James F. Chambers, Jr. Oral History
Mr. Chambers passed away on September 21, 2006. His October 1961 visit to the White House to participate in a presidential luncheon with national newspaper publishers proved to be an important moment in shaping the national perception of Dallas before and immediately after the Kennedy assassination.
During the luncheon, E.M. "Ted" Dealey, conservative publisher of The Dallas Morning News and a vocal critic of the Kennedy administration, openly insulted the president, insisting that the United States needed "a man on horseback" rather than someone "riding Caroline's tricycle," referring to the president's young daughter. Times Herald publisher Jim Chambers immediately apologized to the president, and the event garnered brief national news attention and an editorial battle between the two Dallas papers during the following weeks. The event, though largely insignificant, did help to expose the political divisions of Dallas in the early 1960s and was one of several isolated incidents mentioned by the national news media following the Kennedy assassination. - Stephen Fagin, Curator