



John F Kennedy – Jacqueline Kennedy Historical Files White House Files-FBI-Secret Service
$19.50
Description
John F. Kennedy: A Timeline of Key Events and Figures
- Early Life – November 1963: John F. Kennedy’s personal papers cover his life from childhood through his assassination in November 1963. Key highlights include:
- Correspondence with family members (father Joseph P. Kennedy Sr., mother Rose Kennedy, brothers Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy).
- Records and correspondence during his time in the Navy.
- Notes taken while writing “Profiles in Courage.”
- Doodles from National Security meetings.
- A childhood letter requesting an allowance raise.
- Copies of schoolwork and report cards.
- August 1-2, 1943: Loss of the USS PT-109. Documents include:
- The 15-page After Action Report detailing the sinking of the ship commanded by then-Lieutenant John F. Kennedy.
- Materials maintained by Evelyn Lincoln, JFK’s personal secretary, regarding the history, sinking, and crew of the PT-109.
- Photos of JFK on the PT-109.
- United States Navy reports on the sinking.
- Newspaper and magazine articles about JFK and the PT-109.
- 1960: John F. Kennedy’s campaign for President. Documents include:
- Memos, correspondences, Nixon debates transcripts, drafts of speeches, and policy papers.
- Material related to his campaigns for the House and Senate.
- FBI memo concerning West Virginia Election Law Matters and Senator Kennedy’s 1960 Campaign.
- Statement of Senator John F. Kennedy Announcing Candidacy for President of the United States (January 2, 1960).
- 1961 – 1963 (Presidency): White House Central Files and Foreign Relations:
- Correspondence between President Kennedy and the family of an American soldier killed in Vietnam (1963).
- Public inquiries on various topics.
- Extensive documentation on foreign relations, including:
- Cuba: Cuban Missile Crisis (correspondence with Khrushchev, CIA reports, emergency planning), economic situation, planned counterrevolutionary uprising.
- Soviet Union: Strategies for dealing with nuclear weapons, disarmament, Berlin. Personality sketch of Nikita Khrushchev. Correspondence and memoranda with Soviet leaders. Vienna meeting with Khrushchev.
- Germany: Correspondence with Konrad Adenauer, memoranda on Berlin.
- Vietnam: Correspondence with Ngo Dinh Diem, strategies for troop withdrawal, reports on military forces, summaries of political figures, information on the Buddhist crisis, military operations, and the 1963 South Vietnamese coup.
- October 1962: Cuban Missile Crisis. Evidenced by:
- Correspondence between Kennedy and Khrushchev.
- Phone calls between JFK and former Presidents Eisenhower, Truman, and Hoover.
- Memorandum regarding the relocation of dependents in anticipation of possible nuclear war.
- 1962: General warning that Kennedy may not be safe in Texas (FBI files).
- 1962: FBI concern regarding whether JFK deserved his Pulitzer Prize.
- March 20, 1962: FBI memo concerning Judith E. Campbell.
- 1963: Anti-Diem coup in South Vietnam. Documents include:
- Dictated notes by JFK concerning the coup.
- CIA memo communicating the events of the coup to the White House as it was taking place.
- November 22, 1963: Assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas, Texas. Documents include:
- Conversation between Air Force One and the White House Situation Room on the day of the assassination.
- Conversation between Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy and President Johnson shortly after he took the oath of office.
- FBI files related to the safety concerns, parade preparations, and surveillance indications.
- Assorted FBI and Assassination Records Review Board materials: wiretap transcript mentioning Kennedy, FBI interview with the Secret Service driver, Dallas Police Department notes on Oswald’s interrogation, autopsy information and reports, memos on personal allegations, letter critical of the single bullet theory, disposition of JFK’s coffin.
- Warren Commission Report and Exhibits (rifle, shirt, limousine windshield, “magic bullet”).
- Post-Assassination Investigations:Warren Commission (1963-1964): Report, appendices, witness interview transcripts, and photographic exhibits related to their investigation.
