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Lincoln Assassination Conspiracy Trial Jeopardy - Carolyn Mitchell - 05-02-2016 10:30 PM I just stumbled upon this site: http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/lincolnconspiracy/jeopardy.html Who wants to play? RE: Lincoln Assassination Conspiracy Trial Jeopardy - RJNorton - 05-03-2016 04:25 AM Very interesting! Thanks for posting, Carolyn! I have had previous contacts with the gentleman who operates that website. There is an amazing amount of research there. http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/ftrials.htm RE: Lincoln Assassination Conspiracy Trial Jeopardy - L Verge - 05-03-2016 10:12 AM I have used this site as a resource on several occasions. RE: Lincoln Assassination Conspiracy Trial Jeopardy - Gene C - 05-03-2016 10:28 AM thanks for posting Carolyn. I was doing pretty good until I missed the Final Jeopardy question, What were John Wilkes Booth's dying words? I was sure it was "Don't worry about me, is Laurie OK?" RE: Lincoln Assassination Conspiracy Trial Jeopardy - L Verge - 05-03-2016 02:20 PM I love you, Gene. RE: Lincoln Assassination Conspiracy Trial Jeopardy - Gene C - 05-03-2016 05:56 PM Thanks, and the feeling is mutual. RE: Lincoln Assassination Conspiracy Trial Jeopardy - Eva Elisabeth - 05-04-2016 03:24 PM I wasn't aware of the number 2 (nor any at all) being "assigned by the Confederate Secret Service to the large infected trunk of clothes" etc. Could someone please fill me in on the meaning/purpose if there was any to it? Thanks! RE: Lincoln Assassination Conspiracy Trial Jeopardy - L Verge - 05-04-2016 05:12 PM That is one of two that I missed, Eva. I had never heard of it either. RE: Lincoln Assassination Conspiracy Trial Jeopardy - Eva Elisabeth - 05-04-2016 05:39 PM May I ask, which is #2? RE: Lincoln Assassination Conspiracy Trial Jeopardy - Leon Greene - 05-05-2016 01:07 AM Dr. Luke Pryor Blackburn was the Kentucky physician who plotted to infect the North with yellow fever, an early form of germ warfare. The plan was to distribute items contaminated with yellow fever in Northern cities. His first shipment of clothing and bedding from yellow fever patients in Bermuda was contained in five trunks and a small valise. These items were shipped from Bermuda in March 1864. Blackburn himself referred to "Big #2" as the largest and most deadly of the trunks, able to kill a man at 60 yards. Thus, "Big #2" is a reference to Blackburn's own description of the size and the lethality of the contents of that trunk. The Confederate Secret Service simply repeated the moniker. Little did Blackburn know that mosquitoes were needed to infect a person with yellow fever. They were the "unindicted co-conspirators," so to speak. While Blackburn's efforts were unsuccessful, many people attributed some yellow fever epidemics to his evil deeds. It wasn't until about 1901 that Dr. Walter Reed discovered the role of the mosquito in the transmission of yellow fever. RE: Lincoln Assassination Conspiracy Trial Jeopardy - richard petersen - 05-05-2016 07:01 AM Thank you; I finally found a game I can win within my family. I was not aware of the #2 trunk. Thanks for the research. RE: Lincoln Assassination Conspiracy Trial Jeopardy - L Verge - 05-05-2016 11:25 AM I knew the story of Dr. Blackburn and his messy trunks, but don't remember ever reading about a numbering system. Thanks for my lesson of the day. The person who provided us with this lesson knows the history of Dr. Blackburn very well because he has a massive ms awaiting a publisher entitled Yellow Fever, With Love, From Bermuda. Thank you, Dr. Greene. RE: Lincoln Assassination Conspiracy Trial Jeopardy - Eva Elisabeth - 05-05-2016 12:47 PM Thank you so much for the information from me, too, Dr. Greene! RE: Lincoln Assassination Conspiracy Trial Jeopardy - wpbinzel - 05-05-2016 01:49 PM Dr. Greene's reference to Walter Reed reminded me of an odd fact; Dr. Reed died in 1902 from a ruptured appendix and the resulting peritonitis. He was 51. RE: Lincoln Assassination Conspiracy Trial Jeopardy - L Verge - 05-05-2016 04:10 PM And keeping it in the Lincoln assassination field: Walter Reed did much of his yellow fever experimentation at the post that is now Fort McNair (last "home" to the Lincoln conspirators). The swampy areas of the southern quadrants of D.C. were perfect for his investigations of mosquitos. He also died on the post - A general hospital, predecessor to the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, was located at the post from 1898 until 1909. Maj. Walter Reed found the area's marshlands an excellent site for his research on malaria. Reed's work contributed to the discovery of the cause of yellow fever. The major died of peritonitis after an appendectomy at the post in 1902. The post dispensary and the visiting officers' quarters now occupy the buildings where Reed worked and died. Source from Ft. McNair posting online. Seems we can always find some link to the Lincoln assassination story. Six degrees... |