On Nov. 25, 1963, a television
audience of millions of people around the world prayerfully bid farewell
to President John F. Kennedy, as his flag-draped coffin was placed
before the sanctuary of the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle in
Washington, during the funeral Mass for the slain president.
Today, almost 50 years later, people come to the cathedral from across
the country and around the world, with many wanting to stand at that
very spot, where an inlaid marble plaque is inscribed with the words,
'Here rested the remains of President Kennedy at the Requiem Mass, Nov.
25, 1963, before their removal to Arlington, where they lie in
expectation of a heavenly resurrection."
On a recent weekday, Msgr. W. Ronald Jameson, the cathedral's rector,
stood beside that plaque. "Many people who come here, come because of
that," he said, noting that many talk about "the sense of hope that his
presidency brought the nation."
"They see the plaque, and it brings back memories," the priest told the
Catholic Standard, newspaper of the Washington Archdiocese.
In an article in the Nov. 29, 1963, issue of the archdiocesan paper,
reporter Valerie MacNees, who attended the president's funeral,
recounted the emotions of that day in spare language: "The heart of the
entire world shared the grief of the American people in the loss of
their president.
"An emperor, a king, a queen, princes, princesses, presidents and
premiers of foreign governments joined the American people Monday in
paying their last respects to President John Fitzgerald Kennedy," she
wrote.
"The great and the lowly of the world met on a common level in mourning
the 46-year-old president who was slain by an assassin's bullet last
Friday in Dallas." Kennedy was killed Nov. 22, 1963.
Thousands of people crowded the streets leading to the cathedral,
including Richard Schmidt, now the archivist and historian for St.
Matthew's, who was then working as an administrative assistant for the
Food and Drug Administration.
He watched as the president's flag-draped casket was moved on a caisson
drawn by six gray horses, with the Kennedy family members and U.S. and
world leaders walking behind in a solemn procession along Connecticut
Avenue to the cathedral.
"The crowds were unbelievable. People just poured out to witness this,"
said Schmidt, who remembers the silence of the crowd, interrupted only
by the sound of the drums and brass instruments solemnly played by
military band members as the procession moved toward St. Matthew's.
Boston Cardinal Richard Cushing, a friend of the Kennedy family, was the
main celebrant at the Requiem Mass. He had officiated at the wedding of
John and Jacqueline Kennedy. Also in the sanctuary were then-Washington
Archbishop Patrick O'Boyle and Washington Auxiliary Bishop Philip
Hannan, who had been attending the Second Vatican Council in Rome and
rushed back to Washington after learning of the president's death.
In a 1966 oral history interview for the John F. Kennedy Presidential
Library and Museum, Cardinal Cushing said he was in his residence when
he had heard the tragic news about the president's death. "I was
bewildered and shocked."
The cardinal said, "The words of Christ on the cross of Calvary came
repeatedly to my mind: 'Oh heavenly Father, why has thou abandoned me?'
Everyone then was asking 'Why, why, why?'... My thought was that here is
the most difficult 'why,' and I have no answer for it."
In his 2010 memoir published by Our Sunday Visitor, "The Archbishop Wore
Combat Boots," then-retired New Orleans Archbishop Hannan noted that he
had heard the terrible news at his hotel lobby in Rome, after he had
helped conduct a daily press briefing during Vatican II. He said he then
went to his room, closed the door, and "I wept silently and alone."
As a Washington auxiliary, then-Bishop Hannan was a close friend of the
Kennedys, and was asked by the first lady to deliver the eulogy.
The eulogy also included favorite Scriptural passages that President
Kennedy liked to quote, which the family provided to Bishop Hannan.
The responsibility for planning the funeral Mass had been given to
Sargent Shriver, the husband of President Kennedy's sister Eunice and
founding director of the Peace Corps established by the president.
In his 2012 biography of his father, "A Good Man," Mark Shriver wrote
that his father then took on the responsibility of organizing the
funeral Mass and related arrangements with the same resoluteness,
purpose and faith that marked his life of service to his country and his
church.
Later reflecting on the funeral Mass in his oral history interview,
Cardinal Cushing said, "It was a very, very simple funeral, following as
close as possible the services in memory of the martyred Lincoln. No
fanfare, everyone bowed in sorrow, tears flowed in abundance.
"On the way out, I was preceding the casket, and I went over to
Jacqueline and shook hands with her. I kissed little Caroline and shook
hands with her. John John was getting a little restless, so he was down
in the rear of the church. Outside at the end of Mass, John John saluted
the flag, the most touching thing I ever saw."
Outside of St. Matthew's Cathedral, that little boy's salute to his
father's flag-draped casket, immortalized in a photograph by Stan
Stearns of United Press International, remains perhaps the most poignant
image from that day.
In his memoir, Archbishop Hannan recalled what happened next: "Released
from restraint, the crowds erupted in an earthquake of pent-up emotion:
groans, yelps, uncontrollable sobbing."
On a recent weekday at St. Matthew's, its rector reflected on its place
in history as the Catholic cathedral in the nation's capital.
There crowds gathered in joy at the end of World War II in 1945, to
attend Mass with Blessed John Paul II in 1979, in sorrow after the 9/11
terrorist attacks on the United States -- and 50 years ago for the
funeral Mass for the nation's first Catholic president.
"This indeed is holy ground," the priest said.