- House Select Committee on Assassinations (1976-1979): Report on the assassination, including conclusions and findings. Review by the Department of Justice in 1988.
- Assassination Records Review Board (1992-1998): Mandated to gather and open all assassination-related records. Activities included reviewing and declassifying records, authenticity study of the Zapruder Film, releasing CIA records, interviewing FBI agents, acquiring Oswald’s interrogation notes, and sponsoring forensic testing. Final Report issued in September 1998.
- Final NARA – ARRB Forensic Report (1999): Re-examination of forensic evidence (bullet fragment and organic material).
- 1961 – 1974: Secret Service files covering Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and her children, detailing the protection provided and her efforts to maintain a normal life for them.
- NSA Assassination Files: Intercepted communications (COMINT reports) of Cuban and Soviet reactions to the assassination.
- Kennedy/Khrushchev Correspondences: Complete correspondence between President Kennedy and Soviet Chairman Khrushchev, covering arms control, national security policy, the Cuban Missile Crisis, Berlin negotiations, and Laos.
- FBI Files (J. Edgar Hoover’s “O&C” Files): Official and Confidential files kept in Hoover’s private office, covering safety concerns for the Kennedys, allegations of personal misconduct by JFK, parade preparations, surveillance of Judith Campbell, warnings about Texas, testing of wine from Khrushchev, and the Pulitzer Prize matter. Transferred to the National Archives in 2006.
Cast of Characters with Brief Bios
- John F. Kennedy: 35th President of the United States (1961-1963). Served in the Navy during WWII (commanding PT-109), represented Massachusetts in the House of Representatives and Senate. Assassinated in Dallas, Texas.
- Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis: Wife of John F. Kennedy and First Lady of the United States (1961-1963). Later married Aristotle Onassis. The Secret Service files detail the protection provided to her and her children after JFK’s assassination.
- Joseph P. Kennedy Jr.: Older brother of John F. Kennedy. Killed in action during World War II shortly after writing a letter congratulating JFK on receiving a medal.
- Robert F. Kennedy: Younger brother of John F. Kennedy. Served as Attorney General during JFK’s presidency. Mentioned in personal papers.
- Rose Kennedy: Mother of John F. Kennedy. Her phone conversation with President Johnson after JFK’s assassination is recorded.
- Evelyn Lincoln: John F. Kennedy’s personal secretary. Maintained materials related to the USS PT-109.
- Douglas MacArthur: American General. JFK held a meeting with him (audio recording).
- Dwight D. Eisenhower: Former President of the United States. JFK had phone calls with him during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Drafted a joint statement on disarmament with Khrushchev (mentioned).
- Harry S. Truman: Former President of the United States. JFK had phone calls with him during the Cuban Missile Crisis.
- Herbert Hoover: Former President of the United States. JFK had phone calls with him during the Cuban Missile Crisis.
- Nikita Khrushchev: Premier of the Soviet Union. Corresponded extensively with President Kennedy on various critical issues, including the Cuban Missile Crisis and Berlin. Met with Kennedy in Vienna.
- Andrei Gromyko: Soviet Foreign Minister. Met with President Kennedy (mentioned in the context of Cuba).
- Tazewell T. Shepard: Naval Aide to President Kennedy. Wrote a memo to Evelyn Lincoln regarding emergency planning during the Cuban Missile Crisis.
- Ngo Dinh Diem: President of South Vietnam. Corresponded with President Kennedy. Deposed and executed during the 1963 South Vietnamese coup.
- Nicholas Katzenbach: U.S. Attorney General under President Johnson. Involved in discussions related to Kennedy’s assassination (phone calls with LBJ).
- Bill Moyers: White House Press Secretary under President Johnson. Involved in discussions related to Kennedy’s assassination (phone calls with LBJ).
- Ramsey Clark: Deputy Attorney General and later Attorney General under President Johnson. Involved in discussions related to Kennedy’s assassination (phone calls with LBJ).
