Nellie Connally

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Nellie Connally
President Kennedy, Jackie Kennedy, and the Connallys seconds before the assassination in the Presidential limousine.
Born February 24, 1919
Austin, Texas
Died September 1, 2006
Austin, Texas

Idanell Brill "Nellie" Connally (February 24, 1919September 1, 2006) was the First Lady of Texas from 1963 to 1969.

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[edit] First Lady of Texas

Born in Austin, Texas, she was married to John Connally, who served as Governor of Texas and later as Secretary of the Treasury.

[edit] Death of President Kennedy

At the time of her death in 2006, she was the last surviving occupant of the presidential limousine that carried John F. Kennedy when he was assassinated in Dallas, Texas, on November 22, 1963.

While riding in the car with President Kennedy, she told him, "Mr. President, you can't say Dallas doesn't love you." Almost immediately, she heard the first of what she later concluded were three gunshots in quick succession.

The President and her husband were shot, resulting in fatal wounds to the President and serious wounds to Governor Connally. Mrs. Connally got down in the car to take care of her husband, who had slumped after the second shot. "I never looked back again. I was just trying to take care of him", she said.

Connally had said the most enduring image she had of the assassination in Dallas was of a mixture of blood and roses.

"It's the image of yellow roses and red roses and blood all over the car ... all over us", she said in a 2003 interview with The Associated Press. "I'll never forget it. ... It was so quick and so short, so potent."

Anniversaries and media interviews followed the Connallys for decades to come. In her 2003 book From Love Field—Our Final Hours with John F. Kennedy, Connally shared her personal diary of the event, originally written for her children and other descendants in the days immediately after the assassination.

[edit] Diabetes Advocate

She was also an active fundraiser for many charities. In 1989, Richard Nixon, Donald Trump, and Barbara Walters turned out for a gala to honor her and raise money for diabetes research.

"I've never known a woman with Nellie's courage, compassion and character," Walters said. "For all her ups and downs, I've never heard a self-pitying word from her." The "downs" that Walters spoke of were financial difficulties, she and her husband faced.

[edit] Bankruptcy

Private business ventures after 1980 were less successful than John Connally's career as a politician and dealmaking Houston lawyer. An oil company in which he invested encountered trouble, and $200 million of real-estate projects failed. He filed for reorganization of his personal finances under Chapter 11 of the federal bankruptcy code and for liquidation, under Chapter 7, of the Barnes–Connally Partnership, the Austin-based real-estate venture that he founded with former Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes. The auction paid only a fraction of the $93 million in debts that Connally listed with the bankruptcy court in Austin.

[edit] Breast Cancer Advocate

Nellie Connally celebrated her 80th birthday with fellow breast-cancer survivors at a ceremony in the Nellie B. Connally Breast Center at Anderson Hospital in Houston. She had been free of breast cancer for 10 years. She served on the M. D. Anderson Board of Visitors since 1984, and a fund in her name raised millions for research and patient programs.[1]

[edit] Death

She died unexpectedly in her sleep at Westminster Manor in Austin, aged 87.

[edit] Children

The Connallys had three children, John B. Connally III, Sharon Connally, and Mark Connally.

[edit] References

  • Citation: "Woman in JFK Limo During Shootings Dies" By KELLEY SHANNON (Associated Press Writer), from Associated Press, September 02, 2006
  • "From Love Field--Our Final Hours with John F. Kennedy", Rugged Land Books, 2003.

[edit] External links