Top rated |
385 views (5 votes)
|
|
439 views (5 votes)
|
|
LARGE Dealey Plaza592 viewsFort Worth Star-Telegram Collection
http://library.uta.edu/digitalgallery (5 votes)
|
|
301 views (5 votes)
|
|
732 viewsM41 / Z312 (5 votes)
|
|
Cook_Cooper_HSCA_1 810 views Credit: Denis Morissette Via Weisberg Archive (5 votes)
|
|
John E Miller531 views (5 votes)
|
|
John E Miller500 views (5 votes)
|
|
525 viewsOne local resident who added to the assassination literature was John E. Miller who took photos of the arrival of President and Mrs. Kennedy at Love Field and then apparently hot-footed it over to Parkland when the news of the shooting broke. These photos were issued as postcards in 1964 in a packet of 12. (5 votes)
|
|
Presidential Motorcade, Berkeley, California, March, 1962936 viewsSubject Date: 23 March 1962
Summary: United States Secret Service agent Morgan L. Gies was responsible for White House vehicles from 1941 to 1967, serving five presidents. This photograph from his personal collection shows a motorcade with President John F. Kennedy riding in his 1961 Lincoln Continental. Agent Gies is driving the follow-up car directly behind the President's limousine.
Creator: Knudsen, R.L. (Robert LeRoy), (5 votes)
|
|
Lincoln Continental Presidential Limousine Customization, the Spare Tire Well, 1961611 viewsThe Hess & Eisenhardt Company of Cincinnati, Ohio, transformed a stock 1961 Lincoln Continental convertible into the presidential limousine. The firm stretched the car by 3 1/2 feet, added steps for Secret Service agents, and installed a siren, flashing lights, and other special accessories. The customization took approximately six months and the car arrived at the White House in June 1961. (5 votes)
|
|
Lincoln Continental Presidential Limousine Customization, Chauffeur Partition Hatch in Front Door Jamb, 1961625 viewsThe Hess & Eisenhardt Company of Cincinnati, Ohio, transformed a stock 1961 Lincoln Continental convertible into the presidential limousine. The firm stretched the car by 3 1/2 feet, added steps for Secret Service agents, and installed a siren, flashing lights, and other special accessories. The customization took approximately six months and the car arrived at the White House in June 1961. (5 votes)
|
|
3827 files on 319 page(s) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
109 | |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|