Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
American History
Related: About this forumOn this day, June 8, 1968, Robert Kennedy's funeral train ran from New York City to Washington, D.C.
Along route of Robert Kennedys funeral train, {June 8,} 1968:
Link to tweet
Another scene from Robert Kennedys funeral train, {June 8,} 1968:
Link to tweet
I found this exhibit at
@SFMOMA
very moving - photos taken by Paul Fusco from the train carrying Robert Kennedys body; snapshots & home movies by the spectators; & a 70mm film reenactment of the trains journey by French artist Philippe Parreno.
@SFMOMA
very moving - photos taken by Paul Fusco from the train carrying Robert Kennedys body; snapshots & home movies by the spectators; & a 70mm film reenactment of the trains journey by French artist Philippe Parreno.
Link to tweet
Wed Apr 4, 2018: Robert F. Kennedy's Funeral Train, Fifty Years Later
Hat tip, Trainorders: Nostalgia & History > Photo Essay on RFK Funeral Train
Robert F. Kennedys Funeral Train, Fifty Years Later
By Louis Menand April 3, 2018
The Train: RFKs Last Journey is an ingenious and, in a surprising way, affecting exhibition that opened last month at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Although the train in question is the one that, almost fifty years ago, carried Robert Kennedys body from New York City to Washington, D.C., for burial in Arlington Cemetery, the show is not about Kennedy. The show is about deathor, more exactly, about the relationship between photography and death. .... Robert Kennedy is now dead. He was shot in the head at 12:15 a.m., on June 5, 1968, in the kitchen of the Ambassador Hotel, in Los Angeles, moments after declaring victory in the California Democratic primary. He had been campaigning for President for not even three months. He never regained consciousness and died the following day. His body was flown to New York City, where, on June 8th, a funeral was held at St. Patricks Cathedral. Immediately afterward, the casket was put on a train to Washington.
The heart of the sfmoma show is a set of twenty-one photographs taken from aboard that train by a photographer named Paul Fusco. It was a last-minute assignment from Look, where Fusco was a staff photographer, and he assumed that his main task would be in Arlington, where Kennedy was to be buried next to his brother John. But when the train emerged from the Hudson River tunnel, Fusco was amazed to see people lining the tracks. He found a spot at an open window, and, for the eight hours it took the train to get to Washington, he shot picture after picture of the crowds who came out to witness Kennedys body being carried to its grave.
Untitled, from the series RFK Funeral Train, 1968. Photograph by Paul Fusco / Magnum / Courtesy Danziger Gallery
Those pictures eventually became some the most famous works of photojournalism from what was a golden age, the era of the big mass-circulation picture magazines: Life, Look, The Saturday Evening Post, Paris Match, and Stern. Fusco carried three cameras with him on the train: two Leica rangefinder cameras and a Nikon S.L.R. For almost all of the shots, he used Kodachrome film, and he took around a thousand pictures. By the end of the journey, as dusk fell, his exposure times were up to one second.
Trains in the Northeast corridor do not run through upscale neighborhoods. The people who spontaneously turned out to watch the funeral train pass byKennedys biographer Evan Thomas says there were a millionwere, by appearance, mostly working class, and there were whites and African-Americans often standing in clusters together. In 2018, looking back at those images, as the train approaches the terminal and the light begins to fade, you realize that you are watching the final hours of the great Democratic coalition that had dominated American politics since the election of Franklin Roosevelt, in 1932the coalition that would fracture six months later with the election of Richard Nixon, and which is now as dead as Robert Kennedy.
{snip}
Untitled, from the series RFK Funeral Train, 1968.Photograph by Paul Fusco / Magnum / Courtesy Danziger Gallery
By Louis Menand April 3, 2018
The Train: RFKs Last Journey is an ingenious and, in a surprising way, affecting exhibition that opened last month at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Although the train in question is the one that, almost fifty years ago, carried Robert Kennedys body from New York City to Washington, D.C., for burial in Arlington Cemetery, the show is not about Kennedy. The show is about deathor, more exactly, about the relationship between photography and death. .... Robert Kennedy is now dead. He was shot in the head at 12:15 a.m., on June 5, 1968, in the kitchen of the Ambassador Hotel, in Los Angeles, moments after declaring victory in the California Democratic primary. He had been campaigning for President for not even three months. He never regained consciousness and died the following day. His body was flown to New York City, where, on June 8th, a funeral was held at St. Patricks Cathedral. Immediately afterward, the casket was put on a train to Washington.