- James Garrison: District Attorney of New Orleans. Investigated Clay Shaw in connection with Kennedy’s assassination.
- J. Edgar Hoover: Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Maintained “Official and Confidential” files related to John F. Kennedy in his private office.
- W. Mark Felt: Deputy Associate Director of the FBI. Received Hoover’s “O&C” files after Hoover’s death.
- Carlos Marcello: New Orleans crime boss. Mentioned in an FBI wiretap transcript in connection with Kennedy.
- William Robert Greer: Secret Service Agent who drove President Kennedy’s limousine in Dallas. Interviewed by the FBI.
- Lee Harvey Oswald: Alleged assassin of President John F. Kennedy. Interrogated by the Dallas Police Department (notes mentioned). Owned the Mannlicher-Carcano rifle found in the Texas School Book Depository.
- J. Lee Rankin: General Counsel of the Warren Commission. Wrote a letter critical of the single bullet theory.
- Richard Nixon: Republican candidate for President in 1960. Debates with Kennedy were transcribed. His administration reportedly disapproved of using the Apollo program to commemorate Kennedy.
- Judith Campbell: Individual whose apartment was reportedly under FBI surveillance (mentioned in FBI files).
- Dean Rusk: Secretary of State under President Kennedy. Involved in discussions regarding the Soviet Union.
- McGeorge Bundy: Special Assistant to the President and National Security Advisor. Involved in discussions regarding the Soviet Union.
- Konrad Adenauer: Chancellor of Germany (Federal Republic). Corresponded with President Kennedy.
- J. William Fulbright: Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Wrote a memorandum on Berlin.
- Gerhard Schroeder: Foreign Minister of Germany (Federal Republic). Had a conversation with Robert S. McNamara regarding Berlin and Germany.
- Arnold Smith: Canadian Ambassador to the Soviet Union. Discussed Berlin and Germany with Nikita Khrushchev.
- Charles de Gaulle: President of France. Had a telephone conversation with President Kennedy.
- James P. Hosty: FBI Special Agent responsible for the FBI’s cases on Lee and Marina Oswald prior to the assassination. Interviewed by the Assassination Records Review Board.
- Clay Shaw: Individual investigated by New Orleans District Attorney James Garrison in connection with Kennedy’s assassination.
John F. Kennedy – Jacqueline Onassis Kennedy White House – Secret Service – CIA – NSA and other Historical Documents
A collection of 7,379 pages of John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis historical material.
This collection contains images of documents, text, photos and audio from the FBI, Secret Service, CIA, National Security Agency, National Archive and Records Administration, State Department, Assassination Records Review Board, Warren Commission, Dallas Police Department, House Select Committee on Assassinations, Department of Defense, Department of Justice, John F. Kennedy Presidential Library, and the Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library.
The major sections in the collection are:
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JFK PERSONAL PAPERS
USS PT-109 DOCUMENTS
JFK CAMPAIGN PAPERS
JFK PERSONAL SECRETARY MISCELLANEOUS FILES
KENNEDY FAMILY GENEALOGY
AUDIO RECORDINGS
FBI FILES – OFFICIAL & CONFIDENTIAL FILES
ASSORTED FBI AND ASSASSINATION RECORDS COLLECTED BY THE ASSASSINATION RECORDS REVIEW BOARD
SECRET SERVICE FILES
JFK FOREIGN RELATIONS PAPERS
KENNEDY/KHRUSHCHEV CORRESPONDENCES
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY ASSASSINATION FILES
ASSASSINATION RECORDS REVIEW BOARD FINAL REPORT
WARREN COMMISSION REPORT
WARREN COMMISSION EXHIBITS
HOUSE SELECT COMMITTEE ON ASSASSINATIONS REPORT
FINAL NARA – ARRB FORENSIC REPORT ON THE FURTHER SCIENTIFIC EXAMINATION OF THE JFK ASSASSINATION EVIDENCE
The collection includes:
JFK PERSONAL PAPERS
250 pages of selected documents from the John F. Kennedy Personal Papers Collection. Papers include materials dating from Kennedy’s childhood through November 1963. Highlights include a typed letter from John F. Kennedy’s older brother Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., in which he congratulates JFK on receiving a medal. Joe Kennedy Jr. was killed in action shortly after writing this letter. Other letters to and from his father Joseph P. Kennedy, his younger brother Robert F Kennedy, and his mother Rose Kennedy. Papers include: Records and correspondences while in the Navy; notes taken while writing “Profiles in Courage”, doodles drawn during National Security meetings; a written childhood appeal to Joseph Kennedy for an allowance raise. Copies of JFK schoolwork and a report card.
