Good catch James!
I can’t remember if Dr. Glover ever included this seizure/ambulance scene in her recollections.
Here is what Dr. Toni Glover said about the incident in her 1999 Sixth Floor Museum Oral History interview:
Now, it’s a block and a half, you know. I just kept running back and forth, and on one of my trips down there, a man fell. And I remember some kind of blood, whether he hit the corner of his head or scratched something or scraped something, and that was alarming to me at that age. But I was also kneeling and touching him and holding his shoulder. And several people were. There was just… and you know, I remember him jerking. I remember him… it being a little frightening. I did know a woman at the time who had fairly severe epilepsy, and I’d seen her have seizures before. So that was my first little diagnosis.
Bob: What you thought probably.
Toni: And I believe a policeman helped at that time, and I remember an ambulance coming to get him—and my fears that the ambulance was going to interfere with the parade, was somehow going to stop it. It wouldn’t come around the corner. But they came and went quickly.
Bob: And so you left the man yourself, as the ambulance was coming up, or…?
She also said that she had never seen a photo of herself at the scene until two weeks before this interview. She actually joined this forum and posted a few times a few years ago. I can imagine that she would be interested in seeing herself at the epileptic scene in Bronson...
Robin and Charles – thank you for those informative replies.
So in the Texas Monthly article Marilyn Willis says:
“But there was a woman that took her handkerchief and dipped it in the reflecting pool there and wiped his brow. She really did.”
And the Sixth Floor Museum’s Oral History has Toni stating:
”But I was also kneeling and touching him and holding his shoulder. And several people were.”
It makes me wonder if Marilyn Willis’s woman was Toni Glover.