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John Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial

The John Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial is a monument to United States President John Fitzgerald Kennedy in the West End Historic District of downtown Dallas, Texas (USA) erected in 1970, and designed by noted architect Philip Johnson.

John Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial Plaza
John Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial in Dallas (2014)
32°46′43″N 96°48′23″W / 32.77861°N 96.80639°W / 32.77861; -96.80639Coordinates: 32°46′43″N 96°48′23″W / 32.77861°N 96.80639°W / 32.77861; -96.80639
LocationDallas, Texas
DesignerPhilip Johnson
TypeCenotaph
MaterialConcrete and granite
Length50 ft (15 m)
Width50 ft (15 m)
Height30 ft (9.1 m)
Beginning date1969 (1969)
Opening dateJune 24, 1970
Restored date2000
Dedicated toJohn F. Kennedy
WebsiteOfficial website
Kennedy Memorial and Plaza
Part of
DLMKHD No.H/2 (West End HD)
Significant dates
Designated NHLDCPApril 19, 1993
Designated CPNovember 14, 1978
Designated DLMKHDOctober 6, 1975[2]
Downtown Dallas and John Fitzgerald Kennedy 
  •  Open space 
  •  Presidential limousine 
  •  Key locations 

1
Dealey Plaza
2
Texas School Book Depository
3
John Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial
4
The Grassy Knoll
5
Assassination of John F. Kennedy

Design

The John F. Kennedy Memorial was the first memorial by famed American architect and Kennedy family friend Philip Johnson, and was approved by Jacqueline Kennedy. Johnson called it "a place of quiet refuge, an enclosed place of thought and contemplation separated from the city around, but near the sky and earth."[3] Dallas raised $200,000 for the memorial by August 1964, entirely from 50,000 individual donations contributed by private citizens.[4]

Plaza

The simple concrete memorial lies in the block bounded by Main, Record, Commerce, and Market Streets, approximately 200 yards (180 m) east of Dealey Plaza, where Kennedy was assassinated. The block, also known as the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial Plaza, is in downtown Dallas near the Historic West End district, is owned by Dallas County.[5][6]

Cenotaph

Philip Johnson's design is a cenotaph, or empty tomb, that symbolizes the freedom of Kennedy's spirit. The memorial is a square, roofless room, 30 feet (9.1 m) tall and 50 by 50 feet (15 by 15 m) square with two narrow openings facing north and south. The walls consist of 72 white precast concrete columns, most of which end 29 inches (740 mm) above the earth.[7] Eight columns (two in each corner) extend to the ground, acting as legs that support the monument.[8] Each column ends in a light fixture. At night, the lights create the illusion that the structure is supported by the light itself. The corners and "doors" of this roofless room are decorated with rows of concrete circles, or medallions, each identical and perfectly aligned. These decorations introduce the circular shape into the square architecture of the Kennedy Memorial.[7]

The cenotaph lies atop a low concrete hill, embossed with squares and slightly elevated compared to street level. Inside is a low block of dark granite, 8 feet (2.4 m) square, set into a larger shallow depression. The granite square is decorated on its north and south faces with the name "John Fitzgerald Kennedy" carved in gold letters.[9] It is too empty to be a base, too short to be a table, but too square to be a tomb. The letters have been painted gold to capture the light from the white floating column walls and the pale concrete floor. These words – three words of a famous name – are the only verbal messages in the empty room.[7]

Epitaph

Two dark granite squares are set in the plaza surrounding the memorial, each approximately 50 feet (15 m) from the narrow entrances to the cenotaph.[9] They are each inscribed with an epitaph that reads:

The joy and excitement of
John Fitzgerald Kennedy's life belonged to all men.

So did the pain and sorrow of his death.

When he died on November 22, 1963, shock and
agony touched human conscience throughout the world.
In Dallas, Texas, there was a special sorrow.

The young President died in Dallas. The death
bullets were fired 200 yards west of this site.

This memorial, designed by Philip Johnson,
was erected by the people of Dallas. Thousands of
citizens contributed support, money and effort.

It is not a memorial to the pain and sorrow
of death, but stands as a permanent tribute to the joy
and excitement of one man's life.

John Fitzgerald Kennedy's life.

