Where was John Surratt on April 14, 1865 ?
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03-30-2017, 09:11 AM
(This post was last modified: 03-30-2017 09:30 AM by L Verge.)
Post: #162
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RE: Where was John Surratt on April 14, 1865 ?
(03-30-2017 04:37 AM)RJNorton Wrote:(03-28-2017 04:49 PM)loetar44 Wrote: Roger, That link to The Evidence did not include the page on which that appears, page 1331. In going to the book, myself (it is always by my desk at work), I found it as being "items not brought out in the examination of Weichmann, or that he has since recalled." That source makes the insertion of "Booth" spurious in and of itself to me. It is also stated here that Anna made that statement at the breakfast table the next morning, not at the time that the detectives were there. It is also interesting, given what Susan posted about Anna being sick, that the same statement has Anna, Olivia, and Honora making so much noise in the parlor after dinner (and the so-called visit by Booth) that Mrs. Surratt ordered them all to bed early... Guess Anna had a quick recovery. On another issue relative to the query as to who "Miss Mitchell" was (see Susan's previous post), there is a statement given by Anna M. Weber, the landlady to Miss Anne Mitchell, residing at 325 Fifth Street. Mrs. Weber describes Mitchell has having deep Southern sympathies and having a beaux named George Jarboe (aka George Smith), who evidently traveled through the lines and had been arrested a few months earlier, taken the oath, and then left town. He visited Mitchell last on the day of the assassination, coming to her office at Towers Printing Office to say good-bye. Jarboe is a very familiar name in Charles County, so I suspect that Miss Mitchell's arrest had to do with George's activities (and maybe her own) and not with Surratt -- unless young Surratt had yet another series of aliases. |
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