Finding Davy Herold’s grave

When the government released the bodies of the Lincoln conspirators to their families in 1869, there was one condition. None of the four persons hanged on July 7, 1865, could have a marked grave.

Davy Herold’s body was laid to rest hear his father’s body in Congressional Cemetery in Southeast Washington, D.C. The Herold family figured out a way to circumvent the ban on marked graves for conspirators.

When Davy’s sister died, they buried her on top of Davy’s coffin, so they would always know where he was.

Source: The Lincoln Assassination: Where Are They Now? A Guide to the Burial Places of Individuals Connected to the Lincoln Assassination in Washington, D.C. by Jim Garrett and Richard Smyth

Booth’s fan club

boothJohn Wilkes Booth was more discreet than many other actors who received wild proposals from female fans.

One actress remembered that male actors often passed around female fans’ letters for amusement, but Booth, realizing the letters could ruin the reputations of the writers, cut off the signatures before he shared his.

“The sting lies in the tails,” he’d say.

 

Mr. Lincoln couldn’t sleep either

When President Lincoln didn’t sleep well he sometimes wandered to his office and worked, with the whole East Wing unoccupied except for himself and the messenger sleeping in the anteroom.

When the Lincolns first occupied the Executive Mansion, ingress and egress was entirely unobstructed. All the doors on the Pennsylvania Avenue side of the mansion were open all through the day and very late into the night.

Source: White House Community by Ronald D. Reitveld, Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association

 

John Wilkes Booth and the Devil

While painters depicted President Abraham Lincoln surrounded by angels, they paired John Wilkes Booth with a fallen angel. Many drawings of Booth and the devil were sold. Here’s one from the Library of Congress collection. Click on it for a larger version:

 

jwb and d.

 

Treasure trove from 1893

Confederate Veteran magazine, over the centuries, carried first-person narratives from hundreds of important rebel eyewitnesses.

The editors at Confederate Veteran were so kind as to share an accessible collection of fascinating back issues from 1893-1932.

They are posted on this University of Pennsylvania site: http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/serial?id=confedvet

 

Lincoln more popular than Washington

skyscraping-tower-of-books.jpeg.492x0_q85_crop-smart

There are 2,972 biographies of George Washington, but 5,796 of Abraham Lincoln.

If you’re counting books that are simply about Lincoln, it’s much higher — about 16,000. That’s enough books to stack three stories high. The Center for Education and Leadership at the National Park Service’s Ford’s Theatre complex has done just that. The staircase at the new center winds around a wide stack of Lincoln’s books that reach 34 feet high.

Two hundred biographies were published in 2009 alone — the 200th anniversary of President Lincoln’s birth.

Sources: WSJ.com, World Cat

Two graves for Stonewall Jackson

StonewallsArm-webConfederate General Stonewall Jackson died on May 10, 1843, but his arm had already received a Christian burial.

When Jackson was accidentally shot by his own troops on this day in 1863, his arm was amputated to save his life. His chaplain couldn’t bear to see the general’s arm thrown on a pile of amputed limbs from the Battle of Chancellorsville, so he gave the arm a Christian burial in a private cemetery nearby.

Gen. Jackson died of pneumonia the next week. His body was sent to his family in Lexington, Va. — minus one arm.

Mrs. Jackson decided not to exhume the arm because it received a Christian burial.

Unfortunately, Union soliders reportedly dug it up in 1864, possibly moving it to another location. In 1903, one of Jackson’s staff officers erected this granite marker in the cemetery to commemorate the arm. Ellwood Manor Cemetery is near the National Military Park at Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania in Virginia.

Sources: The Surratt Courier, NPR.org

 

President Lincoln’s mourning cards

Mourning Card

Courtesy of Columbia Historical Society

In President Lincoln’s time, people kept mourning cards to remember those who died. The card above was distributed in Washington, D.C.

Metro police had no days off

The Washington City police who searched for John Wilkes Booth were accustomed to working 12-hour shifts seven days a week. That was their normal schedule.

The patrolmen were paid $40 a month — less than day laborers and less than half what a skilled mechanic could command. Sergeants made a little more — $600 a year.

Source: “Law and Order in the Capital City: A History of the Washington Police 1800-1866 by Kenneth G. Alfers.

 

 

Lincoln not the first to lie in state

President Lincoln was not the first person to be accorded the honor of lying in state in the Capitol Rotunda.

Henry Clay, speaker of the House of Representatives, was the first when he died in 1852.

President Lincoln was second, and 11 other presidents followed him, along with selected senators and military commanders, the unknown soldiers for four wars, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover and Pierre L ‘Enfant, who designed the layout for Washington, D.C.