Clay Laverne Shaw was a businessman in New Orleans, Louisiana. He was the only person prosecuted in connection with the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. He was found not guilty. Most, however, do not know that he was a highly decorated war hero, a prominent New Orleans businessman, a French Quarter preservationist, a valued civic leader, and, from age sixteen, a successful playwright.
He was also a homosexual in a time and a place that viewed homosexuality as abhorrent, immoral, and criminal. In that society, gay people, particularly prominent citizens like Clay Shaw, were compelled to remain closeted and were extremely vulnerable. Shaw was outed as a part of the Kennedy assassination by New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison.
He was also a homosexual in a time and a place that viewed homosexuality as abhorrent, immoral, and criminal. In that society, gay people, particularly prominent citizens like Clay Shaw, were compelled to remain closeted and were extremely vulnerable. Shaw was outed as a part of the Kennedy assassination by New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison.
Shaw on March 17, 1913 into a respected family in the small Louisiana town of Kentwood, Clay Laverne Shaw was named for his grandfather, Thomas Clay Shaw, Kentwood's Town Marshal. When he was five he and his family moved to New Orleans.
After graduation from high school, Shaw moved to New York where he managed a Western Union office, took classes at Columbia University, and, later, was booking manager for a lecture bureau, representing luminaries such as poet John Masefield, actor Maurice Evans, and first lady Eleanor Roosevelt. When World War II began, Shaw enlisted as a private in the medical corps. Soon commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant, he was appointed to the staff of Brigadier General Charles O. Thrasher, directing supplies for the million men who crossed the English Channel in the D-Day invasion.
For his role in liberating France from the Nazi occupation, Shaw was awarded the Bronze Star and the Legion of Merit by the United States Army and the Croix de Guerre by the government of France.
Discharged from the Army in 1946, Major Shaw returned to New Orleans, his home for the remainder of his life. Within months he was hired to launch the International Trade Mart, whose objectives were to sell American products abroad and to increase foreign trade into the Port of New Orleans. His army experience in transportation and shipping, along with a fluency in both Spanish and French, made him the ideal for the position.
While serving as Managing Director of the International Trade Mart, Shaw also became a pioneer preservationist, renovating French Quarter buildings.
All of these activities left little time to write, so Shaw decided to retire from the ITM once he could afford to do so. That point came in 1965. At his retirement, the City of New Orleans awarded him its highest honor, the International Order of Merit, in appreciation of his many contributions to the city.
But the social and political turbulence of the 1960s made a quiet retirement for the aspiring writer impossible. On November 22, 1963, President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas. President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed a blue-ribbon committee to investigate the assassination and to report its findings to the American people. Headed by Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren, it became known as the Warren Commission. The Commission concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone assassin, but a large portion of the population felt that they had not presented the whole story.
New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison was one such skeptic. Brilliant, ruthless, and politically ambitious, Garrison saw in the Kennedy assassination his opportunity. He announced that the Warren Commission had deliberately lied to the American people, purposefully covering up a conspiracy. Garrison proposed variously that the conspiracy was hatched by the C. I. A., the F. B. I., the military-industrial complex, Cuban Communists, and Lyndon Johnson and Texas oil barons.
Garrison needed a theory that allowed him jurisdiction to prosecute, so he came up with the idea that the conspiracy was planned in New Orleans, and the assassination was a "homosexual thrill killing." He told a journalist, "They had the same motive as Loeb and Leopold when they murdered Bobbie Franks in Chicago."
On March 1, 1967, Jim Garrison arrested Clay Shaw and charged him with conspiring to assassinate President Kennedy. Garrison knew Shaw was gay, but the general public did not, though soon Shaw's homosexuality was exposed. The discreetly gay Shaw was soon described as a sadist as well as a homosexual.
Exactly how Garrison originally intended to proceed against Shaw is still not clear, although he told reporters that he did not need to develop a case against the businessman because he expected Shaw to commit suicide before he could bring him to trial.
