On Assignment: Dallas Times Herald 1963, presented at the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza beginning April 29, 2026, examines one of the most consequential weekends in modern American history through the eyes of the journalists who documented it as it unfolded. Drawing on newly acquired photographs, personal objects, and archival materials, the exhibition retraces the movements of reporters and photographers from the
Dallas Times Herald as they covered the visit of President John F. Kennedy to Dallas on November 22, 1963, and the dramatic events that followed. By focusing on the individuals tasked with reporting the news, the exhibition reveals the human dimension behind the headlines and images that circulated across the world.
Six journalists stand at the center of the narrative: reporters Keith Shelton, Darwin Payne, Vivian Castleberry, and Jim Lehrer, alongside photographers Eamon Kennedy and Bob Jackson. Each played a different role as the day unfolded, moving between airports, hospital corridors, crowded press rooms, and the streets of Dallas. Shelton traveled with the presidential party as part of the press contingent, while Lehrer reported on the arrival of the motorcade. Payne worked at the newspaper’s rewrite desk, shaping breaking information into coherent stories as updates arrived by telephone. Castleberry, known for her pioneering role in the newsroom and her coverage of social issues, followed the visit of First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy.
The exhibition unfolds through a series of key locations tied to the events of that weekend. Visitors encounter Dallas Love Field Airport, where the presidential plane landed, and Dealey Plaza, where the motorcade passed moments before the assassination. Other sections explore Parkland Memorial Hospital, Dallas Police Headquarters, and the newsroom where reporters worked frantically to assemble the story for publication. The path of the journalists reveals how rapidly unfolding events transformed a routine political assignment into one of the defining news stories of the twentieth century.
Photography occupies a central place in this account. Bob Jackson’s Pulitzer Prize–winning photograph capturing the instant Jack Ruby shot Lee Harvey Oswald stands as one of the most widely recognized images in American photojournalism. Alongside this historic picture appear cameras, notebooks, press credentials, and thousands of photographs documenting Dallas during the 1960s. Through these materials,
On Assignment offers a powerful reflection on the responsibility of journalists who recorded history while standing directly within it.
Image:
2025.007.0008.004
Crowds and dignitaries welcome President
and Mrs. Kennedy at Dallas Love Field on
November 22,1963.
© Bob Jackson Collection