Pictures of the Pain

Pictures of the Pain: Photography and the Assassination of President Kennedy

Pictures of the Pain: Photography and the Assassination of President Kennedy

Dust jacket (hardcover ed.)
Author Richard B. Trask
Country United States
Language English
Subject Assassination of John F. Kennedy
Genre Non-fiction
Publisher Yeoman Press
Publication date
1994
Pages 638
ISBN 0963859501

Pictures of the Pain: Photography and the Assassination of President Kennedy is a 1994 book by Richard B. Trask, an American historian and archivist based in Danvers, Massachusetts. The book compiles more than 350 photographs made by amateur and professional photographers in Dallas, Texas, during the November 1963 assassination of John F. Kennedy, and includes interviews with many of the people who made the images, some of which had never been published prior to the book's release.

Pictures of the Pain was released to favorable reviews, both by critics and by its participants. An abridged version, That Day In Dallas, was published in 1998. The year before, Trask appeared before the Assassination Records Review Board, where he offered prepared comments on the many images compiled for his books.

History

Genesis

When John F. Kennedy (JFK) died, Richard B. Trask was 16 years old. He could not fathom how Lee Harvey Oswald, "a seemingly unremarkable nobody", could succeed in assassinating a President of the United States. Trask set out to learn as much about the assassination as he could, and found that a photographic study was lacking within the many works published on the subject.[1]

Evolution

Trask began his research in 1983, originally expecting to self-publish a handful of copies for "institutional collections"; his success in finding and interviewing people whose stories had yet to be told led Trask to continue work on a completed book.[2] Rather than add to the volume of works presenting "facts, perceived facts, half-truths, innuendoes, self-serving statements, and lies," Trask chose to focus on the photographic history of the assassination.[3] The end result included many photographs that had never been published before.[4]

Sources

Amateurs

Trask contacted several people who had brought cameras to Dealey Plaza to make their own records of Kennedy's visit to Dallas, including Hugh Betzner, Phil Willis and Robert Croft. He cited the published recollections and testimony of many others, including Abraham Zapruder and Orville Nix.

Willis, his parents, his wife and their two daughters were present when JFK was shot. Willis snapped several photographs of the motorcade from the area of Houston and Main Streets; he and his daughters then ran toward Elm Street, where Willis took a picture from behind the presidential limousine. Seconds later, as a "shot rang out, I just flinched and got" another picture. Willis told Trask that, due to his experience with firearms, he knew the sound of a high-powered rifle and that a bullet had struck something.[5][lower-alpha 1]

Croft had taken three pictures of the motorcade and was certain he had taken another at the instant Kennedy was shot in the head. When he got his film back from the FBI, the first three exposures were developed but the fourth was blank. Croft said he was told by the FBI that his camera must have malfunctioned.[7]

Navy officer Thomas Atkins was the first-ever motion picture cameraman assigned to the White House; he rode in the first camera car in the motorcade. The first explosion suggested to Atkins that someone had "lit a cherry bomb ... and then immediately following there were two more quick explosions, and my stomach just went into a knot." Looking for something to film, he captured Bill and Gayle Newman lying on the grass, covering their young children. When his car started to leave, he dived head-first into the back seat "or I'd have been left right there."[8][9]

Professionals

Several professional photographers and photojournalists were interviewed for Pictures, including Ike Altgens, Henry Burroughs, Clint Grant, Cecil W. Stoughton and Dave Wiegman. Altgens told Trask that he had been contacted many times by reporters and researchers, many of whom triedand failedto convince him of a conspiracy.[10] Stoughton, the official White House photographer, also had been approached by researchers and said he was well-read on the subject; he told Trask that he did not have any strong feelings about a possible conspiracy, except to say that it was hard to believe that one man could have pulled off the assassination. Grant was the one photographer who was with President John F. Kennedy during the trip from Washington, D.C., to Texas in November, 1963.[11] Seated in Camera Car 2 in the motorcade, Grant was too far back to capture the shooting, but would make a picture of the Newman family before suggesting to his colleagues that they catch up with the presidential limousine, arriving eventually at Parkland Memorial Hospital.[12]

