Jump to content

Lee Harvey Oswald

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Gamaliel (talk | contribs) at 02:00, 16 July 2004 (burial). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Lee Harvey Oswald (October 18, 1939 - November 24, 1963) was the assassin of U. S. President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963, according to government inquiries into the assassination. Critics of the official account have claimed that Oswald did not act alone or was not involved at all and was framed.


This photo, which shows Oswald with a rifle, handgun, and Belgrade daily newspaper Politika, was taken on March 31, 1963 by his wife Marina. The Warren Commission labeled the photo as exhibit 133-A. Since Oswald's death, there have been questions on the photo's authenticity. The House Select Committee on Assassinations

in the 1970s concluded that the photo was real.

Early life and Marine Corps service

Oswald was born in New Orleans, Louisiana. His father, Robert Edward Lee Oswald, died before he was born, and his mother Marguerite raised him and his two older siblings, his brother Robert and his stepbrother John Pic, Marguerite’s child by her first marriage. Her mother doted on him to excess, but despite this she was a domineering and quarrelsome woman and all three of her children entered the US armed forces, perhaps to escape her influence. They lived an itinerant lifestyle; before the age of 18, Oswald had lived in 22 different residences and attended 12 different schools, mostly around New Orleans and Dallas.

Oswald was a withdrawn and temperamental child. After they moved in with John Pic, who had joined the US Coast Guard and was stationed in New York City, Oswald struck and pulled a knife on his mother. His truancy caused him to be evaluated by a psychiatrist, who diagnosed the 14 year old Oswald as having a "personality pattern disturbance with schizoid features and passive-aggressive tendencies." Marguerite fled back south with her son before he could be institutionalized.

When he was enrolled in school, Oswald attended infrequently. He never received a high school diploma and was for his entire life a quite terrible speller, and his letters and diary have led some to speculate he was dyslexic. Despite this, he read voraciously and as a result thought he was better educated than those around him. Starting at around age 15, he became an ardent communist, solely from his reading on the topic. Despite his communism, Oswald was eager to become a US Marine. He idolized his older brother Robert and wore Robert’s Marine ring constantly. This relationship overrode the obvious ideological conflict for Oswald, and he also may have wanted to escape from his mother. He enlisted in 1956, a week after his seventeenth birthday.

Oswald was trained as a radar operator and assigned to Atsugi, Japan. Though Atsugi was the base for the U-2 spy planes which flew over the USSR, Oswald was not involved in that operation. Oswald’s experience in the Marine Corps was unpleasant. Small and frail compared to the other Marines, he was nicknamed “Ozzie Rabbit”. His meekness and his communism did not endear him to his compatriots, and the more ostracized he was, the more ardent and outspoken a communist he became, to the point where his nickname became “Oswaldskovich”. He subscribed to The Worker and taught himself rudimentary Russian. Oswald was court martialed twice, for shooting himself accidentally with a .22 derringer and for starting a fight with a sergeant. As a result, he lost his promotion to corporal and served time in the brig. He was not punished for another incident in which he broke down and started firing his rifle into the woods. By the end of his Marine career, he was doing menial labor.

The Soviet Union

Oswald's 1959 trip to the USSR was well planned. In addition to his studies of Russian, he saved his Marine Corps salary, he got an early discharge by claiming he needed to care for his mother (a lie), and submitted several falsified applications to universities to aid in his quest to get a student visa. After entering the Soviet Union as part of a package tour, he declared that he wished to defect. Initially, his effort was encouraged, though as he was of little value to the USSR, his application was rejected. A despondent Oswald attempted suicide by slashing his left wrist in his hotel bathtub. Fearing an international incident should Oswald attempt suicide again, Oswald was eventually allowed to stay and shipped off to Minsk, where he was kept under nearly constant surveillance during his stay in the country. The Minsk KGB had never had their own American case and they threw themselves into the task with gusto, the result being the lengthy KGB file no. 31451, a day by day account of Oswald's life.

