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Ward Warren film
Original 8mm color home movie filmed by local high school student Ward Warren. He captured footage of Air Force One and Air Force Two arriving at Love Field, and the Kennedys, Johnsons and Connallys speaking with the crowd along the fenceline, as well as footage of the January 1, 1964 Cotton Bowl parade and excerpts of the game (not included here).
Ward Warren film
11/22/1963 - 01/01/1964
Film
Gauge: 8mm; Camera Speed: 16 fps
William Ward Warren Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza
2010.004.0001
William Ward Warren recorded oral histories with The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza in 2010 and 2016. -- Stephen Fagin, Curator
Ward Warren’s film is one of the few Love Field home movies I’ve seen that shows Vice President Lyndon Johnson. Johnson, of course, always traveled separately from the president for security reasons and was waiting for him at Love Field when Kennedy stepped off the plane. But very few people with cameras paid him any attention, perhaps because he was a Texan who often appeared around the state and on local TV. - Gary Mack, Curator
Ward Warren film
Original 8mm color home movie filmed by local high school student Ward Warren. He captured footage of Air Force One and Air Force Two arriving at Love Field, and the Kennedys, Johnsons and Connallys speaking with the crowd along the fenceline, as well as footage of the January 1, 1964 Cotton Bowl parade and excerpts of the game (not included here).
Ward Warren film
11/22/1963 - 01/01/1964
Films
Sports
Home movie
Kennedy, John F.
Kennedy, Jacqueline
Johnson, Lyndon B.
Connally, John
Johnson, Lady Bird
Connally, Nellie
Warren, William Ward
Love Field
Cotton Bowl
Dallas
Film
Gauge: 8mm; Camera Speed: 16 fps
William Ward Warren Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza
2010.004.0001
William Ward Warren recorded oral histories with The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza in 2010 and 2016. -- Stephen Fagin, Curator
Ward Warren’s film is one of the few Love Field home movies I’ve seen that shows Vice President Lyndon Johnson. Johnson, of course, always traveled separately from the president for security reasons and was waiting for him at Love Field when Kennedy stepped off the plane. But very few people with cameras paid him any attention, perhaps because he was a Texan who often appeared around the state and on local TV. - Gary Mack, Curator