Your personal choice of "most tragic" character in the assassination story
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08-08-2012, 09:30 AM
(This post was last modified: 08-08-2012 09:34 AM by BettyO.)
Post: #50
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RE: Your personal choice of "most tragic" character in the assassination story
(08-08-2012 09:24 AM)MaddieM Wrote:(08-08-2012 09:18 AM)Linda Anderson Wrote: I am not using Shelton as a reference but E. H. Gore's book. Hello, Maddy! In the Fall of 1865, a Captain Newt was assigned to go to Florida to ascertain by Stanton if Lewis Payne was actually in fact, Lewis Powell. Newt traveled down to Live Oak and visited the family, claiming that Reverend Powell was an upstanding, quiet man who was composed and very much in control of his feelings, however Lew's mother was extremely upset by the visit and wouldn't even go into the parlor to meet him. He described Lew's mother as being "an extremely attractive woman" [she was 56 years old at the time] and further said that she appeared "inconsolable in her grief and possessed of strong maternal feeling." Lewis' mother supposedly wore mourning for the rest of her life, in addition to Lewis, her youngest, she had also lost another son, Oliver in the war and never got over the shock. Perfectly understandable. Never did see anything else regarding Lewis' father and any drinking. I'll have to check up on that! "The Past is a foreign country...they do things differently there" - L. P. Hartley |
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