Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson surrounded by a crowd during a Dallas campaign stop

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Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson surrounded by a crowd during a Dallas campaign stop

Original 35mm black and white negative taken by a staff photographer from The Dallas Morning News. The image shows Senator Lyndon B. Johnson and his wife Lady Bird Johnson amidst a crowd of supporters and protesters during a campaign visit to Dallas on November 4, 1960. A photographer on the left is holding a camera with a large flash. Kennedy-Johnson campaign signs and at least one "Tower" sign are in the image. This event took place four days before the presidential election.

Object Details
Object title:

Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson surrounded by a crowd during a Dallas campaign stop

Date:

11/04/1960

Medium:

Film

Dimensions:

15/16 × 1 5/16 in. (2.4 × 3.3 cm)

Credit line:

The Dallas Morning News Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey PlazaDonated by The Dallas Morning News in the interest of preserving history

Object number:

2014.080.0129.0002

Curatorial Note:

The November 5, 1960 edition of The Dallas Morning News included a story on page 1A that describes this campaign visit in detail:"LBJ CALLS PRO-NIXON FANS AT HIS RALLY "DISCOURTEOUS" - SENATOR JEERED AT DALLAS HOTEL - Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson with his wife Friday dismissed police guards and pushed their way through a howling, chanting, jeering pro-Nixon crowd which he later called 'frustrated, discourteous and desperate.' It took the smiling Johnson and grim-faced Lady Bird almost 30 minutes to inch their way through the Republican demonstrators from the front entrance of the Hotel Adolphus to the Grand Ballroom where he was greeted by 2,000 wildly cheering luncheon guests. The Nixon demonstrators, among them Congressman Bruce Alger of Dallas, first confronted Johnson when his motorcade arrived at the Baker Hotel."- Lindsey Richardson, Curator of Collections

The Adolphus Hotel incident in Dallas, just four days before the election, remains one of the most colorful and notorious moments of the 1960 presidential campaign -- and it very likely shifted support to the Kennedy-Johnson ticket in crucial areas of the South. Many Republicans lamented in the aftermath of Kennedy's victory that Republican demonstrators in Dallas had spoiled the election. I had the pleasure of delivering a lecture on this subject during the run of our special exhibit, "A Time for Greatness: The 1960 Kennedy Campaign." You can view a recording of this presentation here on the Museum's YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HTcOHZgFhyE. - Stephen Fagin, Curator

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Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson surrounded by a crowd during a Dallas campaign stop

Original 35mm black and white negative taken by a staff photographer from The Dallas Morning News. The image shows Senator Lyndon B. Johnson and his wife Lady Bird Johnson amidst a crowd of supporters and protesters during a campaign visit to Dallas on November 4, 1960. A photographer on the left is holding a camera with a large flash. Kennedy-Johnson campaign signs and at least one "Tower" sign are in the image. This event took place four days before the presidential election.

Object Details
Object title:

Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson surrounded by a crowd during a Dallas campaign stop

Date:

11/04/1960

Terms:

Crowds

Photographs

Presidential campaign

Campaign

Protests

Photographer

1960 presidential election

Sign

Downtown Dallas

Johnson, Lyndon B.

Johnson, Lady Bird

The Dallas Morning News

Adolphus Hotel

Dallas

Medium:

Film

Dimensions:

15/16 × 1 5/16 in. (2.4 × 3.3 cm)

Credit line:

The Dallas Morning News Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey PlazaDonated by The Dallas Morning News in the interest of preserving history

Object number:

2014.080.0129.0002

Curatorial Note:

The November 5, 1960 edition of The Dallas Morning News included a story on page 1A that describes this campaign visit in detail:"LBJ CALLS PRO-NIXON FANS AT HIS RALLY "DISCOURTEOUS" - SENATOR JEERED AT DALLAS HOTEL - Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson with his wife Friday dismissed police guards and pushed their way through a howling, chanting, jeering pro-Nixon crowd which he later called 'frustrated, discourteous and desperate.' It took the smiling Johnson and grim-faced Lady Bird almost 30 minutes to inch their way through the Republican demonstrators from the front entrance of the Hotel Adolphus to the Grand Ballroom where he was greeted by 2,000 wildly cheering luncheon guests. The Nixon demonstrators, among them Congressman Bruce Alger of Dallas, first confronted Johnson when his motorcade arrived at the Baker Hotel."- Lindsey Richardson, Curator of Collections

The Adolphus Hotel incident in Dallas, just four days before the election, remains one of the most colorful and notorious moments of the 1960 presidential campaign -- and it very likely shifted support to the Kennedy-Johnson ticket in crucial areas of the South. Many Republicans lamented in the aftermath of Kennedy's victory that Republican demonstrators in Dallas had spoiled the election. I had the pleasure of delivering a lecture on this subject during the run of our special exhibit, "A Time for Greatness: The 1960 Kennedy Campaign." You can view a recording of this presentation here on the Museum's YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HTcOHZgFhyE. - Stephen Fagin, Curator