JOHN WILKES BOOTH
G'day folks,
Welcome to some details about an assassin. Despite his success as an actor on the national stage, John
Wilkes Booth will forever be known as the man who assassinated President
Abraham Lincoln.
Booth, a native of Maryland, was a fierce Confederate sympathizer
during the Civil War. Before the fateful night at Ford’s Theatre, he had
conspired to kidnap Lincoln and hide him until all Confederate prisoners were
released. On April 14, 1865, Booth entered the theater’s balcony, shot Lincoln
at close range and immediately fled the scene. After a 12-day manhunt, Booth
was tracked down and killed by Union soldiers.
The celebrated actor Junius Brutus Booth immigrated to the
United States from England in the early 1820s and settled his family in Harford
County, Maryland, where the ninth of his 10 children,
John Wilkes, was born on May 10, 1838. In 1846, it was revealed that Junius
Booth had neglected to divorce his first wife before eloping with his second,
Mary Ann, 25 years before. The scandal made an impression on young John Wilkes,
who was fiercely proud of his illustrious family name.
After his father’s death in 1852, Booth left his studies at
the prestigious military school St. Timothy’s Hall. In 1855, he followed his
older brothers, Junius Jr. and Edwin, into the acting profession, making his
debut in Shakespeare’s Richard III at the Charles Street Theatre in Baltimore.
Booth worked for a year at a Philadelphia theater before moving to the Marshall
Theatre in Richmond, Virginia, where he became known for his dark good
looks, his intensely physical, almost acrobatic, performances and his
popularity with women.
In October 1859, Booth–who, like many Marylanders,
supported slavery–was shocked and galvanized by the abolitionist John Brown’s
bloody raid on Harper’s Ferry, Virginia. Booth briefly enlisted in the Richmond
militia and witnessed Brown’s hanging in December. That summer, he signed on as
the leading man in a touring theater company. Booth was about to take on the
part of Hamlet in October 1860 when he accidentally shot himself in the thigh
with a co-star’s pistol. Abraham Lincoln was elected president one month
later, and Booth watched the South move toward secession while recuperating in
Philadelphia.
Shortly after the outbreak of the Civil War, Lincoln
declared martial law in Maryland as part of an effort to keep the state from
seceding. Angry and frustrated, Booth nonetheless promised his mother he would
never enlist in the Confederate Army. He continued his acting career, drawing
crowds and impressing critics from St. Louis to Boston. In November 1863, he
performed in The Marble Heart at Washington’s Ford’s Theatre. In the audience
were President and Mrs. Lincoln. It was the only time Lincoln would see Booth
perform.
In late May 1864, Booth invested in an oil company in
western Pennsylvania. After seeing no immediate profit,
he backed out of the operation, losing most of his savings. By that time, he
had already begun working on his conspiracy to kidnap Lincoln. He performed
less and less frequently, and by late 1864 had gone into debt. Booth attended
Lincoln’s second inaugural in early March with his secret fiancĂ©e Lucy Hale,
the daughter of an abolitionist New Hampshire senator. In what would be his last performance,
Booth appeared in front of a full house at Ford’s in The Apostate on March 28,
1865.
Less than a week later, Confederate forces evacuated
Richmond, and within two weeks, General Robert E. Lee surrendered his troops. As Washington exploded in celebration, Booth
attended another Lincoln speech on April 11, reacting strongly to Lincoln’s
suggestion that he would pursue voting rights for blacks. Booth angrily told
his co-conspirator, Davy Herold: “Now, by God, I’ll put him through.” Three
days later, at Ford’s Theatre, John Wilkes Booth made good on his word.
Clancy's comment: Yet another person who has slain someone famous.
I'm ...
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