Authors: James L. Swanson
death of, 378
Johnson's pardon of, 366â67
Lovett's questioning of, 211â12, 234â35
popular image of, 378
Wells's interrogation of, 235â39
Mudd, Sarah Frances, 127, 152, 153, 155, 157, 162, 209, 234
Munroe, Seaton, 91
National Hotel, 119, 127, 197
National Intelligencer
, 17, 29, 135, 205
Navy Yard Brigade, 66â68, 81â82, 164, 229
Naylor, T., 78
Nelaton probe, 110, 118
Newport, Colonel, 184
New York Herald
, 171, 186, 198, 205
New York Times
, 205
New York Tribune
, 16â17, 205
Norris, Basil, 50, 52, 68â69
O'Beirne, James, 89, 281â82, 315, 358
O'Laughlen, Michael, 24, 27â28, 80, 231, 339, 349, 353, 356, 363, 366, 378, 379
arrest of, 197, 220
Olcott, H. S., 146â47, 190
Oldroyd, Osborn H., 244â45, 374
Olin, Abram B., 112
Orr, Colonel, 384â85
Oswald, Lee Harvey, 383
Our American Cousin
(Taylor), 12â13, 15, 17, 374
Booth's knowledge of, 35â36
fatal shot and, 41â42, 159 “Our Brutus” (sheet music), 385
Page, Nathan, 180, 219
papal states, 375â76
Parker, Commander, 254
Peanut, John,
see
Burroughs, John Pendleton, J. H., 304 “Perrine's New Topographical War Map of the Southern States,” 294
Petersen, William, 93, 145
Petersen House, 374, 379
Jones's visit to, 244â45
Lincoln moved to, 90â94
as tourist attraction, 244â45
Peyton, Lucy, 278
Peyton, Randolph, 277â78
Peyton, Sarah Jane, 278â79
Philadelphia Inquirer
, 205, 217
Phillips, Henry B., 5
Pierpont, F. H., 147
Pinkerton, Allan, 23, 215
Pope's Creek, 179
Port Tobacco, 208â10, 242
Powell, Lewis, 6, 24, 28, 29â30, 68, 70, 86, 118, 132, 194, 195â96, 205, 221, 231, 256, 323, 336, 349, 356, 358, 377, 381
background of, 25
capture of, 190â93, 231
disinterment of, 379â80
execution of, 364â66
Gardner's photographs of, 353
Seward attacked by, 51â61
trial and conviction of, 362â63 “Præsidicide, The” (Hylton), 385
Prisoner of Shark Island, The
(film), 378
Purdum, James W., 219â20, 358
Queen, William, 127â28
Quesenberry, Elizabeth, 230, 252, 256â59
Rathbone, Henry, 32â33, 35, 41, 42â43, 58, 63, 73â75, 77, 91, 115, 160, 264, 277
fate of, 372
grapples with Booth, 46â47
wound of, 72, 108â9
Rawlins, General, 18
Ray, James Earl, 383
Reconstruction, 6, 387
Richards, Almarin C., 135, 146
Richmond, fall of, 2, 4, 266
Richter, Hartman, 181, 219â20
River Queen
, 269
Robey, Franklin, 165, 171
Robinson, George, 51, 55, 57â60, 61, 68â71, 101, 372
Rollins, Betsy, 301, 302
Rollins, William, 267, 310
Baker's questioning of, 298â302
Booth and Herold encountered by, 270â71, 274â76
as cavalry guide, 302â3, 305
Rosch, Charles H., 358
Rucker, General, 112
Ruggles, Mortimer B., 272â80, 301â4
Safford, Henry, 93â94, 106 “Sam” letter, 119, 133â35, 174, 183, 197
Sampson, Thomas, 358
Saugus
, USS, 353
Secret Service, Confederate, 24, 27, 116, 125
Severs, Wesley, 200
Seward, Anna, 60
Seward, Augustus “Gus,” 59â60, 69, 101
Powell identified by, 194
Seward, Frances (wife), 51, 60, 377
Seward, Frances “Fanny,” Adeline, 49, 50â52, 54â55, 57â59, 60, 68, 69, 70, 79, 85, 98, 101, 377
Seward, Frederick, 49, 54â56, 57, 60, 69â70, 101, 111, 115, 121, 136, 377
Seward, William H., 28â29, 97, 98, 101, 111, 113, 115, 121, 132, 137, 141, 142, 148, 191, 193, 205, 323, 336, 357, 362
in carriage accident, 49â50
Powell's attempted assassination of, 51â61
wounds suffered by, 68â69, 377, 377 Shakespeare, William, 251, 268, 269â70, 327
Sherman, William Tecumseh, 14, 30
Sixteenth New York Cavalry, U.S., 253, 283, 285, 289, 298â303, 328, 331, 340, 345, 348, 357â58, 359, 361
at Garrett's farm, 314â28, 334â42
Jett arrested by, 311â13
Rollins as guide for, 302â3
Sixth Massachusetts Infantry, U.S., 87
Slater, Sarah, 167, 256
Slough, J. P., 123â24, 253