Initially, Oswald seem to thrive. He had a job as a metalworker at the Belorussian Radio and Television Factory and his own rent free apartment and monetary subsidies, an idyllic existence by middle class standards. He was called "Alek" by his friends, who thought "Lee" was too Chinese. He bought a shotgun and went hunting with friends and dated women he met at trade union dances. However, Oswald tired of his life. The bureaucracy of the Soviet Union eventually caused Oswald to believe the country was a poorly implemented perversion of Marxist goals and believed himself to be a pure Marxist. He grew bored with the limited recreation that Minsk offered and was stunned when a co-worker he proposed to, Ella Germann, rejected him.

At a dance, Oswald met Marina Prusakova, a 19 year old pharmacology student. The were married less than a month and a half later. It was not the ideal basis for such a union, as Oswald was on the rebound from Ella and Marina, some believe, married Oswald for his standard of living (his own apartment, etc.) or in order to immigrate to America. "Maybe I was not in love with Alik as I ought to have been," she admits. Marina also soon became pregnant, and gave birth to a daughter, June. Oswald renounced his renunciation of American citizenship, and after nearly a year of paperwork and waiting, the family left the USSR on June 1, 1962.

Dallas

Back in the United States, the Oswald family settled in the Dallas/Fort Worth area. Oswald attempted to write a memoir and commentary on Soviet life, a small manuscript called The Collective. Oswald soon abandoned the idea, but searching for feedback did put him in touch with the area's close-knit community of Russian émigrés. They merely tolerated Oswald, but they took to Marina, feeling sorry for her because she was in a foreign country with no knowledge of English, which Oswald refused to teach her, and because Oswald had begun to beat her. They eventually abandoned Marina, however, because she would not leave Oswald. From this group, Oswald found an unlikely best friend, the outrageous oil geologist Baron George de Mohrenschildt. Perhaps they took to each other because they were polar opposites, or perhaps de Mohrenschildt, who liked playing the provocateur, enjoyed putting people off with the disagreeable and sullen Marxist Oswald. Marina also befriended a Quaker couple, Ruth and Michael Paine.

In Dallas, Oswald worked for the Leslie Welding Company, but abandoned the job, which he hated, after three months. Then he obtained a position at the graphic arts firm of Jaggars-Chiles-Stovall as a photoprint trainee. The company is often cited as doing classified work for the US government, but that work was limited to typesetting for maps and was conducted in a section which Oswald had no access to. Oswald used the equipment he did have access to to create fake indentifications and other documents in the name of an alias he created, "Alek James Hidell". After six months, Oswald was fired. His co-workers and supervisors grew frustrated with his inefficency and he was inconsiderate of the other workers, to the point where fistfights threatened to break out. His supervisor terminated him after seeing him reading a Russian newspaper, Krokodil, in the cafeteria.

The attempted assassination of General Walker

General Edwin Walker was an anti-communist, segregationist, and member of the John Birch Society. Walker was commanding officer of the 24th Army Division under NATO, but was relieved of this post by JFK in 1961 for distributing right-wing literature to his troops. Walker resigned and returned to his native Texas. He ran in the six-man gubernatorial primary in 1962 but lost to John Connally, who went on to win the race. When Walker came to Oswald's attention in February 1963, the general was making front page news by joining forces with an evangelist in an anti-communist tour called "Operation Midnight Ride".

Oswald began to put Walker under surveillance, taking pictures of Walker's home and nearby railroad tracks, perhaps his planned escape route, using the same camera used by Marina to take the famous backyard poses (see below). Oswald mail-ordered a rifle (see below) using his alias Hidell (he had already ordered a pistol in January). He planned the assassination on April 10, ten days after he was fired from Jaggars-Chiles-Stovall. He chose a Wednesday evening because the neighborhood would be relatively crowded because of services in a church adjacent to Walker's home; he would not stand out and could mingle with the crowds if necessary to make his escape. He left a note in Russian for Marina with instructions should he be caught. Walker was sitting at a desk in his dining room when Oswald fired at him from less than a hundred feet away. Walker survived only because the bullet struck the wooden frame of the window, deflecting its path, though he was injured in the forearm by fragments.

