Mudd Descendants visit Fort Jefferson NP
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07-30-2015, 10:16 AM
Post: #35
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RE: Mudd Descendants visit Fort Jefferson NP
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(07-30-2015 09:22 AM)L Verge Wrote: "On Friday, April 14, 1865, two men appeared before the guard on the road leading into Washington from the east. Refusing to give their names or state their business, they were arrested and put in the guard tent, whence they were to be sent to headquarters. This was about 1 o'clock in the afternoon. In an hour or two they gave their names as Booth and Herold." Laurie: I am not prepared to dismiss Demond's letters and statement that easily. I believe they can be reconciled with your family history and other information. The only error i see him making is the time when they were finally let go. It could not have been as late as he says it was, because we know that Herold was at Willard's about mid-day and Booth was there shortly thereafter for the luncheon, probably after he left Ford's Theatre, where he went to pick up and read some of his mail around noon. Demond was recalling events of 46 and 51 years ago, when he was a boy of 18. It is understandable that he would have erred with respect to time. Think of ourselves trying to recall with accuracy events that occurred in 1964 and 1969. My rough scenario is as follows: They emerge from overnight stays in Maryland and show up at the Maryland side of the bridge early in the mnorning. They are detained, but then released on the say of an Augur aide and a Dana orderly. They then cross the bridge. Herold probably stops at home and while there has breakfast. At mid-day he shows up at Julia Grant's suite at Willard's. Booth stops three times at Mary Surratt's in the course of the day. He shows up at the theatre for his mail about noon and leaves in about a half hour. He already knows where Lincoln will be that night (per Tidwell,Hall and Gaddy). He joins Herold, Atzerodt and Powell in the dining room at Willard's for Julia's luncheon. In the afternoon he performs carpentry at the theatre. He has an accidental meeting with Mathews on the avenue, giving him the letter he had written earlier for publication in the National Intelligencer. Here, too, he finds out that Grant is leaving the city after Mathews draws his attention to the Grants' carriage. He goes to Willard's and finds out where the Grants are going and then makes arrangements to have an assassin on board the train to Burlington. The rest (the horse, his trips to the theatre, his drinking with Spangler and others, etc.) is well known. Such a scenario incorporates the evidence we have from Demond, Julia, Ulysses, Mathews, the Fords, Weichmann and others. John |
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