Skip to main content

George Christian film

Object number2008.016.0001
Date11/25/1963
ClassificationsFilms
Photographer Dr. George Christian
ObjectFilm, 8mm
Credit LineGeorge and Nancy Christian Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza
MediumFilm
DimensionsGauge: 8mm; Camera Speed: 18 fps
Collections
DescriptionOriginal 8mm color home movie of President Kennedy's funeral procession in Washington, D. C. shot by Dr. George Christian. The movie shows the White House and Treasury Department buildings on November 25, 1963, the day of President Kennedy's funeral. Then, on Pennsylvania Avenue near what is now Freedom Park, Christian caught the funeral cortege as it proceeded to Arlington National Cemetery. Near the front of the funeral cortege, behind the president's casket, came the symbolic "riderless horse," Black Jack, followed by members of the Kennedy family in cars. Similar scenes appeared on live TV, but only as black and white images.
Curatorial Commentary
Dr. George Christian was a private assigned to US Army Intelligence at the Pentagon in 1963. He recorded an oral history with The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza on October 28, 2008. - Stephen Fagin, Curator
Part of this film was incorporated into the video content of the Museum's temporary exhibit, "Mourning a President," about the funeral and mourning rites for President John F. Kennedy. The exhibit was open on the Museum's seventh floor from November 17, 2017 to February 19, 2018. -- Lindsey Richardson, Curator of Collections
Adam Peiperl film
Adam Peiperl
November 1960 - January 1961
John T. Martin film
John T. Martin
August 1963
Schmidt film
Schmidt
10/22/1960
Pat Sanders Film
Pat Sanders
11/22/1963
Keith Griffith film
Keith Griffith
11/22/1963
Charles L. Bronson film
Charles L. Bronson
11/22/1963 - 11/23/1963
George Reid film(s)
George Reid
1963 - 1967
Abraham Zapruder film
Abraham Zapruder
11/22/1963
Robert Hughes film
Robert J. E. Hughes
11/22/1963
Frank Marotta Film
Frank Marotta
11/22/1963 - 11/22/1964
Tower Varizoom 8mm movie camera
Tina Towner Pender
circa 1960