Freelance journalist and photographer Jim Murray had just moved back to Dallas with his family, and was getting a personal camera out of his trunk when he heard the gunshots. Murray would make more than a dozen pictures of the aftermath in Dealey Plaza, including a sequence in which a Sheriff's deputy, a uniformed officer and a man wearing a suit are seen inspecting a spot where, according to the officer's testimony, "they found one shot that had hit the turf" near the south curb along Elm Street.[13] In 1993, Murray complained to Trask that the timing and location of these photographs were misinterpreted by "so-called 'researchers' [who] will bend the truth when there's a buck to be made."[14]

That Day In Dallas: Three Photographers Capture On Film the Day President Kennedy Died
That Day In Dallas: Three Photographers Capture On Film the Day President Kennedy Died
Publication date
1998
Pages 135
ISBN 0963859528

That Day In Dallas

In 1998, Trask published That Day In Dallas: Three Photographers Capture On Film the Day President Kennedy Died. This smaller volume focused on and updated the stories of Altgens, Murray and Stoughton.

Response

In 1997, Trask gave testimony before the Assassination Records Review Board where, in prepared comments, he noted how the many images made during the assassination and compiled within Pictures had been both "used and abused by the government, media and critics." He also hoped to see the Zapruder film donated to the American people due to its value as evidence and as historic record.[15][lower-alpha 2]

Trask's books would be cited in numerous works to follow, including Crossfire and Reclaiming History.[17]

Critical response

Goodreads called Pictures a major work that created "a broad tapestry of truths and perspectives never before revealed concerning" the assassination of President Kennedy.[4] Choice called the book interesting if "tiresome" in its repetitive presentation of witnesses' recollections, and said the chapter on the history of the Zapruder film "is brilliant and riveting."[18] Dan Rather called it "the definitive book" on the assassination.[19]

For the book's jacket, Stoughton called himself a proud contributor to a "collectible collage" that is "not just another theory." Altgens called Pictures a "powerful display of words and pictures ... a 'must read' chronicle". Warren Commission member Gerald Ford called the book an "invaluable addition" to his library. Sixth Floor Museum curator Gary Mack wrote that Trask had done for the photographic record "what Sylvia Meagher did for the Warren volumes."[20]

Notes

  1. This picture would come under scrutiny by assassination researchers who noticed a man in a dark suit holding an open umbrella over his head and who suggested that this man was giving a signal of some sort. The House Select Committee on Assassinations identified the man as an insurance salesman who testified that the open umbrella "was sort of a sore spot" within the Kennedy family, representing the perceived appeasement of Nazis by then-Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy.[6]
  2. In 1999, the Zapruder family donated "copies of the film and color transparencies of each frame, as well as the film’s copyright," to the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza.[16]

References

Footnotes

  1. Trask 1994, p. xvi.
  2. Trask 1994, p. xvii.
  3. Trask 1994, p. xviii.
  4. 1 2 "Pictures of the Pain: Photography and the Assassination of President Kennedy". Goodreads. Retrieved January 3, 2015.
  5. Trask 1994, pp. 170172.
  6. Hersh 1998, p. 64.
  7. Lawrence, Tom (November 21, 2013). "Silent Witness: Powell Native Snapped Famed JFK Photo". Powell Tribune. Powell, Wyoming. Retrieved January 3, 2015.
  8. "The Last Two Days: The Eyes of the President". The Eyes of the President: Cdr Thomas M. Atkins USN (Ret) (19342011). Retrieved January 7, 2015.
  9. Trask 1994, pp. 371, 375.
  10. Trask 1994, p. 322.
  11. Simnacher, Joe. "Clint Grant, Longtime Dallas Morning News Photographer, Dies at 93". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved March 17, 2014.
  12. Trask 1994, p. 402.
  13. WCH 1964, p. 252.
  14. Trask 1994, p. 511.
  15. ARRB 1997, pp. 80–97.
  16. "Online Collection: Abraham Zapruder film". Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza. (Description). Retrieved September 13, 2015.
  17. Marrs, Jim. "Crossfire Bibliography". Retrieved January 3, 2015.
      Bugliosi, Vincent. Reclaiming History: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy. p. 1533. Retrieved January 3, 2015 via Google Books.
  18. "Reviews: Pictures of the Pain". Retrieved January 3, 2015 via Falvey Memorial Library, Villanova University.
  19. "Northeastern University Alumni Magazine" (PDF). January 1, 1999. p. 75. Retrieved January 3, 2015 via Northeastern University.
  20. "Book Dealers: Pictures of the Pain". Retrieved January 3, 2015 via mindspring.com.

Bibliography

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