A Dark
Day: Area residents share special ties to Kennedy assassination
November
22nd, 2013 by Jim Williamson in Texarkana News
When
Connie Trammell Penny walked from the Adolphus Hotel in downtown Dallas and
entered Jack Ruby’s Carousel Club in October 1962, her destiny became
intriguing.
By
walking into the Carousel Club, Connie, who was a native of Ashdown, Ark., was
destined 13 months later to become a footnote in history and included in the
Warren Commission Report exhibit No. 2291
regarding the assassination of
President John F. Kennedy.
FBI
investigators discovered she was acquainted with Ruby and was noted in his
“little black (address) book.”
Connie
still shivers watching reruns of television news on what happened 50 years ago
on Nov. 22,1963, when Kennedy was killed and Nov. 24, 1963, when Ruby killed
Lee Harvey Oswald on national TV.
Connie
realizes 50 years ago she was “a naive or stupid little girl” from Ashdown.
The destiny
trip started in October, 1962, when she entered the Carousel Club and became
acquainted with Ruby.
Then,
her destiny continued evolving Nov. 22, 1963, when she was interviewed by Lamar
Hunt for a job.
During
the same time she had the interview with Hunt, the President was assassinated.
On Nov.
24, 1963, Ruby fatally shot Oswald in the Dallas Police station. The footnotes
to history for Connie formally ended with her testimony before the Warren
Commission on July 9, 1964.
Fate or
the destiny trip also includes:
• The
friendship with Jack Ruby who asked her to become a stripper in October
1962.
• The
same night Ruby asked if Connie wanted to be a stripper, he also asked if she
wanted to see his Dachshunds. The
Dachshund dog Ruby called his wife, Sheba, was found in Ruby’s car parked near
the Dallas Police Department after he shot Lee Harvey Oswald Nov. 24, 1963.
• Ruby
gave Connie a ride to H.L. Hunt’s office in downtown Dallas at Mercantile
National Bank earlier in the day Nov. 22, 1963, for the interview. Hunt, a
millionaire oil tycoon and owner of the Kansas City Chiefs football team, paid
for a full-page ad published in the Dallas newspapers Nov. 22, 1963, attacking
Kennedy. It was during the job interview Kennedy was assassinated.
• The
interview with Hunt drew the interest of the FBI and the Warren Commission
because a theory developed about Connie getting money from Hunt to give to Ruby
to kill Oswald. The rumor was false and the Warren Commission was satisfied
Connie was not involved.
Connie
was a student at the University of Texas in Austin in 1962 and attending a
junket with the “High Noon” advertising club from the university. The “High
Noon” students were writing news articles to get publicity for the boat show in
October 1962.
“We had
friends who met us in Dallas, including Marty Coulter Brunson from Ashdown and
we all said, ‘Let’s go across the street to the Carousel Club,’” Connie said
The
Carousel Club was a night club featuring strippers, including the infamous
Candy Barr, who had also befriended Ruby.
“I don’t
know if it was amateur night. We were all sitting around a big table and we all
had dates. My date was an engineer who built all the bridges around Dallas on
all the roadways. I was not impressed. But now that I think about it, I should
have,” Connie said.
She got
up from the table and was walking toward a restroom and a man started following
her.
“My
mother always said if someone starts following you, run. My mother was scared
of everything,” Connie said.
The man
was Jack Ruby.
While walking
to the restroom, Ruby continued to pursue Connie asking her “‘Would you
like to work for me as a stripper. I own this club.’”
Connie
declined the offer.
“I came
back out of the rest room and he was still there,” Connie said.
Then
Ruby asked if she wanted to see his Dachshund dogs.
“He
asked me if I liked little Dachshunds. I said, ‘I love little Dachshunds.’ I
thought how strange. The people at the table started laughing. It was the
craziest thing,” Connie said.
Ruby had
his Dachshunds in the club’s kitchen.
“I
followed him to the kitchen and he had about four or five Dachshunds. I thought
he couldn’t be all bad,” she said.
Publications
confirmed Ruby loved his dogs and the favorite was “Sheba,” according to the
“Education Forum” blog, “The Dachshunds News,” the book “Reclaiming History:
The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy” written by Vincent Bugliosi,
and an article in the Chicago Tribune.
Ruby
carried Sheba with him in his vehicles.
The
Dallas Police allegedly found Sheba in Ruby’s car after he fatally shot Oswald.
The dog was returned to Ruby’s roommate, George Senator.
“He did
dorky little things and I found him so harmless. My mother was horrified. He
was probably a lot safer than a lot of the guys who went to the University of
Texas,” Connie said.
“People
were attracted to me because of my figure. I was well-endowed. God gave me big
boobs before you could buy them,” she said.
Ruby
also suggested Connie work as a stripper in Las Vegas.
She
declined all offers.
“Everyone
who knew me, knew I was a prude. My morals would never let me become a
stripper. When I say that I was a prude—I mean that I did not drink alcoholic
beverages and did not believe in premarital sex,” Connie said.
“I would
absolutely never want to disappoint Isaac or Oletta Trammell (her parents),”
she said.