USS PT-109 DOCUMENTS
After Action Report of the Loss of the USS PT-109 on August 1-2, 1943. The 15 page action report of the famous loss of the USS PT-109, commanded by future President John F. Kennedy. The incident became the focus of a popular motion picture and media attention upon Kennedy’s emergence as a national political leader.
This file consists of an additional 113 pages of materials maintained by President John F. Kennedy’s personal secretary, Evelyn Lincoln, concerning the history of PT-109, its sinking, and its crew. Of note are two photos of JFK on the PT-109, United States Navy reports of the sinking of PT-109. Also included in this folder are newspaper clippings and magazine articles about President Kennedy and the PT-109.
JFK CAMPAIGN PAPERS
1050 pages of campaign material including, memos, correspondences, Nixon debates transcripts, drafts of speeches, and policy papers, covering JFK’s entering into public life and campaigns for the House, Senate, and mostly the presidency.
JFK PERSONAL SECRETARY MISCELLANEOUS FILES
97 pages from the White House Central Files for the administration of President John F. Kennedy. Files include correspondence between Kennedy and the family of an American solider killed in Vietnam in 1963. Documents cover mundane inquiries from the public, on issues such as the presidents attire and the recipe for his favorite dish, New England fish chowder.
KENNEDY FAMILY GENEALOGY
11 pages of genealogy material. The files contain records of the Kennedy/Fitzgerald family, including a genealogy chart, marriage records, Fitzgerald family bible, and other material. Also included are copies of the birth and death certificates for the Kennedy and Fitzgerald families.
AUDIO RECORDINGS
Approximately 1 hour 30 minutes of audio recordings of telephone calls, meetings and dictated notes. Recordings include; JFK dictating a letter to his father; a meeting with General Douglas MacArthur; phone calls to former Presidents Eisenhower, Truman, and Hoover concerning the Cuban Missile Crisis. Dictates of notes concerning the anti-Diem coup in South Vietnam; Conversations between Air Force One and the White House Situation Room on the day of the assassination. Conversation between Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy and President Johnson, shortly after he took the oath of office aboard Air Force One. Several phone conversations between President Johnson and individuals including Nicholas Katzenbach, Bill Moyers, and Ramsey Clark, on topics including; Events surrounding President Kennedy’s assassination; Kennedy’s trip to Texas; President Kennedy’s autopsy; Warren Commission; and the investigation by New Orleans District Attorney James Garrison of Clay Shaw.
FBI FILES – OFFICIAL & CONFIDENTIAL FILES
1,020 pages of files copied from FBI Headquarters in Washington, D.C. covering John F. Kennedy.
These FBI documents were once kept in a file marked Jacqueline Onassis Kennedy in a safe in FBI directors J. Edgar Hoover’s office. These were amongst a group of files marked “O&C” Official and Confidential. The Official and Confidential Files were kept in Mr. Hoover’s private office to prevent unauthorized access to them. Following Mr. Hoover’s death in 1972, these files were transferred to the office of Deputy Associate Director W. Mark Felt. Hoover’s Official and Confidential Files were transferred to the National Archives from the FBI in 2006.