— Jim Lehrer, journalist[10]

History

Dallas County Judge Lew Sterrett was credited as the first to propose a monument to Kennedy on November 24, 1963, two days after the assassination.[4] The concept became a formal proposal on December 2, when Sterrett formed the John F. Kennedy Citizens Memorial Committee with Mayor Earle Cabell and two dozen prominent Dallas citizens.[8] However, other Dallas civic leaders, including former mayor R.L. Thornton, said the memorial was better placed in Washington D.C., attempting to distance Dallas from the infamy it had gained as the assassination site.[4] The Committee solicited designs for a memorial after its formation; 260 proposals were received within a week, and 700 proposals were received by February 1964.[8]

On February 5, 1964, the Committee, led by W. Dawson Sterling, announced it had met for a fifth time to narrow down the proposals to three or four finalists.[11] On February 22, 1964, the Committee announced that two memorials would be created: one at the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston, and another "dignified and modest memorial near the assassination site".[4][12] The location near the Old Red Courthouse was chosen in April 1964.[4] The original location, announced as the block bounded by Main, Elm, Record, and Market Streets,[13] was shifted to another plaza one block south bounded by Main, Record, Market, and Commerce.[14] Both plazas were owned by Dallas County and were being prepared as part of the new Dallas County Court House, then under construction.[13] By September, the concept for the Kennedy Plaza included a green space with a modest marker.[15]

Committee member Stanley Marcus flew to New York and successfully asked Philip Johnson to take on the memorial design, which he did for no fee. Johnson's proposal model was shown to the Committee in December 1964, and the Committee formally announced the design on December 12, hoping to demolish the existing buildings and have the memorial ready by November 1968, the fifth anniversary of the assassination.[4] An underground parking facility was built under the memorial site, however, and construction did not start until 1969.[9] The Committee stated in June 1969 the memorial was being constructed for a reasonable fee and would be dedicated by January 1, 1970.[16] It was finally dedicated on June 24, 1970 in a ceremony attended by 300 people.[4] Sargent Shriver was the first Kennedy family member to visit the memorial in 1972.[4]

Management

The memorial was vandalized with graffiti in the spring of 1999.[9] In mid 1999, The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza undertook management of the memorial, rallying the support of Dallas County and the City of Dallas. The Museum became caretaker of the monument and launched a full-scale restoration project aimed at preserving the memorial and its history. Philip Johnson, the original architect for the monument, guided the restoration process implemented by Corgan Associates, Inc. and Phoenix I Restoration and Construction, Lt. Numerous local suppliers donated the labor, materials, and equipment required to return the memorial to its original beauty. In 2000, a panel of experts wrote an explanation of the memorial to satisfy the public.[3]

The monument attracts approximately 500,000 visitors annually.[17]

Critical reception

Soon after the Kennedy Memorial was completed, Gary Cartwright wrote in 1971 for The New York Times the "memorial seems esthetically spare, even forbidding", true to the concept proposed by Johnson.[14] In a 1999 interview with The Washington Post, Johnson confirmed the concept: "I don't think it's sterile, of course. I love it. The idea of going into an empty room with nothing to help you, except to think about the slain president, I think that's a very moving image."[9] Cartwright also noted the memorial "was erected, after much delay, by the city fathers of Dallas."[14]

Architectural critic Witold Rybczynski wrote in 2006 that the monument is "poorly done", likening its precast concrete slab walls to "mammoth Lego blocks", and commented that Kennedy "deserved better than this".[18] On the 50th anniversary of Kennedy's assassination, Dallas Morning News architecture critic Mark Lamster called the monument "a disappointing product of the city's ambivalent response to the events of November 1963" and said that Johnson lacked "an animating vision that might have produced an inspiring design. This, in turn, was compounded by a lack of experience".[19] Lamster also noted the similarities between Johnson's design and the unrealized Neue Wache redesign proposal for a war memorial in Berlin, created in 1930 by Mies van der Rohe.[4][19][20]