At the time, authorities had no idea who attempted to kill Walker. Marina saw Oswald burn most of his plans in the bathtub, though she hid the note he left her in a cookbook, intending to bring it to the police should Oswald again attempt to kill Walker or anyone else. Oswald's involvement was unknown until the note and some of the photos were found by the authorities following the assassination of JFK The bullet was too badly damaged to run conclusive ballistics tests, though neutron activation tests later proved that the bullet was from the same manufacturer as the one that killed Kennedy.

New Orleans

Oswald was unemployed, he had failed to kill General Walker, and his best friend, de Mohrenschildt, had moved away from Dallas. Leaving Marina, who was pregnant for the second time, with the Paines, he returned to the city of his birth to look for work, arriving on the morning of April 25. In May, Oswald got a job with the Reily Coffee Company (from which he was fired in July) and Marina joined him in New Orleans, driven there by Ruth Paine.

Though Oswald got a new passport and had Marina write to the Soviet embassy about returning to the USSR, he was still disillusioned with that country. His Marxist hopes were pinned on Fidel Castro and Cuba he became a vocal pro-Castro advocate. The Fair Play for Cuba Committee was a national organization and Oswald, unsolicited, set out to become a one-man New Orleans chapter. Oswald spent $22.73 on 1000 flyers, 500 membership applications, and 300 membership cards and had Marina sign the name "A.J. Hidell" as chapter president on one of the cards.

New Orleans mug shot, August 9, 1963

Most of Oswald's work consisted of passing out flyers. He made a clumsy attempt to infiltrate anti-Castro exile groups and briefly met with the skeptical Carlos Bringuier, the New Orleans delegate for the Cuban Student Directorate. Several days later Bringuier and two friends confronted a man passing out pro-Castro handbills and discovered it was Oswald. In the ensuing scuffle, all were arrested and Oswald spent the night in jail. The trial got press attention and Oswald was interview afterwards. He was also filmed passing out fliers in front of the International Trade Mart with two "volunteers" he had hired for $2 at the unemployment office. Oswald's work came to an end with a WDSU radio debate between Bringuier and Oswald arranged by journalist Bill Stuckey. Instead of discussing issues concerning Cuba, Oswald was confronted with lies and omissions he had made concerning his background. Oswald was devastated and humiliated, and a month later he left New Orleans.

Oswald's four months in the city are the subject of much attention, most notably New Orleans DA Jim Garrison's attempt to link Oswald to local businessman Clay Shaw, former president of the International Trade Mart. The links between Oswald and Shaw were supposedly Guy Bannister, a former FBI agent turned detective, and David Ferrie, a pilot and amateur cancer researcher who wore an ill-fitting red wig because a rare disease made him hairless. Ferrie and Oswald were both in the Civil Air Patrol in New Orleans in the 1950s and a CAP group photo shows them together, though there is no credible evidence that they knew each other then or in 1963. Bannister had an office in the building at 544 Camp Street and Oswald stamped some (but not all) of his flyers with that address. There is also no credible evidence that Oswald knew Bannister or rented an office at Bannister's building, and in any case Oswald's letters, applications, etc. were constantly filled with lies. But Oswald must have known the building since the Reily Coffee Company is only a block away. It was also home to the anti-Castro Cuban Revolutionary Council, and using their address way have been Oswald's way of attempting to embarrass them.

Mexico

Ruth Paine drove to New Orleans to bring Marina back to Dallas, while Oswald lingered in the city for two more days in order to collect a $33 unemployment check. He boarded a bus to Houston, but instead of heading north to Dallas he boarded a bus southwest towards Laredo and the Mexican border. In Mexico, he planned to continue on to Cuba, a plan which he openly shared with other passengers on the bus. Once in Mexico City, he filled out a visa application at the Cuban consulate claiming he wanted to stop there on his way back to the USSR. The Cubans insisted the USSR needed to approve his journey to that country first before he could get a Cuban visa, and he was rejected by the Russian consulate once they checked up on him with Moscow. After shuttling back and forth between consulates for five days, Oswald returned to Dallas. Disappointed and surprised that he was not quickly allowed into Cuba despite his work on behalf of the Cuban revolution, he never spoke in glowing terms about Cuba or Castro again.

