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The Lincoln Assassination: Facts, Fiction and Frankly Craziness Class 3 Lincoln Assassination Conspiracies Jim Dunphy dunphyjj@aol.com 1

Intro Was it just Booth and a small band of associates that carried out the events of April 14 th? 2

Intro In this class, we will look at a number of possible other outcomes, and weigh their possibilities 3

Intro These include: 1. Andrew Johnson was involved with Booth 2. Lincoln s assassination was the result of a Confederate Plot 3. Lincoln s assassination was the result of a conspiracy of powerful international bankers 4

Intro These include: 4. The Roman Catholic Church was behind Lincoln s assassination 5. Secretary of War Edwin Stanton was the mastermind behind Lincoln s assassination 5

Intro And, as a bonus.. Booth did not die at the Garrett Farm but 1. Moved to India or 2. Later lived and died in Oklahoma 6

Although it is now almost 35 years old, William Hanchett s The Lincoln Murder Conspiracies remains the standard in discussing (and debunking) much of today s class 7

Conspiracy #1 Andrew Johnson was involved in the Lincoln Assassination 8

Cui bono There is a principle in criminal investigation (for all of you who have watched a Law and Order franchise show) cui bono Translated, it means who benefits? In investigations, it means who benefits by an action, and that is your suspect for the action 9

Cui bono So who benefited by the assassination of Abraham Lincoln? Clearly VP Andrew Johnson, who became President on Lincoln s death 10

Andrew Johnson Johnson was a Democratic Senator from Tennessee who remained loyal to the Union After Tennessee was occupied by Union forces, he became Military Governor of the state He ran with Lincoln in 1864 on a National Union ticket Famously, he gave a rambling, drunken speech at the 1865 Inauguration 11

Andrew Johnson As noted, on the day of the assassination, Booth left his card at Johnson s hotel with the cryptic note Don t wish to disturb you; are you at home? Accused Confederate conspirators tried to deflect blame to Johnson as the only one who truly benefited from Lincoln s death 12

Andrew Johnson According to E. Lawrence Abel and other authors, in February 1864, while Johnson was Governor of TN, Booth played there While there, Booth and Johnson shared two sisters as their lovers If these sources are to be believed, then Johnson and Booth had an intimate relationship 13

Andrew Johnson Mary Todd Lincoln, a great hater, would later write (emphasis in original) That miserable inebriate Johnson had cognizance of my husband s death Why was that card of Booth found in his box As sure as you & I live, Johnson had some hand in this 14

Summary Booth had a tendency to leave evidence where it might involve others, whether letters in trunks or letters to be delivered He may have also been trying to fix Johnson s location for Atzerodt to kill him later that night Mary Todd is certainly not the most rational analyst, and others had reason to deflect blame 15

Verdict Not Proven! 16

Conspiracy #2 Lincoln s assassination was the result of a Confederate plot 17

First, a little background The Confederacy established a Secret Service in 1864, centered in Montreal and Toronto The group, headed by Jacob Thompson (r) and Clement Clay, operated quite openly out of the St. Lawrence Hall in Montreal From there, they planned raids on St. Albans in Vermont and an attempt to free prisoners on Johnston Island in Lake Erie 18

First, a little background It is know for a fact that Booth was in Montreal in October 1864 At that time, he checked into the St. Lawrence Hall, which was the HQ of the Confederate Secret Service At that time, Booth was more interested in a kidnapping plot the assassination plot did not begin until later. 19

First, a little background One of the biggest plots was to burn down New York On November 25, 1864, a fire was started in Barnum s Museum and three hotels However, other agents fled rather than start fires Ironically, the fire in the Lafarge Hotel interrupted a play in the Winter Garden, where Junius, Edwin and John Wilkes Booth were performing 20

On the Union side In March 1864, prior to LTG Grant preparing his overland campaign, BG Judson Kilpatrick led a raid against Richmond. The stated goal was to free Union prisoners held at Belle Isle and Libby Prison Surrounded by Confederate Cavalry, Kilpatrick never reached Richmond, heading instead down the Peninsula 21

