S23 Oswald Rooming House Museums

Located in Dallas, Texas, the Oswald Rooming House Museum is the site of the JFK assassination. The home has been restored and is now open to the public. The Oswald Rooming House Museum is not to be confused with Oswald’s actual home, but it is located in the same historic district. Come and explore the museum at 1026 N Beckley Ave, Dallas, TX 75203.

Patricia Puckett Hall, the third generation of women to run a rooming house, began offering guided tours of the house nine years ago. She says people always ask to see the house. She remembers Oswald as a good young man, but she disagrees with the standard explanation.

Hall is almost 70 years old and says she has a limited amount of time left to tell her story. She admits that her home is not as well preserved as she would like, but she says that she wants to be able to preserve it for future generations. She says her children will take over the home when she dies. She is also interested in preserving the history of Dallas, and she wants to make sure the house is preserved.

The Oswald Rooming House Museum was founded by Pat Hall, who grew up interacting with Lee Harvey Oswald. She recalls Oswald being a good, kind young man. She also remembers meeting “Mr. Lee,” and the frequent interactions she had with him. She says she knows a lot about the case and that she can help people with their questions about the report.

The Oswald Rooming House is located in the Lake Cliff historic district. The house was once owned by Gladys Johnson, a woman who was a landlady to Lee Oswald. The house was then occupied by Marina Lee, Oswald’s pregnant wife. The house was also rented by Bonnie Parker, a well-known singer. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The Oswald Rooming House museum offers guided tours for $40 a person. The tour includes an audio guide, and it takes about 90 minutes to go through the whole thing. Occasionally, temporary exhibits are included in the tour. The tour also includes Walter Cronkite coverage on vintage tube television.

The museum is not for the faint of heart, but if you are interested in learning more about the history of the Oswald rooming house, this is the place to visit. The guided tour includes the museum and a few other historical sites. The Sixth Floor Museum is also included, and is the site where Oswald allegedly shot President Kennedy. Worth investigating.

Aside from the Oswald Rooming House Museum, there is also a Sixth Floor Museum on Dealey Plaza. While the Sixth Floor Museum is the actual site of Oswald’s assassination, it is not the home that Oswald stayed in the night before the assassination. More information.

While the Oswald Rooming House Museum has been open since 1963, the actual home of Lee Oswald has not been. Oswald stayed at another home in Oak Cliff, Texas, the night before the assassination.