The rifle and Oswald’s marksmanship

In March 1963, Oswald (using the name of his ex-boss in the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, Alek J. Hidell) allegedly purchased a rifle and handgun that were later linked by investigators to the events of November 22, 1963.

Rifle

6.5x52mm Mannlicher-Carcano M91/38 bolt-action rifle
Serial number C2766
Western Cartridge 160 grain (10.37 g) ammunition
Side-mounted Ordnance Optics 4 x 18 scope

Handgun

0.38 Special Smith & Wesson Victory revolver 2.25 in bbl
Serial number V510210
Converted from 0.38 S&W, shortened from 5 in bbl

The rifle was kept in the garage of family friends, Michael and Ruth Paine, at whose home Marina Oswald was living at the time. See Warren Commission report describing testimony of Michael R. Paine and his wife, Ruth Paine. [1]

During his military career Oswald scored as a "sharpshooter" in December 1956, on two occasions achieving 48 and 49 out of 50 during rapid fire at a 200-yard distant target, but failed to attain a marksmanship badge. Skeptics doubt the likelihood of Oswald being able to fire shots so accurately and rapidly with the weapon and from the position he was theorized to use to kill Kennedy (a moving 12 to 9 miles-per-hor target). Expert marksmen could not accomplish Oswald's alleged feat in their first try during the reenactments by the Warren Commission (1964) and CBS (1967).

The assassination of JFK and Oswald’s death

According to the controversial Warren Commission report on the John F. Kennedy assassination, Oswald shot Kennedy from a window on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository, where he was employed during the Christmas rush, as the President's motorcade passed through Dallas's Dealey Plaza at 12:30 pm on November 22. Texas Governor John Connally was wounded at the same time, along with an assassination witness, James Tague, who was standing some 270' in front of the presidential limousine. However, critics of this account assert that photographic and filmed evidence show that there were at least one or two shooters in an area known as the grassy knoll behind a picket fence atop a small sloping hill in Dealey Plaza, to President Kennedy's right-front.

Oswald then left the depository after being seen in its second floor lunchroom within only 76 to 90 seconds after the assassination. A punched bus transfer found on Oswald after his arrest indicates that he took a bus, then left in the middle of traffic and (based on a witness statement) entered a taxi (which he was witnessed to have first offered to an elderly woman), which he got out of close to his rooming house in Oak Cliff. According to the report, he changed his clothes and grabbed a pistol in his room at the boarding house, even though no pistol or evidence of one (including a holster alleged to have been found there) had been found by the housekeeper when cleaning. At about the same time, according to his housekeeper, a police car (#107) containing two officers pulled up and beeped the horn twice before leaving after about a second. Oswald left thereafter in a great hurry, and was last seen at 1:03 or 1:04 PM standing and waiting at a bus stop near his rooming house.

After leaving the scene, Oswald allegedly shot and killed Dallas police officer J. D. Tippit at 1:15 or 1:16 PM, 0.85 mile distant from the rooming house. However, witness statements and shell casings indicate a different story. Oswald was seen in the vicinity of the murder scene, but his movements were calm. Several witnesses claimed they saw a man who did not resemble Oswald at all fire the shots. Another witness says she saw Oswald with a second man and that they ran off in separate directions. The report claims Oswald fired two Winchester-Western bullets and two Remington-Peters bullets. However, the shell casings indicated the murderer fired three Winchester-Westerns and one Remington-Peters. The report says there was either a shot unaccounted for that went missing or that he put a Remington-Peters in a Winchester-Western shell, the second of the two being more likely to the report, though it is impossible to do so.

Oswald was arrested at the Texas Theater in the Dallas neighborhood of Oak Cliff at about 1:50 pm, first as a suspect in the shooting of Tippit and was then charged with assassinating Kennedy, even though the arraignment hearing on the Kennedy charge was abruptly interrupted and never did get finished, so he was never really officially charged with the assassination of President Kennedy.

While in custody, Oswald denied the shooting, telling reporters "I didn't shoot anyone" and "I'm just a patsy".