On the Union side One of the detachments was led by COL Ulrich Dahlgren, and got separated from the main force. The unit was surrounded, and COL Dahlgren killed A young boy, looking for booty, allegedly came across some papers which he turned over to the authorities. 22

Dahlgren Papers The papers included the following inflammatory wording: The men must keep together and well in hand, and once in the city it must be destroyed and Jeff. Davis and Cabinet killed Most historians consider the papers to be false, used to fire up Confederates 23

Dahlgren Papers These papers were thought, in the post assassinations trials, to provide a motive for the Confederate conspiracy 24

The Confederate Conspiracy at the Military Commission Judge Advocate Joseph Holt concluded in a proclamation dated April 24 that This Department has information that the President s murder was organized in Canada and approved in Richmond Acting on this proclamation, President Andrew Johnson (r) ordered rewards of $100,000 for Jefferson Davis and $25,000 each for the 4 Confederate commissioners in Canada. 25

The Confederate Conspiracy at the Military Commission When the other conspirators were captured on put on trial by the Military Commission, Holt (also the lead prosecutor) saw the opportunity to prove the Confederate conspiracy He would go to great lengths some legal, some not, some ethical, some not to do so. 26

Examples of Testimony James Merritt, a Canadian MD, testified that when he asked Confederate Commission Clay about the assassination, Clay replied the end justified the means Richard Montgomery, a spy for the US, testified that Commissioner Thompson told him the South had so many friends in the North, Lincoln could be disposed of at any time. 27

Sandford Conover Conover had originally been an official in the Confederate War Dept and fled to the North in 1863 By 1864 he was a correspondent for the New York Tribune He testified that Thompson told him of a plan to assassinate the President and asked him to join in it 28

Sandford Conover He further testified that he was with Thompson when John Surratt arrived from Richmond at some time between April 6 and 9 with instructions to assassinate Lincoln Remember Surratt was in Elmira at that time. 29

Problems with Conover A letter was soon found, addressed by Conover under an alias to Thompson (and addressed March 20, 1865), which started Although I have not had the pleasure of your acquaintance Other problems would crop up later to discredit him 30

Problems with Conover Holt appeared before the House Judiciary Committee in April 1866 and provided affidavits from 8 witnesses supplied by Conover to buttress the case that Davis was behind the assassination Unfortunately for Holt and Conover, one of the witnesses quickly and publicly recanted 31

Problems with Conover Holt saw the only way to remedy the situation was for Conover to testify under oath to the Committee Conover agreed and promptly disappeared. He was not found until the Fall of 1866 32

Problems with Conover At that time, he was tried for perjury, under his real name of Charles A. Dunham He testified that he had coached witnesses in revenge for Davis having put him in prison But he continued to maintain that his original testimony was true 33

Problems with Conover He was convicted on all counts, and sentenced to 10 years in prison He largely disappears from public view after that 34

Jefferson Davis Meanwhile, on May 10, after the assassination but before the conspiracy trials, Jefferson Davis was captured in GA. Not knowing what to do with him, the US cabinet voted to try Davis, in a civil court rather than military, for treason rather than assassination. This vote came on July 21, two weeks after the execution of the four conspirators The trial would never take place 35

John Surratt trial The final blow to the Confederate Grand Conspiracy was in the John Surratt trial in 1867 Tried in a civil instead of military court, the prosecution again tried to link Confederate leadership with the assassination, The trial ended in a hung jury, and Surratt was never retried. 36

Summary There is ample circumstantial evidence that the Canadian Confederate Commissioners were involved in a kidnapping plot. However, it is less clear they had anything to do with the assassination Booth did not turn to assassination until well after his visit to Canada There is no indication of communications or money being sent in furtherance of the assassination 37

Verdict Not Proven! 38

Conspiracy #3 Lincoln s assassination was the result of a group of powerful international bankers 39