Los Angeles Times architecture critic Christopher Hawthorne echoed these prior criticisms in 2013, stating the memorial "symbolizes the city's deep ambivalence about commemorating the assassination. A spare cenotaph, or open tomb, designed to be built in marble, it was instead cast in cheaper concrete. And its location east of the assassination site suggested an effort to tuck the history of that day away."[21]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. November 2, 2013.
  2. ^ Staff (August 4, 2016). "West End Historic District" (PDF). Department of Urban Planning, City of Dallas. p. 3. Retrieved August 2, 2018.
  3. ^ a b "John F. Kennedy Memorial Plaza Marker". hmdb.org.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Brown, Greg. "Forever Changed: The Architecture of Dallas: Reframed by the Kennedy Assassination". AIA Dallas. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  5. ^ Bugliosi, Vincent (2007). "Epilogue". Reclaiming History: The Assassination of John F. Kennedy. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-04525-3.
  6. ^ Glynn, Simon (2004). "John F. Kennedy Memorial". galinsky.com. Retrieved July 25, 2016.
  7. ^ a b c "History of John F. Kennedy Memorial Plaza". The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza. Retrieved 15 May 2018.
  8. ^ a b c Fagin, Stephen (2013). Assassination and Commemoration: JFK, Dallas, and the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 33–34. ISBN 978-0-8061-4358-3. Retrieved 15 May 2018.
  9. ^ a b c d e "Dallas to Clean Up, Protect Deteriorating Memorial to JFK". The Washington Post. 28 November 1999. Retrieved 15 May 2018.
  10. ^ Blumenthal, Ralph (20 November 2003). "Dallas Comes to Terms With the Day That Defined It". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  11. ^ "Kennedy Memorial Sought in Dallas". The New York Times. 6 February 1964. Retrieved 15 May 2018.
  12. ^ "Dallas Citizens Propose Assassination Site Marker". The New York Times. UPI. 23 February 1964. Retrieved 15 May 2018.
  13. ^ a b "Dallas Out" (PDF). Associated Press wire. AP. 18 April 1964. Retrieved 15 May 2018.
  14. ^ a b c Cartwright, Gary (21 November 1971). "The Site Of the Most Shocking Single Event Of Our Time". The New York Times. Retrieved 15 May 2018.
  15. ^ "A Kennedy Plaza Planned by Dallas On Full City Block". The New York Times. AP. 8 September 1964. Retrieved 15 May 2018.
  16. ^ "Dallas Kennedy Monument Promised by First of Year". The New York Times. AP. 22 June 1969. Retrieved 15 May 2018.
  17. ^ "National News Briefs; The Kennedy Memorial In Dallas Is Vandalized". The New York Times. The Associated Press. 5 April 1999. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  18. ^ Rybczynski, Witold (2006-02-15). "The Interpreter". Slate. Washington Post/Newsweek Interactive Co. Retrieved 2008-04-06.
  19. ^ a b Lamster, Mark (16 November 2013). "Why Dallas' current JFK memorial doesn't befit the dignity of Kennedy". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  20. ^ Schulze, Franz; Windhorst, Edward (2012). Mies van der Rohe: A Critical Biography, New and Revised Edition. Chicago, Illinois: The University of Chicago Press. pp. 137–138. ISBN 978-0-226-75600-4. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  21. ^ Hawthorne, Christopher (25 October 2013). "Dealey Plaza: A place Dallas has long tried to avoid and forget". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  22. ^ Kimmelman, Michael (12 September 2012). "Decades Later, a Vision Survives". The New York Times. Retrieved 15 May 2018.

Bibliography

  • Lord, Philip (April 14, 2003). JFK (A&E Biography). DK Publishing. p. 160. ISBN 978-0-7894-9316-3.
  • Brosio, M.D. (2016). The JFK Memorial and Power in America. Createspace Publishing. ISBN 1492861871.

External links

  • Remembering the Kennedy Memorial
  • JFK Memorial Plaza Marker
  • JFK Memorial
  • Fagin, Stephen (24 June 2016). "#OTD in 1970: The dedication of the often misunderstood John F. Kennedy Memorial". The Blog at Dealey Plaza. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  • Bosse, Paula (14 February 2014). "Where to Put That JFK Memorial — 1964". Flashback: Dallas. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  • Heid, Jason (13 November 2013). "Ghosts of Dallas: Kennedy Memorial, 1970". D Magazine. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  • "John F. Kennedy Memorial Plaza". American Heritage. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  • Sullivan, Mary. "Kennedy Memorial". Bluffton University. Retrieved 15 May 2018.
  • Safford, Brandon (15 June 2009). "Historic Dallas Part 1: JFK Memorial Plaza". I Dream of Architecture. Retrieved 15 May 2018.

