JFK, As I
Remember Him
Written and Photographed by
Tony Zappone
Tony
Zappone was only 16 when John F. Kennedy arrived in Tampa for an afternoon four
days prior to his assassination.
(Story and Photos
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No visit to Tampa by any president since has stirred as much excitement and emotion as that of John Fitzgerald Kennedy on the third Monday of November, 1963. Four days later, he was no longer our president…the victim of an assassin’s bullet.
For several weeks, the people of the "Cigar City" eagerly awaited the visit of the young 35th President of the United States. Welcome banners were made and Secret Service agents scouted his motorcade routes and the areas in and around his scheduled stops. Special phone lines were installed for direct communication with the White House and other critical government offices.
School officials made plans to allow children to leave classes for a glimpse of the leader of the free world as he passed along in his motorcade and at several of his public stops. A memo came down from the Superintendent of Public Schools that students who brought a note from their parents could be dismissed from school at noon to view the motorcade downtown or see the President at Al Lopez Field.I was in the 11th
grade at Jefferson High School and one of the many young people who raced
home each Wednesday to catch his regular press conference broadcast live from
the old State Department Auditorium. Tuning in to watch that
part of the President's week in real time became a ritual for me.
Not many my age knew much about the issues he would address during each
session, but we
were mesmerized by his charisma, style, sense of humor, friendliness and
statesmanship.
For security reasons, his Tampa visit wasn’t
publicly announced too much in advance but once I found out
about it I raced to the coordinators at the Greater Tampa Chamber of Commerce.
I already knew Jim Metcalfe, one of the big wigs there, but he said I
still had to be representing
some legitimate organization to get press credentials.
So, Miss Alexine Allen, my journalism teacher, signed a letter stating I
would be representing the school paper and yearbook.
Back in 1963 that was enough. I
got my “all areas” press badge which hung around my neck.
It also gave me permission to leave school for the entire day…on
“official business.”