Dealey Plaza
News •
Dealey Plaza, city park at the west end of downtown Dallas, Texas, between and on either side of the three main thoroughfares of Elm Street, Main Street, and Commerce Street at a point just before they converge in the Triple Underpass. Created on the spot where the city was founded and often referred to as “the Front Door of Dallas,” Dealey Plaza is now best known as the location where, on November 22, 1963, U.S. President John F. Kennedy was assassinated.
After the Trinity River was moved west, away from downtown Dallas, in the late 1920s, George B. Dealey, publisher of The Dallas Morning News, donated land for the creation of a western gateway into the city. The triple underpass beneath a railroad was decided upon in the 1930s and opened in 1936. The large park area above it was landscaped and planted with Texas oak trees. The park, named Dealey Plaza in Dealey’s honor, opened in 1941.
The park served its intended purpose until the Kennedy assassination. Kennedy was on a fund-raising trip in Texas, visiting several cities, and he was traveling in an open convertible in a motorcade passing through Dealey Plaza on Elm Street when Lee Harvey Oswald fired the fatal shots from the Texas School Book Depository, at the corner of Elm Street and North Houston Street facing Dealey Plaza. In the wake of the assassination, impromptu and later permanent memorials to Kennedy appeared in the plaza.
Though many people felt that the former Texas School Book Depository should be razed, eventually the building’s top two floors were turned into the Sixth Floor Museum, which opened in 1989 and is dedicated to the life and times of Kennedy and the story of his assassination. Dealey Plaza was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1993, and a project to restore the park to its 1963 appearance and to improve the tourist experience was undertaken beginning in 2003.