd at Love Field on November 22, 1963 in Dallas, Texas. Members of the crowd, who are behind a chain-link fence, reach to shake the hands of President and Mrs. Kennedy. Vice President Lyndon Johnson and Lady Bird Johnson can be seen in the background, further down the line of people walking by the fence.
Image of President and Jackie Kennedy greeting the crowd at Love Field
11/22/1963
Film
15/16 × 1 7/16 in. (2.4 × 3.6 cm)
Tom C. Dillard Collection, The Dallas Morning News/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza
1994.003.0010.0002
The infant seen just above President Kennedy's outstretched arm in this photograph is fifteen-month-old Peggy Vaughan, who was at Dallas Love Field that day with her mother, Kathleen Vaughan. Kathleen and daughter Peggy recorded an oral history with the Museum in 2018 and donated both the dress that Mrs. Vaughan wore that day as well as the distinctive striped sailor outfit that Peggy wore when she had her brief interaction with President and Mrs. Kennedy along the fence line at Love Field. -- Stephen Fagin, Curator
The young man on the far right who is standing above the crowd and holding the light pole is Wes Stewart, a sophomore at Jesuit High School in 1963. A few weeks prior to President Kennedy's visit, Stewart broke a thumb during a fight at school, which is why his right hand appears in a cast in some photographs. Stewart arrived two hours prior to the landing of Air Force One and, not wanting to miss his opportunity to see the president up close, he climbed on top of the chain link fence and steadied himself by holding the light pole with his left hand. In a 2017 oral history, he explained that just as the Kennedys got to his position, somebody tried to pull him down from his position, nearly causing him to fall and preventing him from shaking hands or having any encounter with the president or first lady. Nevertheless, Stewart appears in several photographs and news footage that day, clearly visible because of his position above the crowd. -- Stephen Fagin, Curator
Image of President and Jackie Kennedy greeting the crowd at Love Field
Original black and white 35mm negative by Dallas Morning News chief photographer Tom Dillard. The image shows the Kennedys greeting a crowd at Love Field on November 22, 1963 in Dallas, Texas. Members of the crowd, who are behind a chain-link fence, reach to shake the hands of President and Mrs. Kennedy. Vice President Lyndon Johnson and Lady Bird Johnson can be seen in the background, further down the line of people walking by the fence.
Image of President and Jackie Kennedy greeting the crowd at Love Field
11/22/1963
Roses
Trip to Texas
Crowds
Photographs
Johnson, Lyndon B.
Johnson, Lady Bird
Kennedy, Jacqueline
Kennedy, John F.
Dillard, Tom C.
The Dallas Morning News
Secret Service
Love Field
Dallas
Film
15/16 × 1 7/16 in. (2.4 × 3.6 cm)
Tom C. Dillard Collection, The Dallas Morning News/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza
1994.003.0010.0002
The infant seen just above President Kennedy's outstretched arm in this photograph is fifteen-month-old Peggy Vaughan, who was at Dallas Love Field that day with her mother, Kathleen Vaughan. Kathleen and daughter Peggy recorded an oral history with the Museum in 2018 and donated both the dress that Mrs. Vaughan wore that day as well as the distinctive striped sailor outfit that Peggy wore when she had her brief interaction with President and Mrs. Kennedy along the fence line at Love Field. -- Stephen Fagin, Curator
The young man on the far right who is standing above the crowd and holding the light pole is Wes Stewart, a sophomore at Jesuit High School in 1963. A few weeks prior to President Kennedy's visit, Stewart broke a thumb during a fight at school, which is why his right hand appears in a cast in some photographs. Stewart arrived two hours prior to the landing of Air Force One and, not wanting to miss his opportunity to see the president up close, he climbed on top of the chain link fence and steadied himself by holding the light pole with his left hand. In a 2017 oral history, he explained that just as the Kennedys got to his position, somebody tried to pull him down from his position, nearly causing him to fall and preventing him from shaking hands or having any encounter with the president or first lady. Nevertheless, Stewart appears in several photographs and news footage that day, clearly visible because of his position above the crowd. -- Stephen Fagin, Curator