john, fitzgerald, kennedy, memorial, this, article, about, memorial, dallas, texas, information, about, memorial, london, john, kennedy, memorial, london, memorial, jerusalem, israel, kennedy, memorial, portland, oregon, portland, oregon, this, article, sectio. This article is about the JFK Memorial in Dallas Texas For information about the memorial in London see John F Kennedy Memorial London For the memorial in Jerusalem Israel see Yad Kennedy For the memorial in Portland Oregon see John Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial Portland Oregon This article or section contains close paraphrasing of a non free copyrighted source https www jfk org the assassination history of john f kennedy memorial plaza Copyvios report Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please improve this article by re writing it in your own words May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The John Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial is a monument to United States President John Fitzgerald Kennedy in the West End Historic District of downtown Dallas Texas USA erected in 1970 and designed by noted architect Philip Johnson John Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial PlazaJohn Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial in Dallas 2014 32 46 43 N 96 48 23 W 32 77861 N 96 80639 W 32 77861 96 80639 Coordinates 32 46 43 N 96 48 23 W 32 77861 N 96 80639 W 32 77861 96 80639LocationDallas TexasDesignerPhilip JohnsonTypeCenotaphMaterialConcrete and graniteLength50 ft 15 m Width50 ft 15 m Height30 ft 9 1 m Beginning date1969 1969 Opening dateJune 24 1970Restored date2000Dedicated toJohn F KennedyWebsiteOfficial websiteKennedy Memorial and PlazaU S National Historic Landmark DistrictContributing PropertyU S Historic districtContributing propertyDallas Landmark Historic DistrictContributing PropertyPart ofDealey Plaza Historic District 93001607 1 West End Historic District ID78002918 1 DLMKHD No H 2 West End HD Significant datesDesignated NHLDCPApril 19 1993Designated CPNovember 14 1978Designated DLMKHDOctober 6 1975 2 Graphs are temporarily unavailable due to technical issues Interactive fullscreen map Downtown Dallas and John Fitzgerald Kennedy Open space Presidential limousine Key locations 1 Dealey Plaza2 Texas School Book Depository3 John Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial4 The Grassy Knoll5 Assassination of John F Kennedy Contents 1 Design 1 1 Plaza 1 2 Cenotaph 1 3 Epitaph 2 History 2 1 Management 3 Critical reception 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Bibliography 6 External linksDesign EditThe John F Kennedy Memorial was the first memorial by famed American architect and Kennedy family friend Philip Johnson and was approved by Jacqueline Kennedy Johnson called it a place of quiet refuge an enclosed place of thought and contemplation separated from the city around but near the sky and earth 3 Dallas raised 200 000 for the memorial by August 1964 entirely from 50 000 individual donations contributed by private citizens 4 Plaza Edit The simple concrete memorial lies in the block bounded by Main Record Commerce and Market Streets approximately 200 yards 180 m east of Dealey Plaza where Kennedy was assassinated The block also known as the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial Plaza is in downtown Dallas near the Historic West End district is owned by Dallas County 5 6 Cenotaph Edit Philip Johnson s design is a cenotaph or empty tomb that symbolizes the freedom of Kennedy s spirit The memorial is a square roofless room 30 feet 9 1 m tall and 50 by 50 feet 15 by 15 m square with two narrow openings facing north and south The walls consist of 72 white precast concrete columns most of which end 29 inches 740 mm above the earth 7 Eight columns two in each corner extend to the ground acting as legs that support the monument 8 Each column ends in a light fixture At night the lights create the illusion that the structure is supported by the light itself The corners and doors of this roofless room are decorated with rows of concrete circles or medallions each identical and perfectly aligned These decorations introduce the circular shape into the square architecture of the Kennedy Memorial 7 The cenotaph lies atop a low concrete hill embossed with squares and slightly elevated compared to street level Inside is a low block of dark granite 8 feet 2 4 m square set into a larger shallow depression The granite square is decorated on its north and south faces with the name John Fitzgerald Kennedy carved in gold letters 9 It is too empty to be a base too short to be a table but too square to be a tomb The letters have been painted gold to capture the light from the white floating column walls and the pale concrete floor These words three words of a famous name are the only verbal messages in the empty room 7 Epitaph Edit Two dark granite squares are set in the plaza surrounding the memorial each approximately 50 feet 15 m from the narrow entrances to the cenotaph 9 They are each