Smith, James, 99â101
Smith, John L., 220
Smith, H.W., 189, 358
Smith, William M., 1
Smithsonian Institution, 380
Soldiers' Home, 97
Soper's Hill, 86, 187
Spangler, Edman “Ned,” 20, 36, 63, 231, 349, 353, 356, 368, 378, 379
arrest of, 197â98
Johnson's pardon of, 366
Speed, James, 154
Sprague, Lyman, 89
Stanton, Edwin M., 13, 50, 70, 96â102, 100, 102, 107, 109, 121, 140, 142, 170, 194, 198, 220, 257, 281, 322, 330â31, 337, 339, 363, 368, 381
in aftermath of Booth's death, 349â56
fate of, 378â79
Lincoln's final hours and, 110â12, 137â38
Lincoln's relationship with, 96â97
manhunt directed by, 112â14, 115, 146â47, 174â75, 183, 202â3, 214â15
Pinkerton's aid declined by, 215
rewards proclaimed by, 221â23, 233â34, 285 “Sam” letter and, 133, 135, 174
Stanton, Ellen, 97, 98
Star Saloon, 35, 37, 155
Stevens, General, 257
Stevenson, General, 113
Stewart, Joseph B., 62â64
Still Waters Run Deep
, 25
Stockton, Mr., 218
Stone, Frederick, 242
Stone, Robert King, 110
Stuart, Richard, 259â62, 263, 287, 308
Booth's written rebuke of, 267â70, 276
Sumner, Isabel, 151â52
Sumter, Fort, 9
Supreme Court, U.S., 379
Surratt, Anna, 120â21, 129, 189, 193, 367
Surratt, John, Sr., 103â4
Surratt, John Harrison, Jr., 19, 23, 24, 25, 80, 104, 118, 119, 143, 148, 189â90, 193, 194, 195, 205, 286, 300, 379
arrest and escape of, 375â76
Booth's recruitment of, 128â29
death of, 377
as fugitive, 365â66, 375
reward offered for capture of, 221â22
in secret mission, 27
trial of, 376â77
Surratt, Mary E., 19, 22â23, 80, 83, 104, 119â20, 128, 129, 155, 226, 231, 300, 349, 356, 357, 374
arrest of, 190â93, 196â97
in Atzerodt's confession, 221
disinterment of, 367
execution of, 364â66 interrogation of, 194â96
Powell's arrest and, 189â90
public sympathy for, 379
trial and conviction of, 362â63
Swann, Mary, 165, 241
Swann, Oswell, 163, 165â66, 240
Sweitzer, W. B., 253, 284
Taft, Charles Sabin, 76, 90â91, 107, 108, 110, 138
Taltavul, Peter, 35, 37, 90
Tanner, James, 113, 138
Taylor, Colonel, 253
Taylor, Tom, 12
Taylor, Zachary, 90 “Terry's Panorama of the War!” (Tyng), 384
Thirteenth New York Cavalry, U.S., 132, 137, 153, 155â57, 161, 182, 239
Thirtieth Virginia Infantry, Confederate, 307
Thomas, Sam, 227
Thompson, John C., 127â28
Thornton, Champe, 276
Thornton, James, 276â77
Torbert, General, 257
Townsend, George Alfred, 86, 150, 192, 208, 209, 346, 347â48, 350, 351
on Booth's interment, 354â55
Garrett farmhouse as characterized by, 345â46
Jones discovered by, 242â44, 373
Townsend, Solomon, 220
Trappe (tavern), 303
Treasury Department, U.S., 15, 373
reward money disbursement and, 357â59
Trotter, Peter, 181
Turner, Ella, 149â50, 383, 384
Turner, J. W., 201
Turner, Mary Ann, 64
Twain, Mark, 242
Twenty-second Army Corps, U.S., 253
Tyng, H. L., 384
Ulke, Julius, 143
Urquhart, Charles, 340, 344
U.S. Army Medical Museum, 300, 380, 382
Usher, John P., 142
U.S. Military Railroad, 113
Vanodi, Sig., 384
Verdi, T. S., 50, 52, 53, 55, 68â69, 70
Virginia, 48, 116, 147
Walker, James, 114
Walnut Theatre, 351
Walton, John R., 224
War Department, U.S., 71, 96, 97, 113, 123, 138, 147, 176, 189, 190, 203, 213, 221, 232, 233â34, 248, 283â84, 350, 352, 361, 362, 368, 379, 381
in appeal to black population, 285â87, 286
reward proclamations of, 221â23, 233â34, 285, 349
Ware, John, 227
Warren, Henry, 43
Washington, Frank, 125
Washington, George, 1, 16, 90, 163, 382
Washington
Daily Morning Chronicle
, 135, 141â42, 163, 177, 198, 205
Washington Evening Star
, 6, 14â15, 149, 177, 205, 363â65, 368
Watkins, Captain, 137
Weaver, John, 367â68
Weichmann, Lewis, 19, 22, 119â21, 129, 193