“I
played Maggie in Tennessee Williams’ ‘Cat On A Hot Tin Roof,’ at Texarkana
College and my Baptist parents did not come see me because I appeared on stage
in a slip,” Connie said.
“He
(Ruby) was always a gentleman. He treated me like I was delicate and a
first-class person. I never heard him say anything off-color or use profanity.
He treated me like I was very, very special,” said Connie.
“He
thought I was classy for going to the University of Texas,” she said.
Ruby got
Connie’s telephone number at the dorm in Austin and called her weekly.'
He
called so much the other dorm residents nicknamed her after Dallas stripper
Candy Barr.
Connie
graduated from UT-Austin and moved to Dallas before Nov. 22, 1963.
Then on
Nov. 22, 1963, Ruby took Connie to the bank building for a job interview with
Lamar Hunt.
The
interviews with the FBI and the Warren Commission contained a mistake on the
date Ruby took Connie to an appointment with Lamar Hunt. The date in the report
was Nov. 21,1963, but was incorrect, said Connie.
The date
was Nov. 22, 1963—the same day Kennedy was killed.
The
morning of Nov. 22, Ruby called asking if she had decided to go to work as a
stripper. She said no.
Connie
had scheduled a job interview with Lamar Hunt.
Connie
didn’t have an automobile and Ruby agreed to meet her at her apartment and
drive her to the Mercantile National Bank.
Ruby
said he had business at the bank and it would be no trouble for him to pick her
up at her apartment.
Ruby
asked how she got an appointment with Hunt.
She had
called his house and talked to a maid who gave her a “straight line” to Hunt’s
office.
The
appointment was at 11 a.m. Nov. 22, 1963. The interview ended about 1 p.m.
She read
in the Dallas newspapers about Hunt owning a bowling alley and he was
converting the bowling alley into a teenageers club. She thought she could gain
employment at the club in public relations since she had obtained a degree from
the University of Texas in public relations, according to the Warren Commission
report.
Ruby
parked his car in a parking lot near the Mercantile Bank and accompanied Connie
to the elevator in the bank, but did not accompany her upstairs.
“This is
the last time that Mrs. Penny has seen Ruby,” states the commission report.
“Ruby
did not express any views about the political views of Lamar Hunt or his
father, H.L. Hunt, during the trip from Mrs. Penny’s apartment to the bank,”
said the report
Connie
was not hired and Hunt said he had no plans for any person to work for him in
the public relations department for the club.
When the
FBI and Warren Commission investigators called her apartment, she was “scared
to death and they could tell it,” she said.
The FBI
discovered her name in Ruby’s black book.
Her name
and phone number were listed in his black address book and had notations about
her being classy and well-endowed, according to the FBI agent.
“I’ve
never seen the black book. I would like to see it some day and what he wrote
about me,” said Connie.
After
the interview, Connie had a date with C.T. Pettigrew at Majestic Steak House in
Dallas. Pettigrew was a friend from Little River County, Ark.
While at
the steak house, she learned about Kennedy being shot.
“I
walked in and everyone was crying. We ordered, but I don’t know if we ate. We
sat there and listened to all the news. I guess before I left, Kennedy had
died,” Connie said.
“I told
C.T. I would ride the bus back to my apartment. Everybody on the bus was
crying. Everyone on the street was crazy. It was a black day,” Connie said.
Then on
Nov. 24, 1963, Connie and her roommate Virginia Wilburn from Texarkana, Texas,
witnessed on television Ruby shoot Oswald.
In the
reruns of the shooting, Connie gasped watching Ruby shoot Oswald. When she sees
the shooting today on television, the shock starts all over.
“I
probably said, ‘Oh, my God. Can you believe this? It gave me chills. That was
the man I thought was so safe. That’s the man who didn’t scare me. How could he
kill somebody like that,” Connie said.
The
Warren Commission interview was conducted July 9, 1964 and it ended her Dallas
destiny trip.
“The
Warren Commission came up with the idea I was getting money to give to Ruby for
shooting Oswald,” she said.
“I can
see how they would get that idea. I knew Jack Ruby. Then the day the President
was shot, I was interviewing at the same time with Lamar Hunt at the bank. Ruby
gives me a ride to the bank and two days later, Ruby kills Oswald,” Connie
said.
Before
the final interviews with the Warren Commission, she had married Phillip Penny.
The couple returned to Ashdown and continue to live in the Southwest Arkansas
town.
Penny
has taught in the Texarkana, Texas, Independent School District; Texarkana,
Ark. School District; Ashdown School District; and Redwater Independent School
District.
The
Texarkana Gazette published the Warren report when the information was
released.
“My name
was in the Gazette, and my mother thought I would never get a job,” she said.
Connie
has one regret about the chain of events.
“I
regret I did not go to that jail cell and interview him and write my book. He
would have told me anything I wanted to know. I was so afraid of anybody
knowing I knew Jack Ruby. My mother said ‘You’ll never be able to get a job.
Nobody will understand because you are always getting yourself into messes,’”
Connie said.
[NOTE: The Warren Report says Ruby took Connie Trammell to Hunt's office for a job interview on Thursday, the day before the assassination, not the morning of the assassination as she states in this article. The job interview she filled out at Hunt's office is dated November 21, not 22. So she is off by one day.]
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