Much of the information is directly related to John F. Kennedy. Coverage of the files include: Concerns for the safety of the Kennedy’s and hostility expressed toward the Kennedy family. Allegations of personal misconduct by JFK. Preparation of the parade Lincoln Continental JFK was riding in when assassinated. Indications of the surveillance of Judith Campbell’s apartment. Account of a 1962 general warning that Kennedy may not be safe in Texas. Reports on testing of wine given to Kennedy by Soviet Premier Khruschev. Files show the Bureau’s concern whether or not JFK deserved to receive his Pulitzer Prize.
ASSORTED FBI AND ASSASSINATION RECORDS COLLECTED BY THE ASSASSINATION RECORDS REVIEW BOARD
160 pages of documents including: An FBI wiretap transcript of a phone conversation by New Orleans crime boss Carlos Marcello, in which Kennedy is mentioned. FBI interview with the Secret Service agent driving Kennedy in Dallas. Dallas Police Department notes on the interrogation of Lee Harvey Oswald. Autopsy information. An FBI report on the autopsy. An assortment of FBI memos documenting accusations of an annulled first marriage and extramarital affairs. A letter written by Warren Commission general counsel J. Lee Rankin critical of the single bullet theory. An exhausted account of the disposition of JFK’s display coffin. Documents indicating Nixon administration disapproval of using the Apollo space program to commemorate Kennedy.
SECRET SERVICE FILES
254 pages of Secret Service files covering Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. Files provide an overview of the protection provided to Jackie Kennedy Onassis and her children, John Kennedy Jr. and Caroline Kennedy from 1961 to 1974. Files chronicle Mrs. Kennedy Onassis’ struggle to provide as normal a life as possible for her children.
JFK FOREIGN RELATIONS PAPERS
1,600 pages of documents mostly dating from 1961 to 1963, including State Department cables, CIA reports, National Security Council reports and memoranda, and similar documents from the White House staff and from other agencies concerning U.S. foreign relation issues such as the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Berlin situation, Vietnam and relations with the Soviet Union.
Highlights include:
CUBA
Materials pertaining to the Cuban missile crisis, Cuba’s economic situation, a meeting between President Kennedy and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. Memoranda from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) regarding a planned uprising of counterrevolutionary groups in Cuba, a memorandum from the President to editors and radio and television news directors, sent during the Cuban missile crisis, regarding sensitive national security information along with a request that they not be made public, correspondence between the President and Soviet Prime Minister Nikita Khrushchev, and a memorandum to the President’s personal secretary Evelyn Lincoln from Naval Aide to the President Tazewell T. Shepard titled, “Relocation of Dependents of Personnel Involved in the White House Emergency Plan,” in anticipation of possible nuclear war during the Cuban missile crisis. Also included in this file is the text for a pamphlet by a group named DADVER titled, “Experiences Adquired [sic] as a Result of the Communist Occupation of the Island of Cuba.”
SOVIET UNION
Documents, telegrams and memoranda to and from President Kennedy and his Cabinet members and advisors regarding suggested strategies for dealing with subjects such as nuclear weapons, disarmament, Berlin, and other issues related to the Soviet Union.
Materials in this file include a personality sketch of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev prepared by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), memoranda from Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Special Assistant to the President and National Security Advisor McGeorge Bundy, drafts of a joint statement on disarmament and ideological conflicts issued by former President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Premier Khrushchev, a summary of President Eisenhower’s meetings with Khrushchev, and a briefing book with background papers on Laos, the Congo, Cuba, Algeria, Berlin, nuclear weapons testing, and disarmament.
Material concerning President Kennedy’s meeting with Soviet Union Premier Nikita Khrushchev in Vienna, Austria. Materials in this file include
suggested remarks, a report on possible cooperative projects between the United States and the Soviet Union, and briefing papers on Sino-Soviet relations, Soviet foreign policy, and the state of the Soviet economy. This file also contains position papers on Cuba, Berlin, Laos, Vietnam, disarmament, and nuclear weapons testing.