International bankers Reasons: The Union needed money to finance the Civil War The Rothschilds offered money at high interest rates Lincoln declined this offer and financed the loans elsewhere cheaper 40

International bankers Reasons: Also, Lincoln was supportive of protectionism Lincoln also favored a lenient reconstruction policy that would have allowed Southern goods to again flood the market The Rothschilds bet the other way, and needed a strong Radical Reconstruction policy to come out ahead. 41

International bankers Advocates believe that Stanton was somehow involved in the conspiracy (different from the Stanton conspiracy discussed later) As an example of fitting things to the conspiracy, it was widely reported that Mary Lincoln, after the assassination, turned to Ford s Theater and uttered, Oh, that terrible house 42

International bankers Conspiracy theorists agree Mary said this But they argue she was referring to Thomas House, a banker and the Rothschilds man in the US (?!?!?!) 43

International bankers Somehow, the conspiracy gets tied up with the Federal Reserve (which was not started until 1913, almost 50 years after Lincoln s death) The argument (if you can figure it out) is Lincoln issued notes that somehow didn t pay interest to bankers 44

Summary We are going deep down the rabbit hole with this one. While most of the theories have a kernel of possibility, I tend to agree with Hanchett, who stated: Another lunacy with devoted partisans is that Lincoln was done in by a conspiracy of international bankers, led by the Rothschilds. 45

Verdict Not proven! (really, really, really!) 46

Conspiracy #4 The Roman Catholic Church was behind Lincoln s assassination 47

The Catholic Conspiracy: Background Immigration during the early years of the country was largely from The United Kingdom Protestant England, Scotland and Northern Ireland However, in the 1840 s a series of famines in Ireland led to huge Irish Catholic emigration This in turn led to a counter movement in the US exemplified by the American (Know Nothing) anti immigration political party This party, besides electing Congressmen, was able to run former President Millard Fillmore as their Presidential candidate in 1856, receiving 21.5% of the vote 48

The Catholic Conspiracy: Background So it is not surprising, given this background, that a Catholic conspiracy would arise! 49

Charles Chiniquy Chiniquy was born in 1809 (the same year as Lincoln) and became a priest in Canada in 1833 before moving to Illinois While there, he was sued by a Catholic layman, and Chiniquy employed Abraham Lincoln as his lawyer. As was his wont, Lincoln settled the case out of court, but Chiniquy thought this was a stinging rebuke to the Church. Later, Chiniquy was defrocked by the Archbishop of Chicago, and then left the Catholic Church 50

Chiniquy and Lincoln Chiniquy would later write of his continuing relationship with Lincoln In a August 1861 conversation, after Chiniquy made reference to rumors that Lincoln had been born a Catholic, Lincoln supposedly replied Thank God I have never been a Roman Catholic After a later visit in 1862, Lincoln supposedly said in 1864 that This war would never had been possible without the sinister influence of the Jesuits 51

Chiniquy and Lincoln Of course, there is no evidence that Lincoln made any such statements In fact, there is no evidence that Chiniquy met with Lincoln after his election to the Presidency Moreover, Robert Todd Lincoln later wrote to a Catholic magazine that he never heard his father utter a anti Catholic sentiment, but that his father s name was a peg upon which to hang many things. 52

Charles Chiniquy After his excommunication, he would spend the rest of his life (as a Protestant) attacking the Catholic church and accusing it of everything under the sun, including the Lincoln Assassination It was all compiled in a strange book, 50 Years in the Church of Rome that still remains in print today and is quoted by anti Catholic activists 53

So what is the evidence that Lincoln ended up being killed as the result of Catholics? 54

Basis for the Catholic Conspiracy 1. Many of the conspirators were Catholic (in a largely Protestant country ) Mary and John Surratt Dr. Samuel Mudd David Herold (at least educated in a Catholic school) 55

