Dallas Municipal Archives - 1,864 Matching Results

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[Supplementary Offense Report, November 24, 1963, #1]
Supplementary Offense Report concerning the slug removed from the body of Lee Harvey Oswald.
[Supplementary Offense Report, November 24, 1963, #2]
Supplementary Offense Report concerning the slug removed from the body of Lee Harvey Oswald.
[Supplementary Offense report regarding the murder of President John F. Kennedy]
Supplementary Offense Report clearing the murder of President John F. Kennedy with the arrest of Lee Harvey Oswald.
[Table of Contents for Documents in Notebooks Pertaining to the John F. Kennedy Assassination]
Table of contents for documents placed in notebooks. They are listed alphabetically by name and subject.
[Table of Contents, listing affidavits by person]
Table of contents listing affidavits by person.
[Telegram to Dallas Police Chief Regarding Raymond Hamilton]
Telegram to the Dallas Chief of Police inquiring as to whether Raymond Hamilton and "three others" are wanted for murder in the recipient's city or state.
[Telegram to Mrs. Lee Oswald from N. L. Kellogg, November 24, 1963]
Telegram to Mrs. Lee Oswald from N. L. Kellogg with a money order for $10.00.
[Telegram to Mrs. Lee Oswald - N. L. Kellogg, November 24, 1963]
Telegram sent to Mrs. Lee Oswald by an unknown author, expressing sympathy for Lee Harvey Oswald.
[Telegrams from Citizens to Jack Ruby]
Telegrams from multiple citizens to Jack Ruby, many of which congratulate him for shooting Lee Harvey Oswald.
[Telegrams to Lee Harvey Oswald and his mother]
Telegram sent to Lee Harvey Oswald's mother by Mrs. Sam Harris, Jr. offering her sympathies, on November 25, 1963. Second telegram sent to Lee Harvey Oswald on November 23, 1963 by Joseph Naylor.
[Telegrams to Lee Harvey Oswald, November 23 & 24, 1963]
Telegrams sent to Lee Harvey Oswald, the first by Ann Leigh containing a verse from the Bible on November 24, 1963. The second is by H. McDermid offering Oswald counsel, on November 23, 1963.
[Telegrams to Lee Harvey Oswald, November 23, 1963]
Telegrams sent to Lee Harvey Oswald on November 23, 1963.
[Telegraph to Dallas Police Department - 12/09/1932]
Telegraph to the Dallas Police Department informing them of the arrest of Raymond Hamilton and J. C. Clark alias Dunn in Bay City, Michigan. J. C. Clark was suspected to be Clyde Barrow.
[Telex Communication regarding Ann Moore and Jack Ruby]
Telex Communication by an unknown author from the Michigan Police Department, regarding Ann Moore and Jack Ruby.
[Texas Department of Public Safety Arrest Record for Floyd Hamilton, 1934 - 1958]
Department of Public Safety arrest record for Floyd Garland Hamilton dating from 1934 to 1958.
[Toxicology Report on Lee Harvey Oswald]
Toxicology Report on Lee Harvey Oswald, by an unknown author. The report found Oswald negative.
[Transcript of the Interrogation of Curtis Leonard Warner - February 2, 1964]
Transcript of the Interrogation of Curtis Leonard Warner.
[Transcript of the Interrogation of Eva Grant - December 17, 1963]
Transcript of the interrogation of Eva Grant.
[Transcript of the Interrogation of Karen Lynn Bennett, aka "Little Lynn"]
Transcript of the interrogation of Karen Lynn Bennet, aka Little Lynn, a stripper at Jack Ruby's Carousel Club.
[Transcript of the Interrogation of Samuel Ruby - December 12, 1963]
Transcript of the interrogation of Samuel Ruby.
[Twelve Photocopied Telegrams]
Twelve photocopied telegrams sent to Lee Harvey Oswald.
[Typed excerpt from recording of an interview with Chief J. E. Curry]
Typed note by an unknown author of an excerpt from the recording of an interview by KRLD-TV with Chief J. E. Curry, concerning the transfer of Lee Harvey Oswald.
[Typed illegible note]
Photocopy of an illegible note typed on a card.
[Typed note by an unknown author]
Typed note by an unknown author with the words "9 arrests" on the front.
[Typed Note by Bill Decker]
Typed note by Bill Decker, concerning the receipt of telegrams for Jack Ruby.
[Typed Note Concerning The Arraignment of Jack Ruby, November 24, 1963]
Typed noted by an unknown author concerning the arraignment of Jack Ruby for Lee Harvey Oswald's Murder
[Typescript arrest report for Candy Barr]
Two pages of typescript from the arrest report for Candy Barr. The first page details previous arrests. The second page includes her fingerprints and physical description.
[United States Treasury Department identification card for Harlis Jackson]
Photocopy of a United States Treasury Department identification card for Harlis Jackson.
[V. D. Monaghen Report on Officer's Duties in Regards to the President's Murder - #801, #1]
Report on officer's duties in regards to the President's murder.
[V. D. Monaghen Report on Officer's Duties in Regards to the President's Murder - #801, #2]
Report on officer's duties in regards to the President's murder.
