
Every time we make a determination to set aside a seashore for the use of future generations, every time we build these great projects, we develop the water resources, we set aside recreational areas, we can be sure they are going to be used. Three hundred and fifty million Americans will live in this country of ours in the short space of less than 40 years, where now there are 180 million. What will they do? What kind of a country will they find? How much recreation will be possible for them? I think if we make the right decisions now they will be as grateful to us as we were and are to Gifford Pinchot and Theodore Roosevelt for the things they did 45 and 50 years ago.
We witness today the completion of a project which symbolizes the goals to which we are committed. The Whiskeytown Reservoir is not the largest structure on the Trinity River, but its completion is significant because this is the last of the Trinity project dams.
With the Trinity division completed and the upper reaches of the Sacramento now harnessed, Shasta County and its neighbors are assured of water and power. They can enjoy new chances for recreational use, and new access to open space. - President John F. Kennedy, September 28, 1963.
Those were the words of our 35th President at the dedication of Whiskeytown Reservoir, a mere 7 weeks and 6 days before he was cut down by a sniper’s or snipers’ bullets in Dallas, Texas on November 22, 1963.
When I visited Whiskeytown on the afternoon of July 7 and heard a recording of these remarks at the Kennedy Memorial on the corner of Whiskeytown Dam they seemed at once poignant and tragic, because through the lens of history we know that the optimistic and foresighted words that Kennedy spoke were being uttered by a condemned man whose life was soon to come to a tragic and premature end.