Basis for the Catholic Conspiracy 2. The Pope s letter Pope Pius IX allegedly addressed a letter to Jefferson Davis as Illustrious and Hon. Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederate States of America If so, this could be construed as granting recognition to the Confederacy Actually, it was a personal letter to Davis, addressed to Honorable President of the Confederate States of America While not granting recognition, this letter led to a 1867 law preventing diplomatic relations with the Holy See 56

Basis for the Catholic Conspiracy 3. Early notice Chiniquy makes reference to an affidavit from a Protestant minister in St. Joseph MN that at 6:00 (4 hours before the assassination) priests were telling villagers that Lincoln and Seward were dead Of course, this pre knowledge would mean that they were in on the secret The problem of course being that for a priest in a small town in Minnesota to know the secret, a whole heck of a lot of other people would have to know it, and there is no evidence of this. 57

Summary In support of the conspiracy we have: Statements that Lincoln supposed made to Chiniquy with no documentation, and in fact unlikely historically The fact that a larger than expected number of conspirators were Catholic A letter from the Pope that could be interpreted as supporting the Confederacy, when no formal recognition was made A completely unsupported story that there was early notification of the assassination in an obscure village in MN but nowhere else 58

Verdict Not proven! 59

Conspiracy #5 Secretary of War Stanton was the mastermind behind Lincoln s assassination 60

Edwin Stanton Stanton, a Democrat, was the last Attorney General in Buchanan s Cabinet He replaced Lincoln s first Secretary of War, Simon Cameron, who was involved in shady dealings Stanton was forceful Secretary of War, managing the largest military in US history to that point 61

Edwin Stanton He first engaged with Lincoln as attorneys, and did not have a high opinion of Lincoln Later, their relationship turned to respect and even love Stanton was present at the Peterson House after Lincoln was shot, essentially running the government Famously, he said after Lincoln died Now he belongs to the ages. 62

Otto Eisenschiml The most famous proponent of the Stanton conspiracy was Otto Eisenschiml Born in Vienna, Austria in June 1880, his father had emigrated to the US, served as an officer in the Union Army in the Civil War, and lived in the US until 1872 when he returned to Austria 63

Otto Eisenschiml After Otto graduated from college in Vienna with a degree in chemistry, he also sailed for the US First working as a chemist, he later founded a manufacturing company and became rich He took up history as an avocation, particularly Civil War military history 64

Otto Eisenschiml Eisenschiml tells the story that he answered the question in his head while driving in Chicago With the answer, he jammed on the brakes, causing the car behind him to hit him When the driver demanded to know what he was thinking, Eisenschiml replied I now know why Grant didn t accompany Lincoln to the theater! 65

The Stanton Conspiracy The only possible reason (at least to Eisenschiml) was that Grant was ordered not to And the only person with the authority to so order would be Secretary of War Stanton 66

The Stanton Conspiracy Eisenschiml would set out his theory and evidence in a book entitled Why was Lincoln Murdered In it, Eisenschiml argues that he is just asking questions based on the evidence 67

The Stanton Conspiracy Planks of evidence in the Conspiracy When telegrams were sent out to watch roads, the actual road Booth and Herold took were not mentioned There was a two hour interruption of the telegraph from Washington to the outside world There was no coordination among the search parties 68

The Stanton Conspiracy Planks of evidence in the Conspiracy Booth was killed so he could not spill the beans The prisoners were hooded at the trial so they could not do likewise There were 18 missing pages of Booth s diary which, according to Eisenschiml, could have incriminated Stanton 69

Answers to Eisenschiml s Questions When telegrams were sent out to watch roads, the actual road Booth and Herold took were not mentioned First, while afterwards, it was known that Booth took this route, there was no immediate evidence that he did Also, the Union had no troops or telegraphic facilities in Southern MD 70

Answers to Eisenschiml s Questions When telegrams were sent out to watch roads, the actual road Booth and Herold took were not mentioned Stanton did warn the Naval Station at St. Inigoes MD, nearest where Booth would have crossed, before midnight on the night of the assassination Finally, if Booth had not been injured and needed to stop at Dr. Mudd s house, he would have been deep into VA if he took the Southern MD route 71

