The first truly memorable president from childhood
was John F. Kennedy. Dwight Eisenhower was
president when I was born and through those first school years, but other than
looking at his bland and smiling picture in our classroom on a daily basis, we were
clueless about him, except that he had big fish-like lips and looked like
someone’s benevolent grandfather.
Ike was actually “up there”, but we were far too
young to appreciate him. He was the hero
of many of our parents. Ike was the most
illustrious military commander of WW2, including Operation Overlord and the
Normandy Invasion. During his
presidency, he was responsible for the building of our national highway
infrastructure, which cut road trips in half as potholed and miserable state
roads were replaced with new federally funded highways. Ike had some roots in San Antonio too. As a young officer, he was stationed at Fort
Sam Houston and met wife Mamie there too, whose well-off family summered in an
impressive columned house on McCullough Avenue.
But it was John F. Kennedy who caught all of our
attention when he was elected in 1960. This
was far before all of the dark corners of his presidency were gradually
revealed. We children too fell victim to
his charisma, especially his lovely family and children. There were coloring books about Caroline
Kennedy and her princess existence in the White House. Who else got to keep a pony at the White
House and ride it whenever she wanted?
My thoroughly Baptist parents did not care for the Catholic Kennedys,
but that didn’t stop us from poring over every word that was written about them
in our Weekly Readers. They
ranked up there with the astronauts John Glenn, Alan Shepard and Eugene
Cerna.
The assassination was an experience that was
seared into our generation. John F.
Kennedy and Jackie had been to San Antonio (and Houston) just a few days before
Dallas and many classmates (especially the Catholics) had been taken out of
school so that they could see the local motorcade, or watch him fly into the
airport. Several even got to shake his
hand and vowed they would never wash the hand that had touched JFK. They were over the moon. When the shooting actually occurred, we were
all at recess. We had lined up to come
in, and when we entered the classroom, TVs had been rolled into the classrooms
and they were on. The TVs were NEVER on
(except for Senorita Barrera). As we sat
at our desks, the drama unfolded. It was
about 12:15 or so. He was still alive,
but in the Parkland Hospital. Our
teachers were absolutely silent, gathered in groups in front of the TV. We sat
ignored and unattended at our desks. I remember praying that he would live. That was what you did, right? But I also knew in my heart that praying
would be useless. When his death was
announced a few minutes later, a black cloud descended on us all and did not
fade for a long time. The TVs were turned
off. Stunned, we somehow muddled through
the rest of the afternoon. We did school
work. No one offered us a word or
comfort to help us come to terms with our shock and grief. What did we need that for? We would get over it. Get
out your books. There’s work to be
done. My walk back to my father’s barber
shop was slow and thoughtful. He was
waiting for me outside, unaware that I already knew everything. When I saw him, I cried for the first
time. Over those dreadful next few days,
I found my mother crying also. My mother
never cried. She was a strong woman, but
the horrors of November 23rd, and the shooting of Lee Harvey Oswald
on national television a few days later did her in.
It did all of us in.
For the next few months, the news media was full
of the tall, lanky Texan who found himself thrust unexpectedly into the U.S.
presidency. Lyndon B. Johnson, nicknamed
“Colonel Cornpone” by Jackie Kennedy, was a consummate politician and
wheeler-dealer, and probably one of the
most powerful and effective presidents who ever sat the White House. LBJ was the president who pushed Kennedy’s civil
rights bill on down the throats of Congress and instituted social reforms such
as medicare that would sweep the nation.
It was a shame that he was mostly unappreciated during his time. A lot of that had to do with the fact that he
was thrust into the shoes of John F. Kennedy.
No two presidents could have been less similar. A former school teacher who appeared out of
nowhere to enter the Texas and national political scene, he will be forever
remembered as the president who allowed the Vietnam War to become a
conflagration that raged out of control all through the 60s, and it would crush
both the nation and him. The pity of it
was that he had not even started the Vietnam War. For us, he was always a Texan, a hill country
boy and one of us. LBJ was loud, vulgar
and often crude, but he was a force of nature.
He remained our president until high school.
1 comment:
I lived on base in El Paso when John Kennedy was shot. I remember watching his motorcade go through Ft.Bliss before he went on to SanAntonio and Dallas. I seem to remember being at lunch in the cafeteria drinking our milk in those little glass bottles with the pog tops. So many of us were crying, and as you say I don't remember any adults trying to help us understand or come to terms. Is this just the way kids remember? We were so innocent, the idea of this head of our country being assassinated was unfathomable to this little girl. We had several days off from school as National Days of mourning. Maybe that was just military base schools. For days television was filled with news of the event, the funeral, and of course Lee Harvey Oswald and Sirhan Sirhan.
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