8 Touching Details From John F. Kennedy’s Funeral
JFK’s body was carried in a special horse-drawn cart
A caisson carriage was used to transport President Kennedy’s body from the Capitol Rotunda to his funerary service at St. Matthew’s Cathedral and then to Arlington National Cemetery, where the president was interred. A caisson carriage was originally designed to carry artillery ammunition, and, when necessary, to transport the wounded or dead from the battlefield. Today, caissons are used primarily during the funerary procession for individuals who receive full military funeral honors – something that every US president is entitled to.
The caisson used in President Kennedy’s funerary procession has an interesting history of its own. It also once carried the remains of President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1945, and the Unknown Soldier in 1921.
The Black Watch performed for JFK just days before he was killed
On November 13, 1963, President Kennedy watched the Royal Highland Black Watch Regiment perform on the lawns of the White House. Nine days after their performance, President Kennedy was assassinated. The Black Watch was still in the United States when Jackie Kennedy reached out to them, asking if they would take part in the funeral.
Mrs. Kennedy wanted the Black Watch to play at the funeral because their performance on the White House lawn was the last time she had seen her husband happy and playing with their children.
LBJ declared a national day of mourning
After President Kennedy was assassinated, his Vice President, Lyndon B. Johnson, took office as the President of the United States. One of his first acts as president was to declare Monday, November 25, 1963, a national day of mourning to allow Americans to watch the funeral procession.
This day of mourning allowed for 41.5 million households in the United States alone to watch the funeral on TV, and an additional 800,000 people to gather in Washington D.C. to view the funerary procession in person.
JFK Jr. perfected his salute just in time
Arguably the most famous photo to come from President Kennedy’s funeral was that of his son John F. Kennedy Jr. saluting his father’s casket. According to Jackie Kennedy’s former secret service agent, Clint Hill, JFK Jr. had been practicing his proper military salute for months. He accompanied his father on a visit to the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery to do so.
JFK Jr. struggled to remember the proper military salute, as he was inclined to use his left hand. However, on the day of the funeral, Hill said that Secret Service agents were trying to keep JFK Jr. occupied, so they once again began working with him on the military salute. A Marine colonel taught the child the proper hand technique, just as his father’s casket passed by. JFK Jr. was able to properly salute his father for the last time.
Jackie Kennedy requested two priests stay with JFK’s body
John F. Kennedy was America’s first Catholic president. When the president’s body first arrived back in Washington, it was put in the White House East Room. Jackie Kennedy asked two Catholic priests to stay with him and pray over his body until it was relocated to the US capitol the following day.
Jackie Kennedy modeled JFK’s funeral after Abraham Lincoln’s
There are many similarities between Abraham Lincoln and John F. Kennedy. They were elected presidents one hundred years apart, were both concerned with Civil Rights, and were both assassinated while in office. Mrs. Kennedy modeled a number of similarities between John F. Kennedy’s funeral and Abraham Lincoln’s funeral.
The lying-in-state of Kennedy’s body in the Rotunda was modeled after Lincoln in 1865. Similarly, the catafalque that covered Abraham Lincoln’s coffin was brought out of storage and used again to display JFK’s casket. Jackie Kennedy’s insistence to walk behind her husband’s casket during the funeral procession was also a nod to Abraham Lincoln.
Two formers United States presidents attended the service
Dignitaries from 92 countries around the world attended JFK’s funeral to pay their respects, making it the largest gathering of foreign statesmen in the United States at this time. Former presidents Dwight Eisenhower and Harry Truman also attended President Kennedy’s funeral service, as it is customary for all former living presidents to attend the funeral of American presidents.
Supposedly, Eisenhower and Truman had a frosty relationship, but apparently patched things up at President Kennedy’s funeral. During the funeral, the former presidents rode together from St. Matthews Cathedral to Arlington National Cemetery.
A riderless horse followed the funerary procession
One of the most haunting parts of President Kennedy’s funeral was the sound of the horse hooves keeping time as the funerary procession moved towards Arlington Cemetery. This sound came from a riderless horse named Black Jack – named after General John “Black Jack” Pershing, who followed the procession.
The riderless horse carried a pair of boots reversed in the stirrups. This is an ancient funerary motif that dates back to the time of Genghis Khan. It is meant to symbolize and commemorate a leader lost in battle. Prior to President Kennedy’s funeral, a riderless horse had been used to commemorate the death of President Roosevelt eighteen years earlier.