Pre-Stonewall era, suicide was often the expected course for gay people to avoid suffering the humiliation of being publicly identified as a degenerate. This was particularly true for prominent figures like Clay Shaw. Months passed, however, and Shaw had not obliged Garrison by killing himself. Garrison then was forced to bring Shaw to trial.
The trial finally began in early 1969. Garrison produced witnesses who swore that they saw Shaw plotting to kill the President. As the trial progressed, however, it became clear these witnesses whose stories were incompatible with each other and illegally obtained.
The jury took less than an hour of deliberation to return with a verdict of not guilty. The date was March 1, 1969, exactly two years after Shaw's arrest.
Two days later Garrison re-arrested Shaw, this time charging him with perjury. It took another two years, and the last of Shaw's retirement savings, finally to get the United States Supreme Court to order Garrison to stop persecuting Clay Shaw. By this time Shaw's resources were depleted, and he had to return to work.
The strain of the five-year ordeal took its toll on Shaw's health. He died of lung cancer on August 14, 1974. He was 61 years old.
To honor him, friends erected a plaque on one of the French Quarter buildings he had restored. They hoped that with time the public would come to know what they knew, that Shaw was a fine and decent man. What they did not anticipate that Oliver Stone would make a film called JFK, which made the unscrupulous Garrison into a hero and portrayed Shaw as a slimy underworld figure. Shaw was portrayed by Tommy Lee Jones in the film. Jones received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for the role.
The truth about Clay Shaw on display on the plaque given by his friends
After graduation from high school, Shaw moved to New York where he managed a Western Union office, took classes at Columbia University, and, later, was booking manager for a lecture bureau, representing luminaries such as poet John Masefield, actor Maurice Evans, and first lady Eleanor Roosevelt. When World War II began, Shaw enlisted as a private in the medical corps. Soon commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant, he was appointed to the staff of Brigadier General Charles O. Thrasher, directing supplies for the million men who crossed the English Channel in the D-Day invasion.
For his role in liberating France from the Nazi occupation, Shaw was awarded the Bronze Star and the Legion of Merit by the United States Army and the Croix de Guerre by the government of France.
Discharged from the Army in 1946, Major Shaw returned to New Orleans, his home for the remainder of his life. Within months he was hired to launch the International Trade Mart, whose objectives were to sell American products abroad and to increase foreign trade into the Port of New Orleans. His army experience in transportation and shipping, along with a fluency in both Spanish and French, made him the ideal for the position.
While serving as Managing Director of the International Trade Mart, Shaw also became a pioneer preservationist, renovating French Quarter buildings.
All of these activities left little time to write, so Shaw decided to retire from the ITM once he could afford to do so. That point came in 1965. At his retirement, the City of New Orleans awarded him its highest honor, the International Order of Merit, in appreciation of his many contributions to the city.
But the social and political turbulence of the 1960s made a quiet retirement for the aspiring writer impossible. On November 22, 1963, President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas. President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed a blue-ribbon committee to investigate the assassination and to report its findings to the American people. Headed by Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren, it became known as the Warren Commission. The Commission concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone assassin, but a large portion of the population felt that they had not presented the whole story.
New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison was one such skeptic. Brilliant, ruthless, and politically ambitious, Garrison saw in the Kennedy assassination his opportunity. He announced that the Warren Commission had deliberately lied to the American people, purposefully covering up a conspiracy. Garrison proposed variously that the conspiracy was hatched by the C. I. A., the F. B. I., the military-industrial complex, Cuban Communists, and Lyndon Johnson and Texas oil barons.
Garrison needed a theory that allowed him jurisdiction to prosecute, so he came up with the idea that the conspiracy was planned in New Orleans, and the assassination was a "homosexual thrill killing." He told a journalist, "They had the same motive as Loeb and Leopold when they murdered Bobbie Franks in Chicago."
On March 1, 1967, Jim Garrison arrested Clay Shaw and charged him with conspiring to assassinate President Kennedy. Garrison knew Shaw was gay, but the general public did not, though soon Shaw's homosexuality was exposed. The discreetly gay Shaw was soon described as a sadist as well as a homosexual.