Answers to Eisenschiml s Questions There was a two hour interruption of the telegraph from Washington to the outside world What was interrupted for two hours was the commercial telegraph branch from DC to Baltimore It did not affect the military telegraph or other commercial telegraph 72

Answers to Eisenschiml s Questions There was a two hour interruption of the telegraph from Washington to the outside world It was clear that Stanton was in constant telegraphic communication with MG Dix in New York Chief Telegraph Officer Eckert, in Congressional testimony, essentially indicated that this minor break was not worth investigating 73

Answers to Eisenschiml s Questions There was no coordination among the search parties Finally, with rewards in the hundreds of thousands, if one search party received a lead, they were not going to coordinate with another party, and possibly have to split up the reward 74

Answers to Eisenschiml s Questions There was no coordination among the search parties Having multiple intelligence sources about Booth s escape route, search parties were sent in every direction Multiple parties went to Southern MD, at different times and different places, but in the heat of the moment, were not coordinated, just as those sent to other locations 75

Answers to Eisenschiml s Questions Booth was killed so he could not spill the beans Eisenschiml argues that Everton Conger, acting under Stanton s orders, had Booth killed so he could not reveal details about the assassination plot. To do so, Eisenschiml must overcome the notion that Boston Corbett fired the fatal shot. 76

Answers to Eisenschiml s Questions Booth was killed so he could not spill the beans He first argues correctly that Corbett was 30 feet away from the barn However, it is also clear as the situation went on, the soldiers changed their position and moved closer to the barn 77

Answers to Eisenschiml s Questions Booth was killed so he could not spill the beans There is no one there who ever said anyone but Corbett fired the fatal shot Finally, Booth remained conscious for hours until his death, and did not reveal any details of a plot during those hours when clearly if Stanton ordered him to kill Lincoln, this would have been Booth s final revenge 78

Answers to Eisenschiml s Questions The prisoners were hooded at the trial so they could not also speak To ensure that the prisoners remained silent, they would have be all condemned to death According to Eisenschiml, those not condemned to death would be sent to a civil prison in Albany NY, so Stanton intervened to send them to the Dry Tortugas 79

Answers to Eisenschiml s Questions The prisoners were hooded at the trial so they could not also speak Even if in isolation in the Dry Tortugas, the prisoners had plenty of time to speak to guards and sailors on the ship taking them to confinement Also, Spangler, Mudd and Arnold all lived after release (Arnold for almost 40 years) and they never made any statements incriminating Stanton or anyone else 80

Answers to Eisenschiml s Questions There were 18 missing pages of Booth s diary which, according to Eisenschiml, could have incriminated Stanton Booth used an 1864 date book as a diary while on the run Some of the pages are covered with justifications for Booth s actions Others were known to have been used by Booth for notes during the escape 81

Answers to Eisenschiml s Questions There were 18 missing pages of Booth s diary which, according to Eisenschiml, could have incriminated Stanton However, there were still a large number of pages cut out Since this was an 1864 date book, there is no conclusive evidence that materials from the 1865 assassination were the ones cut out And certainly nothing that would implicate Stanton 82

Initial Verdict Not proven! 83

The Lincoln Conspiracy: Eisenschiml Revisited Based on this analysis, the Eisenschiml conspiracy basically was sent to the dustbin of history That is, until the publication of The Lincoln Conspiracy in 1977. The authors modestly contended We have advanced the Lincoln assassination study more in one year than it has been advanced in the previous 112 years 84

The Lincoln Conspiracy: Eisenschiml Revisited The authors argue that they were able to do so because they used original sources, particularly the 18 missing pages of Booth s diary These pages were found by unnamed descendants of Stanton Supposedly, the Stanton descendant, wanting anonymity, refused to let the authors see the original papers, but for $6,500, provided a 3,000 word transcript 85