The heart of the sfmoma show is a set of twenty-one photographs taken from aboard that train by a photographer named Paul Fusco. It was a last-minute assignment from Look, where Fusco was a staff photographer, and he assumed that his main task would be in Arlington, where Kennedy was to be buried next to his brother John. But when the train emerged from the Hudson River tunnel, Fusco was amazed to see people lining the tracks. He found a spot at an open window, and, for the eight hours it took the train to get to Washington, he shot picture after picture of the crowds who came out to witness Kennedys body being carried to its grave.
Untitled, from the series RFK Funeral Train, 1968. Photograph by Paul Fusco / Magnum / Courtesy Danziger Gallery
Those pictures eventually became some the most famous works of photojournalism from what was a golden age, the era of the big mass-circulation picture magazines: Life, Look, The Saturday Evening Post, Paris Match, and Stern. Fusco carried three cameras with him on the train: two Leica rangefinder cameras and a Nikon S.L.R. For almost all of the shots, he used Kodachrome film, and he took around a thousand pictures. By the end of the journey, as dusk fell, his exposure times were up to one second.
Trains in the Northeast corridor do not run through upscale neighborhoods. The people who spontaneously turned out to watch the funeral train pass byKennedys biographer Evan Thomas says there were a millionwere, by appearance, mostly working class, and there were whites and African-Americans often standing in clusters together. In 2018, looking back at those images, as the train approaches the terminal and the light begins to fade, you realize that you are watching the final hours of the great Democratic coalition that had dominated American politics since the election of Franklin Roosevelt, in 1932the coalition that would fracture six months later with the election of Richard Nixon, and which is now as dead as Robert Kennedy.
{snip}
Untitled, from the series RFK Funeral Train, 1968.Photograph by Paul Fusco / Magnum / Courtesy Danziger Gallery
The pictures won't link correctly from the article in The New Yorker. I took these images from an article in the New York Times:
So Long, Bobby: New Exhibit Looks Back at Robert Kennedys Funeral Train
By PHYLLIS TUCHMAN OCT. 30, 2017
By PHYLLIS TUCHMAN OCT. 30, 2017
One more article:
R.F.K., R.I.P., Revisited
Text JAMES STEVENSON JUNE 1, 2008
PROCESSION: After Kennedys funeral in New York the morning of June 8, 1968, his body was transported to Washington. Mourners, about a million by some estimates, lined the tracks, and the trip, usually about four hours, took twice that long. Credit Paul Fusco
Text JAMES STEVENSON JUNE 1, 2008
PROCESSION: After Kennedys funeral in New York the morning of June 8, 1968, his body was transported to Washington. Mourners, about a million by some estimates, lined the tracks, and the trip, usually about four hours, took twice that long. Credit Paul Fusco
Thu Jun 8, 2023: On this day, June 8, 1968, Robert Kennedy's funeral train ran from NYC to DC.
Wed Jun 8, 2022: On this day, June 8, 1968, Robert Kennedy's funeral train ran from NYC to DC.
Tue Jun 8, 2021: On this day, June 8, 1968, Robert Kennedy's funeral train ran from NYC to DC
Mon Jun 8, 2020: On this day, June 8, 1968, Robert Kennedy's funeral train ran from NYC to DC
Sat Jun 8, 2019: Beschloss tweet: Bringing RFK home
Fri Jun 7, 2019: Robert F. Kennedy's Funeral Train, June 8, 1968
2 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
On this day, June 8, 1968, Robert Kennedy's funeral train ran from New York City to Washington, D.C. (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Jun 2024
OP
AllaN01Bear
(23,243 posts)1. even though i was a very small boy , the thing that gets me is the drum cadence from the funural procession.
remember seeing this on youtube and the news reels of the day, thump thump ta thump thump . and the cannons going off.
50 Shades Of Blue
(10,905 posts)2. :(
My family and I were among those lining Constitution Avenue as his funeral procession made its way to Arlington National Cemetery.