Exactly how Garrison originally intended to proceed against Shaw is still not clear, although he told reporters that he did not need to develop a case against the businessman because he expected Shaw to commit suicide before he could bring him to trial.
Pre-Stonewall era, suicide was often the expected course for gay people to avoid suffering the humiliation of being publicly identified as a degenerate. This was particularly true for prominent figures like Clay Shaw. Months passed, however, and Shaw had not obliged Garrison by killing himself. Garrison then was forced to bring Shaw to trial.
The trial finally began in early 1969. Garrison produced witnesses who swore that they saw Shaw plotting to kill the President. As the trial progressed, however, it became clear these witnesses whose stories were incompatible with each other and illegally obtained.
The jury took less than an hour of deliberation to return with a verdict of not guilty. The date was March 1, 1969, exactly two years after Shaw's arrest.
Two days later Garrison re-arrested Shaw, this time charging him with perjury. It took another two years, and the last of Shaw's retirement savings, finally to get the United States Supreme Court to order Garrison to stop persecuting Clay Shaw. By this time Shaw's resources were depleted, and he had to return to work.
The strain of the five-year ordeal took its toll on Shaw's health. He died of lung cancer on August 14, 1974. He was 61 years old.
To honor him, friends erected a plaque on one of the French Quarter buildings he had restored. They hoped that with time the public would come to know what they knew, that Shaw was a fine and decent man. What they did not anticipate that Oliver Stone would make a film called JFK, which made the unscrupulous Garrison into a hero and portrayed Shaw as a slimy underworld figure. Shaw was portrayed by Tommy Lee Jones in the film. Jones received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for the role.
The truth about Clay Shaw on display on the plaque given by his friends
"Clay Shaw was a patron of the humanities and lived his life with the utmost grace; an invaluable citizen, he was respected, admired, and loved by many."
Brothers and Duncan Jones' Moon both at Dubai International Film Festival.
ReplyDeleteWar drama Brothers, directed by six-time Oscar nominee Jim Sheridan and starring the young talent of Tobey Maguire, Jake Gyllenhaal and Natalie Portman, is also expected to draw much interest.
Thriller fans will not be disappointed with Moon, a brilliant and spooky science fiction tale of a solitary lunar employee who experiences a personal crisis as the end of his three-year stint nears. The film stars Sam Rockwell with Kevin Spacey as the voice of his computer, and is the first feature film of director Duncan Jones.
DIFF 2009 will be held from December 9 to 16
ReplyDeleteFirst film festival for Brothers after US release?
Fact is no one knows how good brothers is yet. Very few have seen the movie. No critics will see the movie before it opens. Audiences who have viewed the movie have been very fan friendly audiences.
ReplyDeleteTom, Brothers was screen last Sunday night for members for of the DGA.
ReplyDeleteOn Sunday night, the military-themed film, which is based on Danish director Susanne Bier’s award-winning 2004 movie “Brodre,” screened for members of the Directors Guild at the DGA Theater on Sunset Boulevard. The next day, the Envelope’s Pete Hammond (who moderated the post-screening discussion with Sheridan) posted an item wondering why no Oscar bloggers were talking about the film -- whereupon Hollywood Elsewhere’s Jeffrey Wells quickly pointed out that Lionsgate hadn’t screened the film for the folks Hammond was chiding.
...Between the raves from the DGA (as a group, a fairly accurate Oscar precursor) and positive comments from a few critics who’d seen the film, Sheridan’s camp reportedly decided a full campaign was in order.
The Wrap
Others at the Sunday screening say that the film was followed by a standing ovation, a rarity for the DGA, and an enthusiastically-received 45-minute Q&A session in which a common theme was questioners wondering why the film didn’t have a higher profile in the awards race.
