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Letter sent to Jack Ruby at Parkland Hospital
Letter sent to Jack Ruby at Parkland Hospital

Letter sent to Jack Ruby at Parkland Hospital

Object number2004.008.0026
Date12/21/1966
ClassificationsDocuments
ObjectLetter
Credit LineAl Maddox Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza
MediumPaper
Dimensions11 x 8 1/2 in. (27.9 x 21.6 cm)
DescriptionTyped letter addressed to Jack Ruby. A widely distributed December 1966 news story reporting that Jack Ruby had been diagnosed with cancer at Parkland Hospital inspired a flood of letters, telegrams and postcards from people around the world. In a letter written on business stationery, Harry Germanow from Rochester, New York, called the shooting of Lee Harvey Oswald "a noble act," which he would have done had he been in Ruby's position.
Curatorial Commentary

According to the donor of this letter, former Dallas County deputy sheriff Al Maddox, Jack Ruby began receiving letters and telegrams immediately after the shooting of Lee Harvey Oswald on November 24, 1963. Letters continued to arrive on a regular basis until just after Jack Ruby's death at Parkland Memorial Hospital on January 3, 1967.

Maddox recalled that within twenty-four hours of the Oswald shooting, Ruby had already received 98 letters; most were congratulatory, while only four specifically criticized his act of violence. After that, remembered Al Maddox, "He'd get a hundred a day. It was nothing to get a hundred a day--85, 90 letters a day." - Stephen Fagin, Curator