Welles, Gideon, 13, 99â101, 102â3, 107, 109, 117â18, 136â37, 142, 154, 213, 253â54, 363
Welles, H. H., 156, 189â90, 193, 233â34
Mary Surratt interrogated by, 194â96
Mudd interrogated by, 235â39
reward money awarded to, 358
Welles, John, 99
Welles, Mary Jane, 99, 139â40, 154
Wermerskirch, William, 190â91, 358
Whitman, Walt, 64â66, 125
Willard Hotel, 213
Willauer, Captain, 257
Williams, William, 208, 209â10, 243â44
Wilmer, Parson, 212, 238
Winship, W. W., 253
Withers, William, 33, 48
Wood, Reverend,
see
Powell, Lewis Woodland, Henry, 179, 184, 228â29
Woodward, Dr., 352
World's Columbian Exposition, 373
Zeilin, Colonel, 117â18
I
THANK THE PIONEERS
, G
EORGE
A
LFRED
T
OWNSEND
(1841 TO 1914), Osborn H. Oldroyd (1842 to 1930), and James O. Hall, who, in his nineties, remains an inspiration. All other scholars of the Lincoln assassination must stand on their shoulders. Townsend, Oldroyd, and Hall followed Booth's path, asked the questions, collected the documents, and pursued the unknown. The rest of us walk in their footsteps, and those tracks span several generations leading in an unbroken line back to the night when Abraham Lincoln was shot. I owe special thanks to Mr. Hall for a memorable day at his home, when he shared some of the knowledge that he has devoted a lifetime to acquiring.
With fond memories, I thank the late Michael Maione, National Park Service historian at Ford's Theatre, who, as far as I know, never appeared anywhere out of uniform, for memorable conversations and good counsel. Mike was the model of a public historian, and those who saw him in action at Ford's, pacing in front of the stage, delivering his famous lecture on the assassination in a bellowing voice, saw him at his best. Once, I cautioned Mike that his enthusiasm was frightening the schoolchildren who flocked in droves to Ford's every summer. “Yes,” he said, beaming, “and they will remember me!” They certainly did. And Michael, so shall we. It was “altogether fitting and proper,” to borrow Lincoln's phrase from his remarks honoring the dead at Gettysburg, that Mike's memorial service was held at the place he lovedâFord's Theatre.
I thank Library of Congress specialist Clark Evans for quiet days in the rare-book room at the Jefferson Building, when he brought out one delightful Lincoln treasure after another. I also thank John R. Sellers, Historical Specialist
at the Library of Congress manuscripts division, for assassination tips, helpful publishing advice, and making available some of the Lincoln treasures from his domain. At the National Archives, Michael Musick was an indispensable guide to the complicated records of the Lincoln assassination.
Two good friends in the Lincoln community, Edward Steers Jr., the premiere contemporary historian of the assassination, and Michael F. Bishop, executive director of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission, graciously read and improved the manuscript. Michael Burlingame, Lincoln scholar, editor, and author nonpareil, is unfailingly eager to share his research with colleagues, and he generously answered my questions. At the University of Chicago, David Bevington offered insights into Booth's use of Shakespeare.
Andrea E. Mays, an astute critic of historical nonfiction, read and commented on the manuscript from her unique perspective. She reviewed several incarnations of the book and saved me from making a number of embarrassing errors and omissions.
I also thank Lisa Bertagnoli, journalist, linguist, and student of Southern culture, for reading the manuscript, offering many valuable comments, and for her other contributions.