Newspaper articles, background papers on nuclear science and possible cooperative space exploration projects, a summary of a telephone conversation between President Kennedy and French President General Charles de Gaulle, an itinerary for President Kennedy’s trip to Vienna, Austria, and copies of a joint statement issued by the President and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev concerning nuclear weapons, disarmament, and Germany following discussions in Vienna.
GERMANY
Materials include correspondence between President Kennedy and Chancellor of Germany (Federal Republic) Konrad Adenauer; a memorandum on Berlin by Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee J. William Fulbright; and a statement by President Kennedy on Germany, Berlin, and the Soviet Union.
Documents pertain to the situation in Berlin, German defense expenditures, and the Cuban Missile Crisis. Of note is a memorandum from Canadian Ambassador to the Soviet Union Arnold Smith regarding his talk with Soviet Prime Minister Nikita Khrushchev about Berlin and Germany, and a letter from Khrushchev to President Kennedy concerning the Cuban Missile Crisis. Also included in this file is a memorandum of a conversation between United States Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and the Foreign Minister of Germany (Federal Republic) Gerhard Schroeder.
VIETNAM
Materials include a report on an injured American soldier, press releases, news articles, a partial text of a Senate resolution regarding foreign aid to South Vietnam, correspondence between President Kennedy and Ngo Dinh Diem, President of South Vietnam, and memoranda regarding strategies for removing American troops from Vietnam while,e preventing the spread of communism in the region.
Includes a list of military forces available for use in Vietnam, a report from American officials summarizing an investigative visit to Vietnam, a summary of prominent political figures in Vietnam prepared by the Central Intelligence Agency, and summaries of strategies for negotiations and military actions. This file also contains telegrams and memoranda regarding the Buddhist crisis, military operations in the region, the status of pending foreign aid appropriations legislation, negotiations with Ngo Dinh Diem, President of South Vietnam, Vietnamese attitudes towards the American presence in Vietnam, and the 1963 South Vietnamese coup during which Diem was deposed and later executed.
KENNEDY/KHRUSHCHEV CORRESPONDENCES
220 pages of text from the Department of States’ “Foreign Relations of the United States”, Volume VI. Volume VI presents the complete correspondence between President Kennedy and Soviet Chairman Khrushchev. The efforts at arms control, the basic elements of national security policy, the October 1962 Cuban missile crisis, negotiations and plans arising from the threat of war over Berlin, and the threat of hostilities by Soviet-supported forces in Laos.
The Foreign Relations of the United States series presents the official documentary historical record of major foreign policy decisions and significant diplomatic activity of the United States. The series documents the facts and events that contributed to the formulation of policies and includes evidence of supporting and alternative views to the policy positions ultimately adopted.
The editors had complete access to all the retired records and papers of the Department of State. The editors of the Foreign Relations series also have full access to the papers of Presidents Kennedy and other White House foreign policy records. Presidential papers maintained and preserved at the Presidential libraries include some of the most significant foreign affairs-related documentation from other federal agencies including the National Security Council, the Central Intelligence Agency, the Department of Defense, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY ASSASSINATION FILES
587 pages of NSA documents, memos and Communications Intelligence/COMINT reports. COMINT intelligence information was obtained for intelligence purposes from the intercept of foreign communications by other than the intended recipient. Coverage of files include intercepted chatter of Cuban and Soviet reactions to the assassination.
ASSASSINATION RECORDS REVIEW BOARD FINAL REPORT
The September 1998, 205-page Final Report of the Assassination Records Review Board. In 1992 Congress passed the President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992 (JFK Act), mandating the gathering and opening of all records concerned with the death of the President. The major purpose of the Review Board was to re-examine for release the records that the agencies still regarded as too sensitive to open to the public. Congress established the Review Board as an independent agency. The Board consisted of five citizens, trained in history, archives, and the law, who were not government employees but who had the ability to order agencies to declassify government documents once the Board made the decision that a document should be declassified, only the President could overrule its decision.