ReplyDeleteAgain a very friendly Sheridan loving group. The movie could be very good. I am not ready to say that just yet. If it is I will. Then you all can wrap ur arms around reese and embrace her because u better get used to having her around.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteLet me ask the believers of BT a question. Who should we be more proud of. A man who you believe is keeping a kid hidden in a closet. Probably the same one he hides in. Or should we proud of men like Ricky Martin and Clay Aiken who love their children so much they want to share their love with the world. And oh yes those men have careers to protect also. If Jake has a kid and is hiding it he is a slim ball and not a hero or good dad. That is life the way I see it.
ReplyDeleteI CANT SUPPORT that is ANY WAY. NO EXCUSES
is = in
ReplyDeleteI have never heard about Shaw before. What a tragic story, although I guess we should be greatful they did not vote to convict "the fagg*t". Never saw Stone's JFK for the very reason that I do not like films that distort history.
ReplyDeleteTom, I am on the fence about BT, but I think if he or she exists, what J and A are doing is a form of child abuse. I think psychologically fucking with a child is almost as bad as physical abuse.
Jake Gyllenhaal AND Russell Crowe at today's Steelers game. You know they've fallen in love with our city.
ReplyDelete4 hours ago
JanePitt
jake gyllenhaal is at aladdin's eatery off forbes & shady
15 minutes ago from web
lynz0r
Aladdin's Eatery
If Jake has a kid and is hiding it he is a slim ball and not a hero or good dad.
ReplyDeleteTom, why doesn't Austin receive the same slagging that Jake does? Is he not part of the BT story?
Again a very friendly Sheridan loving group. The movie could be very good. I am not ready to say that just yet. If it is I will.
How will you be able to say that if you plan to boycott his films, as you've said before?
Questions I do blame Austin just as much as Jake if he was involved in bringing a child into the world. Again I dont think there is one. I think TED LIED. I must admit it is harder to be tough on Austin. He is very much a gentleman
ReplyDeletewhere as Jake has been quite a Jerk the last couple yrs. Cant blame reese he is his own man.
I wont be able to judge on my own how good Brothers is. I am talking about the general reviews from the critics that the movie gets. Why should I support the movie. I believe Jake is gay and is an outright liar.
Any other questions. Fire away.
ReplyDeleteJake and Russell Crowe at the Steelers game. That is a PR dream come true. Of course could be a total lie. Will need to see pics of that one.
ReplyDeleteThe tweet didn't say they were together, but both are in Pittsburgh (so is Denzel Washington) filming. It is really doubtful they were together but could see both of them going. Jake's seen the Pirates play, and their were mentions he was to an Steelers game early in the season. See if he will do the trifecta and see the Penquins before he leaves. Honestly I thought he might have gone to a Pitt football game (yesterday they blamed Notre Dame).
ReplyDeleteHave to check the news stations in Pittsburgh and the papers and see if they mention either of them going to the game or any pics.
Talyor Hanson needs to stay sober.
ReplyDeleteThe Taylor Hanson pictures are totally faked.
ReplyDelete1. Depending on how far you want to go to figure out, you could check the resolutions of different parts of the image. However, most image manipulation artists will shrink down the image far enough so that you can't tell. What this really means is that most folks that are trying to hide a Photoshopped image will post it in a really small size.
ReplyDelete2. Try looking at the edges of the subjects- if they're sharper than they should be, or show edges of color that doesn't match the background, or things are cut off. Look for blurs or lack of detail in areas where the image should be in focus, and areas where one color is used more predominately than it would be in the natural world. Look for repetition in natural textures. Also, look for flaws in the perspective, color interaction, light source, etc.
3. Inconsistencies in highlights, shadows, focus, depth of view, resolution, etc can all give away a manipulated picture.
deviantART
^^there's also something I heard about differences in color temperature between parts of a shopped pic but it's microscopic and you have to have special equipment for that.
What a tragic story. I saw Oliver Stone's version of JFK way back when and bought it hook, line and sinker. Thanks for posting the true story.
