Ike Altgens

Ike Altgens
Ike Altgens, c. 1970 (photo courtesy the Altgens estate)
Ike Altgens, c. 1970
Born
James William Altgens

(1919-04-28)April 28, 1919
Dallas, Texas, U.S.
DiedDecember 12, 1995(1995-12-12) (aged 76)
Dallas, Texas, U.S.
Occupations
Years active1938–1979
EmployerAssociated Press
Known forphotographer/reporter/witness, assassination of John F. Kennedy
Spouse
Clara B. Halliburton
(m. 1944; their deaths 1995)

James William "Ike" Altgens (/ˈɑːlt.ɡənz/;[1] April 28, 1919 – December 12, 1995) was an American photojournalist, photo editor, and field reporter for the Associated Press (AP) based in Dallas, Texas, who became known for his photographic work during the assassination of United States President John F. Kennedy (JFK). Altgens was 19 when he began his AP career, which was interrupted by military service during World War II. When his service time ended, Altgens returned to Dallas and got married. He soon went back to work for the local AP bureau and eventually earned a position as a senior editor.

Altgens was on assignment for the AP when he captured two historic images on November 22, 1963.[2] The second, showing First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy toward the rear of the presidential limousine and Secret Service agent Clint Hill on its bumper, was reproduced on the front pages of newspapers around the world. Within days, Altgens' preceding photograph became controversial after people began to question whether accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald was visible in the main doorway of the Texas School Book Depository as the gunshots were fired at JFK.[3]

Altgens appeared briefly as a film actor and model during his 40-year career with the AP, which ended in 1979. He spent his later years working in display advertising, and answering letters and other requests made by assassination researchers. Altgens and his wife Clara died in 1995 at about the same time in their Dallas home. Both had suffered from long illnesses, and police said poisoning by a malfunctioning furnace also may have contributed to their deaths.

  1. ^ Journalists Remember 1993, 1:52:48.
  2. ^ Trask 1994, pp. 318–9. There were seven total photographs of the motorcade by Altgens, who later told author Richard B. Trask that he was not sure of the number and did not want to take credit for anything that was not his work. By this time, the negatives had been examined at the AP New York bureau by Richard E. Sprague, who found that Altgens' film "is of the same type (Tri-X), is numbered sequentially, is chronological, and taken from the same vantage points at which Altgens is known to have been located."
  3. ^ Official investigations concluded he was not; see § The man resembling Lee Harvey Oswald.

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