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Category Archives: Assassination
Report of first doctor to reach Abraham Lincoln after he was shot is found
The first doctor to reach President Abraham Lincoln after he was shot in a Washington theater rushed to his ceremonial box and found him paralyzed, comatose and leaning against his wife. Dr. Charles Leale ordered brandy and water to be … Continue reading
Posted in 1865, Assassination, Documents, Lincoln, Medicine, National Archives
Tagged 1865, 1867 Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, Abraham Lincoln, April, Associated Press, Blaine Houmes, Cedar Rapids, Charles Leale, Daniel Stowell, Ford's Theater, Helena Iles Papaioannou, Illinois, Iowa, John Wilkes Booth, National Archives, Papers of Abraham Lincoln, Springfield, U.S. Surgeon General, Washington D.C.
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Lincoln Assassination Resources
Due to the reconfiguration of this blog, here are the links to the stories on Frederick Aiken, Mary Surratt and the Lincoln Assassination, for your convenience. Frederick Aiken Biography Frederick Aiken The Attorney – Historians Weigh In Rare Aiken … Continue reading
Frederick Aiken The Attorney – Historians Weigh In
From the moment that the American Film Company released The Conspirator, questions have been raised about the films accuracy regarding the lead counsel, Frederick Aiken. Was he, as FoxNews host Bill O’Reilly would opine, a “pinhead” or a “patriot?” You be … Continue reading
The Lincoln Assassination: New research unravels old myths
By Jeffrey S. Williams Concordia University-St. Paul, Minn. Written for Dr. David Woodard’s “Readings in American History” class – April 2011. The Northern States were celebrating the end of the Civil War when President Abraham Lincoln was shot at Ford’s … Continue reading
Lincoln Assassination Books
Here are the five best books for details on the Lincoln Assassination. American Brutus, by Michael W. Kauffman It is a tale as familiar as our history primers: A deranged actor, John Wilkes Booth, killed Abraham Lincoln in Ford’s Theatre, … Continue reading
Posted in 1865, Assassination, Books, Booth, Frederick Aiken, Lincoln, Surratt
Tagged american brutus, assassins accomplice, Azerodt, clifford, Frederick Aiken, John Wilkes Booth, kauffman, Lincoln Assassination, manhunt, Mary Surratt, my thoughts be bloody, Powell, Seward, Stanton, swanson, titone
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Mary Eugenia Surratt (1823-1865)
Convicted Lincoln assassination conspirator Mary Eugenia Jenkins was born in Maryland in 1823. As an adolescent she attended a Catholic seminary for girls in Virginia, but at sixteen she married John Surratt, at least ten years her senior, and in … Continue reading
On this day: April 26, 1865 – JOHN WILKES BOOTH KILLED!
The Account of the Officer in Charge On April 24, 1865, Lieutenant Edward Doherty sits on a bench across from the White House conversing with another officer. The arrival of a messenger interrupts the conversation. The messenger carries orders directing … Continue reading
On this date: April 24, 1865 – Hancock issues proclamation
On this date, 146 years ago – Maj. Gen. Winfield Scott Hancock ordered the following handbills printed and distributed to free blacks in the communities of Virginia and Maryland along the Potomac River. John Wilkes Booth, President Lincoln’s assassin, and … Continue reading
Posted in 1865, African-American, Assassination, Booth, Lincoln, Maryland, Surratt
Tagged Booth, Frederick Aiken, Free Black, Mary Surratt, Winfield Scott Hancock
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Frederick A. Aiken biography
Sarah Olivia WESTON was born in West Randolph, Orange, Vermont. Educated at home, chiefly under private tuition. She continued her studies in Boston, devoting her attention principally to the classics and history, under the direction of several noted professors at Cambridge, she being the … Continue reading
Posted in 1865, Assassination, Booth, Frederick Aiken, Lincoln, Surratt
Tagged Frederick Aiken, Lincoln Assassination, Mary Surratt, The Conspirator
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‘The Conspirator’ takes in $7 million in ten days
Here are the latest numbers for the first ten days of ‘The Conspirator’ courtesy of the-numbers.com. The film had a budget of $25 million and has now taken in just under $7 million in ten days at the box office. … Continue reading
Posted in 1865, Assassination, Booth, Frederick Aiken, Lincoln, Maryland, Surratt
Tagged Frederick Aiken, Lincoln Assassination, Mary Surratt, The Conspirator
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