[V. D. Monaghen Report on Officer's Duties in Regards to the President's Murder - #801, #3]
Report on officer's duties in regards to the President's murder.
[V. D. Monaghen Report on Officer's Duties in Regards to the President's Murder - #801, #4]
Report on officer's duties in regards to the President's murder.
[Voluntary Statement by Amos Lee Euins #1]
Voluntary statement by Amos Lee Euins as a witness in Dealey Plaza. Euins states that he attends Franklin D. Roosevelt High School and is in the 9th grade. After watching the President drive by in the motorcade he heard a gunshot and saw a man in the window of the Texas School Book Depository with a rifle.
[Voluntary Statement by Amos Lee Euins #2]
Voluntary statement by Amos Lee Euins as a witness in Dealey Plaza. Euins states that he attends Franklin D. Roosevelt High School and is in the 9th grade. After watching the President drive by in the motorcade he heard a gunshot and saw a man in the window of the Texas School Book Depository with a rifle.
[Voluntary Statement by Arnold Louis Rowland #1]
Voluntary statement by Arnold Louis Rowland, a witness in Dealey Plaza. He states that he noticed a man in the window of the Texas School Book Depository with a rifle pointed towards the road before the motorcade passed by Dealey Plaza. About 15 minutes later the President passed in front of him and he heard three gunshots.
[Voluntary Statement by Arnold Louis Rowland #2]
Voluntary statement by Arnold Louis Rowland, a witness in Dealey Plaza. He states that he noticed a man in the window of the Texas School Book Depository with a rifle pointed towards the road before the motorcade passed by Dealey Plaza. About 15 minutes later the President passed in front of him and he heard three gunshots.
[Voluntary Statement by Austin Lawrence Miller #1]
Voluntary statement by Austin Lawrence Miller, a witness on top of the triple underpass. Miller describes watching the motorcade proceed to the underpass when he heard gunshots and saw smoke coming from a group of trees.
[Voluntary Statement by Austin Lawrence Miller #2]
Voluntary statement by Austin Lawrence Miller, a witness on top of the triple underpass. Miller describes watching the motorcade proceed to the underpass when he heard gunshots and saw smoke coming from a group of trees.
[Voluntary Statement by Barbara Walker Rowland #1]
Voluntary statement by Barbara Walker Rowland, a witness in Dealey Plaza. She states that her husband Arnold Louis Rowland pointed out a man in a window of the Texas School Book Depository holding a rifle, but she could not see him.
[Voluntary Statement by Barbara Walker Rowland #2]
Voluntary statement by Barbara Walker Rowland, a witness in Dealey Plaza. She states that her husband Arnold Louis Rowland pointed out a man in a window of the Texas School Book Depository holding a rifle, but she could not see him.
[Voluntary Statement by Charles Hester #1]
Voluntary statement by Charles Hester, a witness in Dealey Plaza. He states that he was sitting on the grass on Elm Street when he heard gunshots that sounded like they came from the Texas School Book Depository.
[Voluntary Statement by Charles Hester #2]
Voluntary statement by Charles Hester, a witness in Dealey Plaza. He states that he was sitting on the grass on the Elm Street when he heard gunshots that sounded like they came from the Texas School Book Depository.
[Voluntary Statement by Emmett Joseph Hudson #1]
Voluntary statement by Emmett Joseph Hudson as a witness in Dealey Plaza. He states that as the President went by him in the parade he heard multiple gunshots that came from above as well as behind him.
[Voluntary Statement by Emmett Joseph Hudson #2]
Voluntary statement by Emmett Joseph Hudson as a witness in Dealey Plaza. He states that as the President went by him in the parade he heard multiple gunshots that came from above as well as behind him.
[Voluntary Statement by Ernest Jay Owens #1]
Voluntary statement by Ernest Jay Owens regarding a man he saw on Wood Street by Good-Lattimer Expressway on the day of the assassination. He states that the man was carrying a rifle and that he had never seen him before.
[Voluntary Statement by Ernest Jay Owens #2]
Voluntary statement by Ernest Jay Owens regarding a man he saw on Wood Street by Good-Lattimer Expressway on the day of the assassination. He states that the man was carrying a rifle and that he had never seen him before.
[Voluntary Statement by Gayle Newman #1]
Voluntary statement by Gayle Newman, a witness in Dealey Plaza. Newman states that he was about ten feet away from the President's car when he heard gunshots and saw him slump over.
[Voluntary Statement by Gayle Newman #2]
Voluntary statement by Gayle Newman, a witness in Dealey Plaza. Newman states that he was about ten feet away from the President's car when he heard gunshots and saw him slump over.
[Voluntary Statement by Howard Leslie Brennan]
Voluntary statement by Howard Leslie Brennan regarding a man with a rifle in a window. Brennan states that he was working in the Katy Railroad yards when he went to the intersection of Houston Street and Elm Street to watch the President. He noticed a man in the window of a building before the motorcade came through, and after hearing gunshots he saw the man with a rifle aiming towards the President.
[Voluntary Statement by Hugh William Betzner, Jr.]
Voluntary statement made by Hugh William Betzner, Jr. as a witness in Dealey Plaza. He describes watching the President's car pass by and then hearing gunshots that he believed came from behind a wooden fence.
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