Did William Coggeshall Save Lincoln's Life?
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09-23-2016, 12:05 PM
Post: #59
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RE: Did William Coggeshall Save Lincoln's Life?
(09-23-2016 11:09 AM)L Verge Wrote: I am home on leave while my chariot is getting a tune-up, so I have poked around online for more information on Herr Coggeshall. Some interesting statements: Wikipedia (which lists a number of sources) refers to him as the "self-appointed" bodyguard of Lincoln on Feb. 13, 1861, in Cincinnatti. At that time, he's listed as a reporter for the Ohio State Journal en route to D.C. for the Inauguration and part of Lincoln's guard (an early Brian Williams-Hillary Clinton style of reporting while embedded?). No mention of his heroics. It goes on to say that he often served Lincoln as a bodyguard in D.C. -- John, didn't you report that he wasn't in D.C. that much? Laurie: Eva's citations above are valuable. The first lists seven books (not eight--my mistake) written by Coggeshall: 1. Signs of the Times (1851) 2. Easy Warren and His Contemporaries (1854) 3. Oakshaw, Or the Victim of Avarice (1855) 4. Home Hits and Hints (1859) 5. Poets and Poetry of the West (1860) 6. Stories of Frontier Adventure (1863) 7. The Journeys of A. Lincoln as President-Elect and as President Martyred (1865) Protective Policy in Literature, if bona fide, would be eight. in addition to contributions to periodical literature. Your information is also valuable. I do not know how much time he spent in Washington. I surmise only that it wasn't too much inasmuch as he is said to have been assigned secret service missions in Virginia and Ohio. I can believe he lobbied for the position in Ecuador, but Koch also records, without citation, that his candidacy was supported by Postmaster General, formerly Governor, William Dennison, Governor Jacob D. Cox, Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase and U.S. Senator John Sherman (p. 102) John |
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