Image of a White House Press bus in the Kennedy motorcade on Main Street

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Image of a White House Press bus in the Kennedy motorcade on Main Street

35mm slide taken by Stuart L. Reed showing one of the two White House Press buses in the presidential motorcade on Main Street. The chartered Continental Trailways bus has a sign affixed to the driver's side that reads "White House Press." Motorcade spectators, all looking to their left, are seen alongside the bus.

Object Details
Object title:

Image of a White House Press bus in the Kennedy motorcade on Main Street

Date:

11/22/1963

Dimensions:

2 × 2 in. (5.1 × 5.1 cm)

Credit line:

Stuart Reed Family Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

Object number:

2023.018.0009

Curatorial Note:

Stuart Leslie Reed (1906-1979) had a truly remarkable experience on November 22, 1963. Reed, employed in the Secretary of the U.S. Army's Office for thirty years, was serving as Executive Officer of the Panama Canal Zone Civilian Personnel Policy Coordinating Board at the time of the Kennedy assassination. He was visiting his daughter, F.A. Holley, in Dallas when he decided to see the Kennedy motorcade on Main Street. Reed ultimately took twenty photographs that day, first documenting the Kennedy motorcade as it passed his location on Main Street. After making his way to the Oak Cliff section of Dallas, he happened to be on Jefferson Blvd. when he photographed suspect Lee Harvey Oswald being brought out of the Texas Theatre by Dallas police officers after his dramatic arrest inside. At some point that day, Reed also captured a few photos showing the exterior of the Texas School Book Depository building. Over the years, as some of his photographs have been published and examined, they have generated research interest. They also proved to be of research interest to investigators at the time. The FBI became aware of Reed's photographs by November 26, 1963. FBI agents tracked down Reed in New Orleans as he was preparing to return to the Panama Canal Zone and obtained his written permission to examine his photos. After being developed by Dynacolor in Dallas, the images were provided to the FBI by Reed's daughter, F.A. Holley. The FBI kept ten of the images for further study and later returned them to the family. The original 35mm color slides then remained in the possession of the family until Stuart Reed's grandson, Stuart Reed III, donated the twenty images to The Sixth Floor Museum in 2023. He also recorded an oral history at that time, sharing family stories about his grandfather and his extraordinary photos from November 22, 1963. - Stephen Fagin, Curator

Object featured in special exhibition, Two Days in Texas, November 8, 2023 through September 28, 2024.

Two identical Continental Trailways buses, designated White House Press bus #1 and #2, were the seventeenth and nineteenth vehicles in the Dallas motorcade, with a local press pool car traveling in between them. The first bus, driven by Joe Savage, carried various journalists including Robert Pierpoint of CBS, Robert MacNeil of NBC, Charles Roberts of Newsweek and Hugh Sidey of Time. As soon as shots were fired in Dealey Plaza, Robert MacNeil from bus #1 insisted that he be let off in the plaza (where he would go on to make a report to NBC from a telephone inside the Texas School Book Depository, after possibly encountering Lee Harvey Oswald exiting the building). Unlike White House Press bus #2 (driver unidentified), which traveled to the Dallas Trade Mart as scheduled, Joe Savage closely followed the leading cars and drove White House Press bus #1 directly to Parkland Memorial Hospital. This put the journalists aboard bus #2 at a disadvantage, forcing many of them to hitch rides, such as Sid Davis of Westinghouse Broadcasting, or make other immediate transportation arrangements to get to the nearby hospital where the breaking news of the assassination was rapidly unfolding. Driver Joe Savage saved the banner on the driver's side of the first White House Press bus, which was donated to the Museum by his family in 2003. - Stephen Fagin, Curator

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Image of a White House Press bus in the Kennedy motorcade on Main Street

35mm slide taken by Stuart L. Reed showing one of the two White House Press buses in the presidential motorcade on Main Street. The chartered Continental Trailways bus has a sign affixed to the driver's side that reads "White House Press." Motorcade spectators, all looking to their left, are seen alongside the bus.

Object Details
Object title:

Image of a White House Press bus in the Kennedy motorcade on Main Street

Date:

11/22/1963

Terms:

Press

Trip to Texas

Main Street

Motorcade

Assassination

Oswald, Lee Harvey

Dimensions:

2 × 2 in. (5.1 × 5.1 cm)

Credit line:

Stuart Reed Family Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

Object number:

2023.018.0009

Curatorial Note:

Stuart Leslie Reed (1906-1979) had a truly remarkable experience on November 22, 1963. Reed, employed in the Secretary of the U.S. Army's Office for thirty years, was serving as Executive Officer of the Panama Canal Zone Civilian Personnel Policy Coordinating Board at the time of the Kennedy assassination. He was visiting his daughter, F.A. Holley, in Dallas when he decided to see the Kennedy motorcade on Main Street. Reed ultimately took twenty photographs that day, first documenting the Kennedy motorcade as it passed his location on Main Street. After making his way to the Oak Cliff section of Dallas, he happened to be on Jefferson Blvd. when he photographed suspect Lee Harvey Oswald being brought out of the Texas Theatre by Dallas police officers after his dramatic arrest inside. At some point that day, Reed also captured a few photos showing the exterior of the Texas School Book Depository building. Over the years, as some of his photographs have been published and examined, they have generated research interest. They also proved to be of research interest to investigators at the time. The FBI became aware of Reed's photographs by November 26, 1963. FBI agents tracked down Reed in New Orleans as he was preparing to return to the Panama Canal Zone and obtained his written permission to examine his photos. After being developed by Dynacolor in Dallas, the images were provided to the FBI by Reed's daughter, F.A. Holley. The FBI kept ten of the images for further study and later returned them to the family. The original 35mm color slides then remained in the possession of the family until Stuart Reed's grandson, Stuart Reed III, donated the twenty images to The Sixth Floor Museum in 2023. He also recorded an oral history at that time, sharing family stories about his grandfather and his extraordinary photos from November 22, 1963. - Stephen Fagin, Curator

Object featured in special exhibition, Two Days in Texas, November 8, 2023 through September 28, 2024.

Two identical Continental Trailways buses, designated White House Press bus #1 and #2, were the seventeenth and nineteenth vehicles in the Dallas motorcade, with a local press pool car traveling in between them. The first bus, driven by Joe Savage, carried various journalists including Robert Pierpoint of CBS, Robert MacNeil of NBC, Charles Roberts of Newsweek and Hugh Sidey of Time. As soon as shots were fired in Dealey Plaza, Robert MacNeil from bus #1 insisted that he be let off in the plaza (where he would go on to make a report to NBC from a telephone inside the Texas School Book Depository, after possibly encountering Lee Harvey Oswald exiting the building). Unlike White House Press bus #2 (driver unidentified), which traveled to the Dallas Trade Mart as scheduled, Joe Savage closely followed the leading cars and drove White House Press bus #1 directly to Parkland Memorial Hospital. This put the journalists aboard bus #2 at a disadvantage, forcing many of them to hitch rides, such as Sid Davis of Westinghouse Broadcasting, or make other immediate transportation arrangements to get to the nearby hospital where the breaking news of the assassination was rapidly unfolding. Driver Joe Savage saved the banner on the driver's side of the first White House Press bus, which was donated to the Museum by his family in 2003. - Stephen Fagin, Curator