File:Ruby-shooting-oswald.jpg
Jack Ruby shooting Lee Harvey Oswald

Oswald was shot and killed by Texas nightclub owner Jack Ruby while being transferred to a nearly next door county jail, two days after the president's assassination, and before being brought to trial. Many alternative theories of the assassination contend that he acted on behalf of others, or even that Oswald was not the actual assassin.

Oswald’s grave is in Rose Hill Memorial Burial Park in Fort Worth. The November 25th burial and funeral were paid for by Oswald’s brother Robert. There was no religious service and reporters acted as pallbearers. When his mother died in 1981, she was buried next to Oswald with no headstone. Originally, his headstone read "Lee Harvey Oswald", but this was stolen and replaced with a marker which simply reads "Oswald". Immediately adjacent is a marker which reads "Nick Beef", the stage name of a local comedian who purchased the site and used that fact in his act.

Marina married Kenneth Porter in 1965 and her daughters took Porter's last name.

Investigations

The Warren Commission created by President Lyndon B. Johnson on November 29, 1963 to investigate the assassination, concluded that Oswald did assassinate Kennedy and that he acted alone (also known as the Lone gunman theory). The proceedings of the commission were secret, and 3+% of its files have yet to be released to the public, further fuelling speculation about the assassination. A later investigation by the House Select Committee on Assassinations, during the late 1970s, concluded that President Kennedy had "most-likely was assassinated as the result of a conspiracy."

In October 1981, Oswald was subject to an exhumation undertaken by British writer Michael Eddowes (with Maria Oswald Porter's support). They sought to prove or disprove a thesis developed in a 1975 book, Khrushchev Killed Kennedy (The book was republished in 1976 in Britain as November 22: How They Killed Kennedy and in America a year later as The Oswald File.) The thesis of the trio of books was that when Oswald went to the Soviet Union, he was swapped with a Soviet clone. Eddowes's support for his thesis was a claim that the corpse buried in 1963 in the Shannon Rose Hill Memorial Park cemetery in Fort Worth, Texas did not have a scar that resulted from surgery conducted on Oswald years before. The final results of the exhumation found that the corpse they studied was Oswald's. The finding was based on dental records.

New evidence

New evidence has recently come to light indicating conspiracy in the Kennedy death. Witness Judyth A. Vary Baker came forward claiming to have had an affair with Oswald during his months in New Orleans and having learned of the JFK conspiracy in which he was involved. However, it seems that her account can be easily debunked regarding some slip-ups, including the inclusion of Cancun as a rendezvous spot for her and Oswald if he escaped when it apparently didn't exist until very late in the 1970s. Seldom is a Judyth supporter found these days, with the exception of out-of-work photographer Martin Shackelford and "Dr." Howard Platzman.

Also, a letter dated November 18, 1963 was recently found. It was definitely not in Oswald's handwriting, according to the authentication of handwriting experts. The letter was signed "Alek J. Hidell." It mentioned the recent efforts at organizing an FPCC chapter in New Orleans and indicated that Oswald was being used as a front because Hidell would be shunned and the chapter not paid attention to were Hidell to do it, perhaps indicating that the real Hidell was a person of low social standing or otherwise. He also mentioned Oswald's having bought a rifle for him and planning to do "something big" when Kennedy came to Dallas.

This letter's apparent implications were confirmed when employment records for an "Al Hydell" were found, indicating that he was working at one of Oswald's former workplaces in New Orleans a week before the assassination and took the weekend off. A photograph of him was found that was a remarkable dead ringer for Oswald with the exception of a bull neck and a larger nose. Other employment records linked to these indicate that he had operated a quack practice as "Dr. A. Hideel" in Fort Worth two years before. Witnesses state a similar looking person was seen in Mexico at about the time Oswald is reputed to have gone there.

A hypothesis has been formed suggesting that Hidell took the week off and hitchhiked to Austin with the Mannlicher-Carcano. From there, he tailed Kennedy's motorcade to Houston, where he bought a 30.06 rifle and phoned in death threats against Kennedy anonymously. However, news stories at the time suggest he was killed outside a nightclub near the highway.

A cursory reading of the Warren Report and a look at the evidence shown there seems to indicate that the new Hidell evidence ties up many loose ends.

See also