The Lincoln Conspiracy: Eisenschiml Revisited Problem 1 none of the identified descendants of Stanton had any idea about these papers A supposed diary entry of Radical Congressman George Julian of Indiana makes reference to the diary pages being in the possession of Stanton 86

The Lincoln Conspiracy: Eisenschiml Revisited The route of these papers were from Julian s daughter to Claude Bowers, who wrote The Tragic Era, an anti Radical history of Reconstruction Bowers supposedly returned the entries to the daughter, who then burned them The transcript of the diary pages was not in Bowers papers, but rather in the papers of a pro Eisenschiml author, Ray Neff 87

The Lincoln Conspiracy: Eisenschiml Revisited So Bowers, who was anti Stanton and anti Radical, would have had a smoking gun and did not use it Moreover, the Julian diary entry for April 24, when he supposedly saw the Booth papers, had been copied for the Indiana Magazine of History in 1915, and had no mention of Booth s diary 88

The Lincoln Conspiracy: Eisenschiml Revisited While The Lincoln Conspiracy authors would receive honorary doctorates, and the book turned into a pot boiler film, in 1977, prominent Civil War historians writing in Civil War Times Illustrated demolished point by point the thesis In the wreckage of The Lincoln Conspiracy was the wreckage of the Eisenschiml thesis 89

Verdict Not Proven! (Once again!) 90

Occam s razor This is the logic theory that among competing hypotheses, the one with the fewest assumptions should be selected. Or more straightforwardly put the simple explanation is usually better than the complex one 91

Occam s razor So the simple conspiracy is that Booth and a number of picked associated accomplished the assassination There is much to recommend this as compare to the complex conspiracies noted above, many of which would require hundreds if not thousands of participants 92

And finally.. 93

Was it actually John Wilkes Booth who was killed at the Garrett Farm? 94

Did Booth Escape? The historical evidence supports the idea that Booth was killed at the Garrett Farm in April 1865 When his body was brought back to DC, it was identified by numerous individuals Moreover, after his body was released to the Booth family in 1869 for reburial, his identity was reconfirmed 95

However.. There are numerous theories that Booth escaped and lived many years thereafter, including having a family with current descendants 96

Booth escapes the Barn Version one: Booth asked an overseer named Ruddy to fetch some papers, and it was Ruddy in the barn (Booth had left earlier) who was killed Taking the name John St. Helen, Booth moved to Texas when he appeared near death, confessed to be Booth 97

Booth escapes the Barn Version one: He committed suicide in Enid OK in 1903, then under the name of David George His corpse was mummified and displayed in carnivals throughout the Midwest and south until it disappeared in the 1930 s 98

Booth escapes the Barn Version two: After escaping the barn, Booth headed to his Shenandoah farm, where a fortune provided him by the Confederacy, and his wife Izola Mills Booth were awaiting him Feeling the heat, he traveled to SF to be reunited with his mother and brother Junius Izola and his children (!) soon joined him 99

Booth escapes the Barn Version two: In 1867, Booth decided that he needed to leave the country, and decided to head to India He needed a passport, and obviously couldn t get one in the name of John Wilkes Booth, so he obtained one in the name of John Byron Wilkes 100

Booth escapes the Barn Version two: India is not the place to be, so they return to the US, and a series of adventures separate Booth and Izola Booth heads to Mexico, where his support of Maximillian makes him persona non grata 101

Booth escapes the Barn Version two: He then returns to the US and takes the name of John St. Helen, and follows version one 102

Summary There were multiple family, friends and authorities who identified Booth after the Garrett Farm Booth as noted remained conscious and speaking after he was shot, and did not make any indication he was anyone but Booth 103

Summary The post Garrett Farm stories are too fantastic for belief While people up to the present day still identify themselves as Booth descendants there is no supporting evidence that Booth survived or had children. 104

Verdict Not Proven! 105

Feel free to resume wearing your tinfoil hat! 106