Georgia Negro Weeps Open-Eyed at the Death of President Roosevelt
Rerun from a year ago
I can't help it. I just love this picture.
Rerun from three years ago
Rerun from four years ago
Itself a rerun
April 12, 1945. The picture of Graham Jackson is the image of that event that I always think of.
The caption of the original photograph starts out:
On the afternoon of the day he died President Roosevelt was scheduled to attend a barbecue at Warm Springs. That afternoon he would have heard Chief Petty Officer Graham Jackson, a Georgia Negro, play his accordion. The President had enjoyed Jackson's songs many times in the past. The next day when the President's body was borne slowly past the main dormitory at Warm Springs, where often he used to wave at the patients convalescing in the sun's rays, Jackson stepped out of the watching circle, sadly fingered the strains of Going Home. As he played, C.P.O Jackson wept open-eyed to the mournful phrases of his own lament.
I can't get to the Atlanta Time Machine website anymore.
Graham Jackson, from the wonderful Atlanta Time Machine.
Please go to Google Books to see the coverage in the April 23, 1945 issue of Life magazine. You will be amazed. (I can't make the link directly.)
Roosevelt's Death:
http://books.google.com/books?id=wEkEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA19&dq=Roosevelt+funeral&hl=en&ei=TirDS4iHOIT7lwfx96jaBA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CAoQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Roosevelt%20funeral&f=true