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Dec 11, 2017 · On Nov. 22, 1963, John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, and amateur photographer Abraham Zapruder — a Jew who fled czarist Russia as a youngster — had captured the only known footage of...
Nov 22, 2016 · Abraham and Lillian Zapruder with the children, Myrna and Henry, at Fair Park in Dallas, Texas, 1942. Zapruder Family. Fifty-three years ago, Abraham Zapruder stepped out of his office in Dallas, video camera in hand, to catch a glimpse of President John F. Kennedy.
In 1933, he married Lillian Sapovnik (1913–1993); they went on to have two children. [4] Zapruder was a Freemason and an Inspector-General (33rd degree) of the Scottish Rite. [5] In 1941, Zapruder moved to Dallas, Texas, to work for Nardis, a local sportswear company.
Dec 21, 2016 · December 21, 2016. “Twenty-Six Seconds: A Personal History of the Zapruder Film” by Alexandra Zapruder (Twelve) is a wholly unique family memoir and a fascinating monograph about one of the...
Nov 23, 2016 · 53 years after JFK assassination, granddaughter of Zapruder pens personal family history. Abraham Zapruder is proof that any one of us can find ourselves in the middle of history. In his...
- Marie Saavedra
- 2 min
Nov 21, 2018 · In 2016, Alexandra Zapruder, granddaughter of Abraham Zapruder, published Twenty-Six Seconds: A Personal History of the Zapruder Film to tell her family’s side of the story and its relationship with the famous film.
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It’s been called the most important 26 seconds of film in history: The 486 frames of 8-millimeter Bell + Howell home movie footage shot in the midday sun of Dallas on November 22, 1963, by a...