White House Press cloth banner from bus in the Dallas motorcade

Full Screen

Back

White House Press cloth banner from bus in the Dallas motorcade

"White House Press" cloth banner from the driver's side of the first White House Press bus in the Dallas motorcade. Handwritten inscription on back reads: "Taken from the side of the bus driven by Joe Savage in the Presidential motorcade, the day of the assassination of John F. Kennedy - November 22, 1963"

Object Details
Object title:

White House Press cloth banner from bus in the Dallas motorcade

Date:

11/22/1963

Medium:

Cloth

Dimensions:

Overall: 25 1/2 x 72 in. (64.8 x 182.9 cm)

Credit line:

Joseph Dwight and Stephen Dane Savage Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

Object number:

2003.060.0001

Curatorial Note:

Continental Trailways bus driver Joe Savage saved this cloth banner following the assassination. He drove what was officially designated White House Press bus #1, the seventeenth vehicle in the Dallas motorcade on November 22, 1963. His bus was followed by eight additional vehicles, including White House Press bus #2 and the Official Party bus. Among the journalists aboard bus #1 were 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 was the only journalist from bus #1 who 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, 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. According to Savage, recalling his activities almost exactly forty years later in 2003, White House Press bus #1 remained at Parkland for at least an hour before heading back to Dallas Love Field. When his shift concluded, Savage decided to save this cloth banner from the driver's side of the bus. It was rolled up and stored in his garage for four decades until it was donated to the Museum on November 18, 2003. - Stephen Fagin, Curator

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

File name:

-

File size:

-

Title:

-

Author:

-

Subject:

-

Keywords:

-

Creation Date:

-

Modification Date:

-

Creator:

-

PDF Producer:

-

PDF Version:

-

Page Count:

-

Page Size:

-

Fast Web View:

-

Choose an option Alt text (alternative text) helps when people can’t see the image or when it doesn’t load.
Aim for 1-2 sentences that describe the subject, setting, or actions.
This is used for ornamental images, like borders or watermarks.
Preparing document for printing…
0%

White House Press cloth banner from bus in the Dallas motorcade

"White House Press" cloth banner from the driver's side of the first White House Press bus in the Dallas motorcade. Handwritten inscription on back reads: "Taken from the side of the bus driven by Joe Savage in the Presidential motorcade, the day of the assassination of John F. Kennedy - November 22, 1963"

Object Details
Object title:

White House Press cloth banner from bus in the Dallas motorcade

Date:

11/22/1963

Terms:

Motorcade

Press

Assassination

Trip to Texas

Kennedy, John F.

Savage, Joe

White House Press

Fort Worth Chamber of Commerce

Medium:

Cloth

Dimensions:

Overall: 25 1/2 x 72 in. (64.8 x 182.9 cm)

Credit line:

Joseph Dwight and Stephen Dane Savage Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

Object number:

2003.060.0001

Curatorial Note:

Continental Trailways bus driver Joe Savage saved this cloth banner following the assassination. He drove what was officially designated White House Press bus #1, the seventeenth vehicle in the Dallas motorcade on November 22, 1963. His bus was followed by eight additional vehicles, including White House Press bus #2 and the Official Party bus. Among the journalists aboard bus #1 were 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 was the only journalist from bus #1 who 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, 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. According to Savage, recalling his activities almost exactly forty years later in 2003, White House Press bus #1 remained at Parkland for at least an hour before heading back to Dallas Love Field. When his shift concluded, Savage decided to save this cloth banner from the driver's side of the bus. It was rolled up and stored in his garage for four decades until it was donated to the Museum on November 18, 2003. - Stephen Fagin, Curator

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