ReplyDeleteI watched the Steeler game today and they showed Crowe in the stands. Called my cousin in Pittsburgh after the game and he talked my ear off for 2 hours. I decided to go for broke and called another cousin and that ran for a good hour as well, so I was wiped out. I was foot-balled out by the time the Patriots started so have not watched, but just flipped the channel. Glad to see they are winning.
Talyor Hanson needs to stay sober.
ReplyDeleteAnd miss all that fun?
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeletewhut??
ReplyDeleteYou know what, 06:21? You can do all your namecalling and self-amusing, self-entertaining, timewasting little keyboard shenanigans allllllll you want.
ReplyDeleteYou're not intimidating me off of this blog and you're not going to get me upset.
I'm here so just deal with it. Not only that, but I've got the support of most everyone here on this blog.
So you can just go ahead and waste all the energy and time that you want. I'm not going anywhere.
So deal with it however you need to. We'll all just sit back and watch how elementary and stalkish you can be. Just remember. Your computer ID gets recorded and can be traced.
LOL, and if anything, it's just going to make me be on here more. Boy, wouldn't everyone love that!!
ReplyDeleteLOLLLL!
Oh, and correction; I guess that should read your computer IP address, not your I.D. Maybe it's the same thing.
Whatever! It can be traced and I know that for a fact.
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteAnd how rude of me. Not to even say good morning first!!
ReplyDeleteComing to you Liiiiiive from my work. My internet provider is having some serious problems. I can't even access my home email from here. Grrrrrr!!
Just barely got the walk in this morning. It was drizzling but got it in. And it's supposed to rain all day. Again.
I was watching some of my OTH this morning, trying to catch up. Is it on tonight? I'm still behind.
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteAnon, you forgot to sign in!
ReplyDeleteAnonymous said...
ReplyDeleteI watched the Steelers game. At one point when the camera stopped, I thought the man they were photographing looked a lot like Russell Crowe. Maybe that was him. Or not. But I didn't see anyone who looked like Jake.
November 16, 2009 8:54 AM
Anyone still not believing Jake has been jinxed by his beard?!
ReplyDeleteEntertainment2u: TV Update: Episode #666 of NBC's "SNL" will have Jake Gyllenhaal as host, 50 Cent as musical guest and @Entertainment2u in audience! - 12/5
about 1 hour ago
I think you should delete 8:41 Special; I don't think name-calling of that sort should be allowed to stay up. Boy, when all else fails, resort to school-yard tactics. Too bad we're not all 16-years old who'll run from the school yard when someone calls us a name.
ReplyDeleteAbout 8:41 am.
ReplyDeleteSorry I just realized what it was. I did see that when I looked at it the first time.
Thanks again Destiny for point it out to me
ReplyDeleteAustin & Sophia were in NYC this weekend, there is a photo of them on one of the sights, with Kevin Zegler (her former co-star for Narrow) who is dating her friend..
ReplyDeleteLast weekend they were together in LA..
Weekend before that in Texas..
So there together in Wilmington all week and then they take trips on the weekends.
Next up Turkey & Germany.
Unlike Reese & Jake, these two actually look like they are happy.
Who wants to put odds on who marries first Jake & Reese or Austin & Sophia??
Sorry babbler, ther will be no Jake & Reese nor Austin & Sophia weddings.
ReplyDeleteThere might be weddings. Just no wedding nights.
ReplyDeleteBoys aren't THAT desperate and stupid.
ReplyDeleteYes they are!
ReplyDeleteNo, we aren't!
ReplyDeleteYou will be!
ReplyDeleteDamn straight!
ReplyDeleteYou'll be straighter than the beeline we make to the bank!
ReplyDeleteIt was done in such a way that they hoped it'd be missed Special.
ReplyDeleteJust Bearding and Famewhoring must be slipping; not a word about Austin and no pictures of him on the red carpet with Sophia at the movie last night.
ReplyDeleteYou mean JustHorrid?
ReplyDeleteOr JustWhoreIt?!
ReplyDeleteNice picture of Sophia, Austin and Kevin at the Pippa Lee screening:
ReplyDeleteSophia Austin Kevin