November 22, 1963 – remembered like it was yesterday.

As I glanced at today’s date this morning, it transported me 60 years back to the afternoon of November 22, 1963.

I was in 12th grade, seated about two-thirds of the way back in Miss Allison‘s French class at Central Collegiate in London, Ontario.

Suddenly, the vice principal interrupted the class with an announcement emanating from the big, square, beige intercom on the wall at the front of the room.

“President John F. Kennedy has been shot in Dallas, Texas.”

The class was stunned into silent, wide-eyed shock.

It wasn’t until classes ended an hour later that we learned Kennedy had succumbed to his injuries. I remember walking home up Waterloo Street, kind of dumbfounded.

That dreary November weekend became a vigil, spent watching Walter Cronkite give solemn updates on an old black-and-white console television in my grandparents’ living room.

President Johnson being immediately sworn in as President in the back of a plane when Kennedy was pronounced dead.
  • Images of L.B. Johnson being sworn in as president in the back of a plane, while Jackie Kennedy, the new widow, wore a pink, blood-spattered suit, looking on.

  • The subsequent arrest of Lee Harvey Oswald and watching as he is fatally shot by Jack Ruby on live TV that Sunday morning while he was being transferred from a courthouse to jail.

  • The sound of drums throughout the next week in Kennedy’s funeral cortège.
  • Little John-John saluting as his father’s coffin passes.

Two things strike me about these flashbacks.

First, it’s amazing how vivid and detailed 60-year-old memories can be, especially as I increasingly find moments when I struggle for a few minutes to remember the name of someone I should know well.

Secondly, it makes me feel old — to have been “present” for a historical event most people now read about in history books. How many of you clearly remember JFK or that fateful November day 60 years ago?

I know I have some high school friends whom I still keep in touch with that will share these memories.

Do you have news events similarly etched indelibly into your long-term memory? What was the first striking news event you recall?

London Central Secondary School.

This reminiscence also got me searching for a 1963-64 night school yearbook that I knew I had packed away somewhere.

Here are a couple of photo memories I extracted from the yearbook. The first is a photo of my home room Grade 12-6 class in 1993. Can you find me? Can you find you?

The Grade 12-6 class at Central in 1963

The second is of me rehearsing for the part of Mr Spettigue in the annual school show which was “Girl Crazy” that year. I played the part of a rich old letch … who danced, apparently.

I also found several pages of autographs in the back to the yearbook. Two stood out.

One from a girl i didn’t really know well. It read “Hi John, I hope that you are in my chemistry class again next year so that you can talk all through it.” Some things never change. My chemistry teacher (Art F) also signed the book…on a different page.

Another was from my math teacher who somewhat snarkily wrote ” Hope your mark is where it should be this time.” Always a bit of a curse to be someone with “potential”.

4 thoughts on “November 22, 1963 – remembered like it was yesterday.

  1. Yes I remember the Kennedy shooting well and the related events. At the time it had significant impact on us. But I also vividly remember when Buddy Holly, Richie Valens and the Big Bopper were killed in the plane crash. The word of this spread quickly in our hallways at school.

    • t is remarkable how vivid memories can be. I also remember the day that Marilyn Monroe was found dead. Not that I was a big Marilyn Monroe fan but it was news that that startled everyone. Like Michael Jackson’s death…or Princess Diana,

  2. I too was in high school on this historical day and was with many others in the boy’s gym, writing a Geometry exam. At the finish time, Mr. Coombes said, “Pens down now. The latest news is that President Kennedy is dead, by assassination. Put your exam in the box on your way out” All of us left, very quiet and somewhat stunned. In the days ahead we experienced the same events that you mention, John, on our black and white TVs.

    On November 22, 2010, my daughter, Jane, gave birth to boy/girl twins, and they called their son, Simon and their daughter, Clare. They resisted the suggestion from many, to name one of them Kennedy. The twins are 13 today, which along with the vivid memories of the assassination, make me realize how fast time moves and how old I must be.

    • No cell phones, no Internet, no laptops, no computers, just the good old black-and-white console TV, often a focal point in the living room. And TV dinners eaten off a foldable TV tray.

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