inscribed with an epitaph that reads The joy and excitement of John Fitzgerald Kennedy s life belonged to all men So did the pain and sorrow of his death When he died on November 22 1963 shock and agony touched human conscience throughout the world In Dallas Texas there was a special sorrow The young President died in Dallas The death bullets were fired 200 yards west of this site This memorial designed by Philip Johnson was erected by the people of Dallas Thousands of citizens contributed support money and effort It is not a memorial to the pain and sorrow of death but stands as a permanent tribute to the joy and excitement of one man s life John Fitzgerald Kennedy s life Jim Lehrer journalist 10 John F Kennedy Memorial Narrow openings north and south Inside the cenotaph Low granite square John Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial Plaza in January 2016 With visitors for scale Plaza and granite markerHistory EditDallas County Judge Lew Sterrett was credited as the first to propose a monument to Kennedy on November 24 1963 two days after the assassination 4 The concept became a formal proposal on December 2 when Sterrett formed the John F Kennedy Citizens Memorial Committee with Mayor Earle Cabell and two dozen prominent Dallas citizens 8 However other Dallas civic leaders including former mayor R L Thornton said the memorial was better placed in Washington D C attempting to distance Dallas from the infamy it had gained as the assassination site 4 The Committee solicited designs for a memorial after its formation 260 proposals were received within a week and 700 proposals were received by February 1964 8 On February 5 1964 the Committee led by W Dawson Sterling announced it had met for a fifth time to narrow down the proposals to three or four finalists 11 On February 22 1964 the Committee announced that two memorials would be created one at the John F Kennedy Library in Boston and another dignified and modest memorial near the assassination site 4 12 The location near the Old Red Courthouse was chosen in April 1964 4 The original location announced as the block bounded by Main Elm Record and Market Streets 13 was shifted to another plaza one block south bounded by Main Record Market and Commerce 14 Both plazas were owned by Dallas County and were being prepared as part of the new Dallas County Court House then under construction 13 By September the concept for the Kennedy Plaza included a green space with a modest marker 15 Committee member Stanley Marcus flew to New York and successfully asked Philip Johnson to take on the memorial design which he did for no fee Johnson s proposal model was shown to the Committee in December 1964 and the Committee formally announced the design on December 12 hoping to demolish the existing buildings and have the memorial ready by November 1968 the fifth anniversary of the assassination 4 An underground parking facility was built under the memorial site however and construction did not start until 1969 9 The Committee stated in June 1969 the memorial was being constructed for a reasonable fee and would be dedicated by January 1 1970 16 It was finally dedicated on June 24 1970 in a ceremony attended by 300 people 4 Sargent Shriver was the first Kennedy family member to visit the memorial in 1972 4 Management Edit The memorial was vandalized with graffiti in the spring of 1999 9 In mid 1999 The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza undertook management of the memorial rallying the support of Dallas County and the City of Dallas The Museum became caretaker of the monument and launched a full scale restoration project aimed at preserving the memorial and its history Philip Johnson the original architect for the monument guided the restoration process implemented by Corgan Associates Inc and Phoenix I Restoration and Construction Lt Numerous local suppliers donated the labor materials and equipment required to return the memorial to its original beauty In 2000 a panel of experts wrote an explanation of the memorial to satisfy the public 3 The monument attracts approximately 500 000 visitors annually 17 Critical reception EditSoon after the Kennedy Memorial was completed Gary Cartwright wrote in 1971 for The New York Times the memorial seems esthetically spare even forbidding true to the concept proposed by Johnson 14 In a 1999 interview with The Washington Post Johnson confirmed the concept I don t think it s sterile of course I love it The idea of going into an empty room with nothing to help you except to think about the slain president I think that s a very moving image 9 Cartwright also noted the memorial was erected after much delay by the city fathers of Dallas 14 Architectural critic Witold Rybczynski wrote in 2006 that the monument is poorly done likening its precast concrete slab walls to mammoth Lego blocks and commented that Kennedy deserved better than this 18 On the 50th anniversary of Kennedy s assassination Dallas Morning News architecture critic Mark Lamster called the monument a disappointing product