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JFK An American Patriot - Podcast

12/2/2023

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JFK & BUD WILKINSON
President John F. Kennedy and his good friend, OU football coach Bud Wilkinson (Ch. 8), in the White House. JFK decried what he called a nation full of “Soft Americans” becoming sports spectators rather than participants, and selected Bud to head a new President’s Council on Physical Fitness. Kennedy played football himself at Harvard and was a college gridiron fanatic. He not infrequently called the Sooner to Washington to discuss their fitness program in person. Bud remembered that the President invariably moved to the most important item on his agenda: asking the Coach for his personal recollections of big games! Kennedy’s last words to him: “I think you can win them all this year.” Only a couple of months later, JFK died. The next day, Bud, his head bowed to the ground all day on the sideline, coached his final college football game. Courtesy John F. Kennedy Library and Presidential Museum.

He wasn’t from Oklahoma and he never lived here, but he had historic collaborations with several of the state’s greatest leaders, and his impact on the Sooner State was colossal—and not yet finished. Learn the true legacy of “JFK – An American Patriot.”

Join John and KTOK/iHeartRadio star Gwin Faulconer-Lippert for one of American history’s most haunting tales, like you’ve never before heard it—the life and death of a decorated World War II hero and President whose legend grows with each passing year.

This is the 79th episode of our original OKLAHOMA GOLD! radio program! Thank you Atwoods Stores for making it possible! Go HERE to listen to them all! Future episodes explore more great heroes, events, and movements of Oklahoma History. Thank you Atwoods Stores for making it possible!

https://youtu.be/Eq67dNECplo
JFK & SENATOR ROBERT S. KERR
JFK visiting the southeast Oklahoma ranch of legendary Oklahoma oilman, governor, and U.S. senator Robert S. Kerr, with whom he had a complex but consequential and mutually respectful working relationship.

JFK IN WW II NAVAL UNIFORM
Though his powerful father arranged a desk job for him during World War II, John F. Kennedy enlisted in the Navy. He rose to command of PT-109, a lethal fast attack craft that the Japanese called “devil boats.” Kennedy’s legend began to grow when an enemy destroyer tore his boat in half in a Solomon Islands night battle. Some crewmen died and Kennedy led the survivors to the closest island. He saved his bloodied engineer by swimming for four hours, gripping a strap from the man’s life preserver in his teeth to tug his body. He nearly died in swimming and canoeing attempts into the sea for help before rescue came. Decorated for his exploits, Kennedy suffered from the effects of his wounds for the rest of his life.

JFK GIVING MOON SPEECH AT RICE STADIUM
With a fist clenched in conviction, President John F. Kennedy rallies a dejected nation reeling and fearful from Communist space successes: “We have vowed that we shall not see (space) governed by a hostile flag of conquest, but by a banner of freedom and peace.”

JFK & CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS NEWSPAPER
Never before or since has the world come closer to nuclear destruction than during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Battle-hardened World War II veterans led both major adversaries, the United States and Communist Russia. The latter’s leader, Nikita Khrushchev, a Soviet commander at the Battle of Stalingrad, gambled that youthful American President John Kennedy would not risk nuclear war to stop Russian missile deployment and rearming. The Communist’s gamble failed—barely. Courtesy Oklahoma Publishing Co. and Oklahoma Historical Society.

JFK & ROCKING CHAIR

JFK GRAVE CARTOON
Illustration Jim Lange. Courtesy Oklahoma Publishing Co.

Atwoods Ranch & Home Logo

Many thanks to Atwoods Stores, a farm and ranch supply company based in Enid, Oklahoma, for their support of the Red River Institute of History and OKLAHOMA GOLD! Please support them as you are able! Wherever you are, you can order online from thousands of quality products on their terrific website HERE. Atwoods also has 66 stores in 5 states: Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Texas. In addition to farm and ranch supplies, Atwoods stores sell clothing, lawn and garden items, tools, hardware, automotive supplies, sporting goods, pet supplies, firearms, and seasonal items.


Read the full story at “JFK – An American Patriot” - Podcast,
from Oklahoma History, with John Dwyer
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    Picture
    author John J Dwyer

    John Dwyer's   Oklahoma History

    Author John Dwyer takes us on a voyage through time, to discover Oklahoma is ways we've never fully understood.

    Picture
     The hardbound pictorial of volume 1 is available for a limited time at up to 40% off, using this link.

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      Novelist and Oklahoma native Ralph Ellison said, "You have to leave home to find home", an apt description of the journey of John Dwyer, author and general editor of The Oklahomans. The Dwyer family roots were firmly transplanted from Ireland to Oklahoma by John's great-grandfather and grandfather, the latter who settled in Oklahoma City in 1909, just two years after Oklahoma achieved statehood. Although born in Dallas, TX, John was relocated to Oklahoma when his widowed mother returned to her home when he was two years old.
      It would be on Oklahoma soil that his mother instilled in him his love for history, and coupled with his unusually creative imagination, it soon became apparent that John not only liked to hear great stories of legend and history, but to make up his own as well. It would be out of a sense of divine purpose that he would use that creativity in response to a higher calling in the years to come.
      John began a career in journalism during his high school days when he served in a variety of roles, including news and sports reporter, for the Duncan Banner, a daily newspaper in his small Oklahoma hometown. He was the youngest sports editor in the newspaper's history by the time he attended the University of Oklahoma on a journalism scholarship. He graduated in 1978 with a bachelor of arts and sciences degree in journalism.
      Dwyer further developed his journalistic skills in radio as a play‐by‐play football and basketball announcer for several radio stations. He won the coveted position of sports director for the University of Oklahoma's 100,000 watt KGOU‐FM radio station. For seven years, he provided live, on‐air reports to America's largest radio networks of University of Oklahoma college football games.
      Except for a year in England during 6th grade, John lived in the Sooner State for 28 years before returning to Dallas in 1986 to attend Dallas Theological Seminary where he earned his Master of Biblical Studies. While there, Dwyer worked part time on the sports staff of The Dallas Times Herald, which at the time owned one of the five largest circulations of any daily newspaper in Texas. It was in Texas that he also met and married his wife Grace in 1988 and settled down to start his family.
      In the spring of 1992, Dwyer and his wife founded the Dallas‐Fort Worth Heritage newspaper, which would grow to a circulation of 50,000 per month at the time of its sale, after nearly a decade, to new owners. The Heritage pioneered innovative features such as full color photography and graphics, an expansive web site, a cluster of informative daily radio programs, and an aggressive, uncompromising brand of investigative news reporting unprecedented for contemporary news publications holding an
    orthodox Christian worldview.
      In 2006, at the urging of his family and the Oklahoma Historical Society, John returned to Oklahoma to tackle the colossal task of writing "The Oklahomans," which was endorsed as an official project of the Oklahoma Centennial Commission. He has completed volume 1 (Ancient‐Statehood) and a portion of volume 2 (Statehood‐Present), which releases in November 2018.
      He is now an Adjunct Professor of History and Ethics at Southern Nazarene University. He is former history chair at Coram Deo Academy, near Dallas, Texas. His books include the non‐fiction historical narrative "The War Between the States: America's Uncivil War" (Western Conservatory), the novel "When the Bluebonnets Come" (Bluebonnet Press), the historical novels "Stonewall" and "Robert E. Lee" (Broadman & Holman Publishers), and the upcoming historical novels "Shortgrass" and "Mustang" (Oghma Creative Media).
      John and Grace have one daughter and one grandson and live in Norman, Oklahoma. They are members of the First Baptist  Church of Norman, where they serve in a variety of teaching, mission, and other ministry roles.

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