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Wednesday, April 1, 2020

"I WAS REALLY STRUCK BY HOW RECOGNIZABLE JFK'S VOICE WAS"



EARLIEST VOICE RECORDING OF JFK

Boston, Massachusetts (JFK+50) In 2017, Harvard University Archives released "the earliest voice recording" of John F. Kennedy.  The recording was made in 1937 for a class in Public Speaking.*

The 1 minute, 28 second recording, restored and made part of an exhibit at the University Archives, was a speech about Hugo Black, U.S. Supreme Court justice appointed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

The speech was originally recorded on a two-sided aluminum disc*.   David Ackerman, head of media preservation services at Harvard, said...

"I was really struck by how recognizable (JFK's) voice was, even through the noise."

 *The aluminum disc was a phonograph record made of bare aluminum in the late 1920s & 1930s.  It was primarily used to record radio broadcast for private transcription.  Most aluminum disc records were scrapped for metal during WWII.

**The JFK Presidential Library "holds no recording earlier than a 1940 radio interview."

SOURCE

"Centennial exhibit includes earliest known recording of future president's voice," by Colleen Walsh, The Harvard Gazette, May 9, 2017.  www.news.harvard.edu/