of the city s ambivalent response to the events of November 1963 and said that Johnson lacked an animating vision that might have produced an inspiring design This in turn was compounded by a lack of experience 19 Lamster also noted the similarities between Johnson s design and the unrealized Neue Wache redesign proposal for a war memorial in Berlin created in 1930 by Mies van der Rohe 4 19 20 Los Angeles Times architecture critic Christopher Hawthorne echoed these prior criticisms in 2013 stating the memorial symbolizes the city s deep ambivalence about commemorating the assassination A spare cenotaph or open tomb designed to be built in marble it was instead cast in cheaper concrete And its location east of the assassination site suggested an effort to tuck the history of that day away 21 See also Edit National Register of Historic Places portal Texas portalFour Freedoms Park designed by Louis Kahn and compared to Johnson s Kennedy Memorial by The New York Times 22 List of memorials to John F Kennedy List of National Historic Landmarks in Texas National Register of Historic Places listings in Dallas County Texas List of Dallas Landmarks Presidential memorials in the United StatesReferences Edit a b National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service November 2 2013 Staff August 4 2016 West End Historic District PDF Department of Urban Planning City of Dallas p 3 Retrieved August 2 2018 a b John F Kennedy Memorial Plaza Marker hmdb org a b c d e f g h i Brown Greg Forever Changed The Architecture of Dallas Reframed by the Kennedy Assassination AIA Dallas Retrieved 14 May 2018 Bugliosi Vincent 2007 Epilogue Reclaiming History The Assassination of John F Kennedy Norton ISBN 978 0 393 04525 3 Glynn Simon 2004 John F Kennedy Memorial galinsky com Retrieved July 25 2016 a b c History of John F Kennedy Memorial Plaza The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza Retrieved 15 May 2018 a b c Fagin Stephen 2013 Assassination and Commemoration JFK Dallas and the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza Norman Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press pp 33 34 ISBN 978 0 8061 4358 3 Retrieved 15 May 2018 a b c d e Dallas to Clean Up Protect Deteriorating Memorial to JFK The Washington Post 28 November 1999 Retrieved 15 May 2018 Blumenthal Ralph 20 November 2003 Dallas Comes to Terms With the Day That Defined It The New York Times Retrieved 14 May 2018 Kennedy Memorial Sought in Dallas The New York Times 6 February 1964 Retrieved 15 May 2018 Dallas Citizens Propose Assassination Site Marker The New York Times UPI 23 February 1964 Retrieved 15 May 2018 a b Dallas Out PDF Associated Press wire AP 18 April 1964 Retrieved 15 May 2018 a b c Cartwright Gary 21 November 1971 The Site Of the Most Shocking Single Event Of Our Time The New York Times Retrieved 15 May 2018 A Kennedy Plaza Planned by Dallas On Full City Block The New York Times AP 8 September 1964 Retrieved 15 May 2018 Dallas Kennedy Monument Promised by First of Year The New York Times AP 22 June 1969 Retrieved 15 May 2018 National News Briefs The Kennedy Memorial In Dallas Is Vandalized The New York Times The Associated Press 5 April 1999 Retrieved 14 May 2018 Rybczynski Witold 2006 02 15 The Interpreter Slate Washington Post Newsweek Interactive Co Retrieved 2008 04 06 a b Lamster Mark 16 November 2013 Why Dallas current JFK memorial doesn t befit the dignity of Kennedy The Dallas Morning News Retrieved 14 May 2018 Schulze Franz Windhorst Edward 2012 Mies van der Rohe A Critical Biography New and Revised Edition Chicago Illinois The University of Chicago Press pp 137 138 ISBN 978 0 226 75600 4 Retrieved 14 May 2018 Hawthorne Christopher 25 October 2013 Dealey Plaza A place Dallas has long tried to avoid and forget Los Angeles Times Retrieved 14 May 2018 Kimmelman Michael 12 September 2012 Decades Later a Vision Survives The New York Times Retrieved 15 May 2018 Bibliography Edit Lord Philip April 14 2003 JFK A amp E Biography DK Publishing p 160 ISBN 978 0 7894 9316 3 Brosio M D 2016 The JFK Memorial and Power in America Createspace Publishing ISBN 1492861871 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial Remembering the Kennedy Memorial JFK Memorial Plaza Marker JFK Memorial Fagin Stephen 24 June 2016 OTD in 1970 The dedication of the often misunderstood John F Kennedy Memorial The Blog at Dealey Plaza Retrieved 14 May 2018 Bosse Paula 14 February 2014 Where to Put That JFK Memorial 1964 Flashback Dallas Retrieved 14 May 2018 Heid Jason 13 November 2013 Ghosts of Dallas Kennedy Memorial 1970 D Magazine Retrieved 14 May 2018 John F Kennedy Memorial Plaza American Heritage Retrieved 14 May 2018 Sullivan Mary Kennedy Memorial Bluffton University Retrieved 15 May 2018 Safford Brandon 15 June 2009 Historic Dallas Part 1 JFK Memorial Plaza I Dream of Architecture Retrieved 15 May 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial amp oldid 1146676508, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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