Keep up with the latest from Baylor Line. Subscribe today.

Baylor Line is supported by our sponsors! Become one today.

McCall’s Personal Journals Reveal President Kennedy Almost Came to Waco on November 22, 1963

On a fall Friday in 1963 I was walking on the Baylor campus toward the then-new science building, heading for my freshman chemistry class with Dr. McAtee. Suddenly physics professor Dr. Robert Packard burst from the building on a run.

“Wow! Where are you going in such a hurry?” I asked.

His shocking answer was that some students had reported that President Kennedy had been shot in Dallas. Dr. Packard was going to his office to get a radio. Of course we gathered around to hear the stunning news. Classes were cancelled for the rest of the day, and we were glued to any available TV set to hear the horrible details.

It was decades later when my father, Abner McCall, who was president of Baylor 1961-1981, revealed to me that he – and Baylor – were peripherally involved in that fateful day. In the fall of 1963 President Kennedy was preparing to run for re-election in November 1964 against Republican Barry Goldwater. His campaign directors were concerned that a liberal Catholic hadn’t fared very well in Texas in the 1960 election, and they were trying to drum up support for Kennedy in the south, especially among Baptists.

The involvement of Baylor is recorded in Judge McCall’s own words in a journal he kept at the time. (We, his children, only learned of the existence of these journals after his death.) In July of the 1964 “edition” he recorded speaking to the Dallas Rotary Club and remarked then that Dallas was about as responsible for Kennedy’s death as Waco was for the tornado which killed 113 Wacoans in 1953.

He then writes:

“Frances [Mrs. McCall] remarked afterward that Dallas was not as responsible for Kennedy’s death as I was. This was an application of the legal theory of causation known as the “but for” rule . . . She was referring to the fact that Governor John Connally had called Harlon Fentress [Baylor trustee and owner of the Waco Tribune Herald] on the morning our Board of Trustees met in the fall of 1963, the day before Homecoming. [Connally] told Fentress he was planning President Kennedy’s itinerary through Texas for his planned visit in November and requested that Baylor schedule a speech at Baylor on November 22nd about 10:00 AM and hold a special convocation to bestow an honorary degree upon President Kennedy. Fentress told me Connally said he would make a major address which would attract national publicity for Baylor. I told [Fentress] I would have to consult the trustees, who would have to approve the degree.”

“Ben H. Wooten [Baylor trustee and chairman of the board of Dallas Federal Savings and Loan Association] was in my office when the call came in from Fentress and I asked him about the matter. He said the Kennedy trip was purely political and the Baylor speech was merely an effort to use Baylor for political purposes. He declared that he would publicly oppose the granting of such a degree to President Kennedy. I went over to the trustee meeting and talked informally to about ten more trustees individually. One . . . favored the granting of the degree, one . . . agreed to go along if I recommended it. The others were all opposed.”

“I then asked Joe Albritton [Baylor trustee; lawyer, banker, media mogul] to pass the word to Fentress . . . to tell John Connally not to make a request of me as I would have to say no. (I had discovered that there was a telephone call from the Governor’s office waiting for me.) Joe called Lyndon Johnson in California to tell him of the situation . . . Johnson told Joe that he would see that the request for Kennedy to get a degree from Baylor was dropped.”

“Since Kennedy was assassinated on the morning of November 22nd in Dallas he might have been in Waco if the request had been granted. So “but for” our refusal to grant the request Kennedy would not have been assassinated in Dallas.”

“This was the meeting of the Baylor Board which made the decision to integrate Baylor . . . I doubt if the request would have been granted even if it had been made on a day other than the one on which the Board had the bitter debate over integration. Over half of those who told me that they would oppose the degree voted for integration of Baylor.”

Part of Judge McCall’s reluctance to bring the Kennedy request before the Board was his determination to gain a favorable outcome for the trustees’ vote to integrate Baylor – a project he had been working on for several months. Believing that a Christian school should lead the way, he wanted Baylor, in whose students, faculty, and staff he had total confidence, to set an example of peaceful integration for the other schools of the Southwest Conference.

If all the above had been known soon after the assassination, Baylor might have received some criticism for denying the request to host Kennedy. Out of fear that Baylor would somehow be blamed, Judge McCall and the trustees whom he had consulted kept the deliberations under wraps. Who knows whether Lee Harvey Oswald might have traveled from Dallas to Waco to fulfill his mission? The shadow of the assassination that fell for many years over Dallas might then have fallen over Waco – and Baylor.

Bette McCall Miller

BA Baylor University 1967

Latest from Baylor Line

12 Things to Do in Waco at Night

As the sun sets over the heart of Texas, Waco lights up with new adventures. Just as captivating and family-friendly

The Many Murals of Waco

For years, Waco has been growing its reputation as a hub of arts and culture, and nowhere is this more

The 11 Best Bars in Waco

Welcome to Waco’s lively night scene! From historic family-owned bars to modern nightlife spots, it’s time to indulge in the

Recommended

Moving Energy Home

What’s the Future of Power in Texas? Two Baylor Professors Discuss Options for campus and Waco, Texas.

If You Grill It, They Will Come

Hungry Wacoans and Baylor students continue to build Jake Patterson’s Yaki dreams. Teriyaki as it is known today first originated

5 thoughts on “McCall’s Personal Journals Reveal President Kennedy Almost Came to Waco on November 22, 1963”

  1. In the fall of 1963 I was a BU freshman living in Martin Hall. Between morning classes some of us guys were talking in the first floor lobby of the Student Union building when word reached us the tragedy in Dallas. Later that day a friend and I traveled home to Dallas. Uncertain what we might experience when we arrived in Dallas my friend actually thought we might encounter Marshal law.

  2. Betty:
    Thank you for sharing this amazing historical incident. The Judge was right in his “but for” analysis – neither Dallas nor Waco nor Baylor can be blamed for such a tragedy. The real blame is blind hatred. This was certainly the emotion expressed by Oswald, but was also the emotion expressed by those trustees opposing integration at Baylor, and – yes – those who would have opposed a speech by the President of the United States on Baylor’s campus. Some years later that same attitude resulted in refusal of the Board to grant an honorary degree to former President Jimmy Carter. Courageous Trustees would have granted the request.

  3. Abner McCall was no saint. He and Dean Perry were two of the most hypocritical “leaders”
    in Baylor’s history.

    Ms. Miler obviously still supports the long-DISproven theory that a “lone nut” killed JFK.
    The HSCA even admitted that the assassination was the result of a conspiracy.

    Tom Kellum
    BBA Baylor University 1967

  4. I was walking in the parking lot of the Student Union Building and noticed several car doors open with radios turned up loud reporting the Kennedy assassination. One guy said that Lyndon Johnson probably was involved which surprised me but now some of the researchers have speculated that he had the most to gain for there were two investigations in congress about corruption which would have ended his political career

Comments are closed.

Baylor Line MAgazine

With over 75 years of storytelling under its belt, the award-winning Baylor Line Magazine is now available digitally. Support this vital, independent voice of Baylor alumni by becoming a member today!