The Board reviewed and voted on over 27,000 previously redacted assassination records; Obtained agencies’ consent to release an additional 33,000 assassination records; arranged for the first known authenticity study of the Zapruder Film; Opened previously redacted CIA records from the Directorate of Operations; Released 99% of the Hardway/Lopez Report documenting the CIA’s records on Lee Harvey Oswald’s trip to Mexico City before the assassination; Conducted a three-day audiotaped interview of former FBI Special Agent James P. Hosty, one of two agents who were responsible for the FBI’s cases on Lee and Marina Oswald prior to the assassination; Acquired for public release two sets of original notes from Lee Harvey Oswald’s interrogation; Sponsored ballistics and forensic testing of Warren Commission exhibits.
WARREN COMMISSION REPORT
The text of the Warren Commission report. The final report of the, “Commission to investigate the assassination on November 22, 1963, of John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the 35th President of the United States,” better known as the Warren Commission.
Text from the Report of the Warren Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy, including appendices and transcript briefs of 117 interviews with commission witnesses.
WARREN COMMISSION EXHIBITS
182 pages of photographs of Warren Commission exhibits. Including: the Mannlicher-Carcano Rifle owned by Lee Harvey Oswald; The shirt Lee Harvey Oswald was wearing when he was shot. The windshield removed from the Presidential limousine that carried President John F. Kennedy during the assassination. Bullet found on a stretcher at Parkland Memorial Hospital (single bullet/magic bullet).
HOUSE SELECT COMMITTEE ON ASSASSINATIONS REPORT
418 pages of text from the House Select Committee on Assassinations report, a copy of Review Requested by the Department Of Justice of the Acoustical Reports Published by the House Select Committee on Assassinations, and the 1988 Department of Justice conclusions about the HSCA findings
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House Select Committee on Assassinations – JFK Assassination Findings. Extractions from the Committee’s final reporting dealing with their conclusions about the Kennedy Assassination. Along with references, footnotes, and citations.
The House Select Committee on Assassinations was established in 1976 to investigate the assassinations of President Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Junior. The Committee released a report on the assassination of Kennedy in January 1979.
FINAL NARA – ARRB FORENSIC REPORT ON THE FURTHER SCIENTIFIC EXAMINATION OF THE JFK ASSASSINATION EVIDENCE
25 pages of files from the National Archives and Records Administration covering the 1998 re-examination of some of the assassination forensic evidence held by the agency. Background material and the final report entitled, “Further Scientific Examination of the JFK Assassination Evidence.” This report, dated December 14,1999, is the final product of the scientific panel charged with further scientific examination of the physical evidence from the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The Department of Justice had asked the Assassination Records Review Board to arrange for further examination of the copper and lead bullet fragment and four smaller pieces of organic material that were part of the physical evidence of the assassination.
CIA-memo-on-anti-Diem-coup-in-Vietnam-as-it-was-taking-place
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) memo communicating to the White House the events of the anti-Diem coup in Vietnam as the coup was taking place. Page 1
CIA-memo-on-anti-Diem-coup-in-Vietnam-as-it-was-taking-place
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) memo communicating to the White House the events of the anti-Diem coup in Vietnam as the coup was taking place. Page 2
Statement of Senator John F. Kennedy Announcing Candidacy for President of the United States January 2, 1960
A 14-year John F Kennedy writes to his father Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. about football, trying out for the school’s basketball team, and his grades.
FBI memo dated March 20, 1962 concerning Judith E. Campbell
First page of FBI interview with Secret Service Agent William Robert Greer who was drove President Kennedy’s limousine on the day of the assassination
FBI Memo concerning West Virginia Election Law Matters and Senator Kennedy’s 1960 Campaign
Warren Commission Exhibit 139
FBI Photo of Oswald Mannlicher-Carcano rifle
Photograph (CE-139) of the Mannlicher-Carcano rifle found in the Texas State Book Depository Building and traced to Oswald.