JFK Assassination Photo Research Galleries


Home :: Login Album list :: Last uploads :: Last comments :: Most viewed :: Top rated :: My Favorites :: Search



Click Here To Visit The JFK Assassination Forum

Most viewed
Bothunwiegman.jpg
Bothun showing Weigman filming Haygood ( Credit: Martin Hinrichs ) 3115 views
willis12.jpg
Willis 123106 views
mURI_temp_3d615643.jpg
Allen Large3102 viewsOriginal black and white photographic negative taken by Dallas Times Herald staff photographer William Allen Friday afternoon after the assassination - between 12:30 and 1 p.m. This image shows the crowd gathered at the entrance to the Texas School Book Depository. The Dal-Tex building, located at 501 Elm Street, can be seen in the background, on the other side of Houston Street


6528.gif
Darnell animated GIF3084 views
bond8.jpg
Bond 83077 views
mURI_temp_0e8bec8e.jpg
Allen Large3071 viewsDate: November 22, 1963
Creator: Allen, William
Description: Original black and white photographic negative taken by Dallas Times Herald staff photographer William Allen Friday afternoon after the assassination - between 12.30 and 1 p.m. This image shows the view from the north side of Dealey Plaza looking south toward Elm Street. A crowd gathered in the plaza after the shooting. Dealey Plaza was not closed to traffic after the assassination - cars are visible traveling on all three streets in this image. The Old Red Courthouse can be seen in the top left corner of the picture.


Be4_hicrop.jpg
Be4_hicrop.jpg3055 viewsScalp being pulled forward, covering the large skull cavity.
Pdvd_9.jpg
3049 views
moormanXdS.jpg
LARGE Moorman Drumscan ( Credit: Josiah Thompson ) Craig Lamson Version3046 viewsJosiah Thompson (The history behind the Drumscan)

'll try to explain. In the spring of 1967, I was done with my LIFE assignment and was putting together all the details that went into Six Seconds. Mary Moorman's photograph was extremely important since it showed the knoll at Z 315. I had done some research with AP and Wide World in New York concerning the negatives and prints of the photo that they had. But the original Polaroid was sitting in Dallas. I paid Mary Moorman for the use of her photo in Six Second. Part of the deal was that she would let a professional photographer come to her house and copy the Polaroid. I hired a professional photographer to do this. He went to her home and copied the Polaroid using a medium format camera where the negative itself is about the size of Moorman's Polaroid. It was that negative from forty-five years ago that I had scanned in San Francisco. The drum scan resulting may turn out to be the highest resolution copy of the Moorman photo extant since the Polaroid itself has deteriorated further with each passing decade.
24_11_63.jpg
Large Dealey Plaza Overhead 3043 views
Picture2_001.jpg
3031 views
Allenphoto.jpg
Allen Large3023 views
4053 files on 338 page(s) 18