Judicial Murder of Mrs. Surratt
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11-02-2017, 06:17 PM
(This post was last modified: 11-03-2017 02:18 PM by wpbinzel.)
Post: #34
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RE: Judicial Murder of Mrs. Surratt
(10-28-2017 05:39 PM)L Verge Wrote:(10-28-2017 01:36 PM)RJNorton Wrote:(10-28-2017 10:51 AM)L Verge Wrote: Also, I am at home without Kate Larson's book, Assassin's Accomplice. Could someone check to see if Kate lists the Johnson Papers held by the NPS as a source? Laurie - I have the text of W. E. McElwee's May 1, 1923 manuscript, in which he recounts a chance conversation with Andrew Johnson on July 29, 1875. Johnson died two days later. McElwee wrote that he was "not attempting to quote his [Johnson's] exact words, but in substance." With regard to why Booth shot Lincoln, McElwee wrote that Johnson said: "I made no investigation of the matter but it was asserted that Boothe [sic] had a friend that had been condemned to death. That Booth had seen Lincoln and had been led to believe the president would commute the sentence but that Stanton and Seward had interfered and prevented any clemency[.]" With regard to Stanton's death, McElwee wrote: Johnson said: "Stanton was the Marat of American politics. He was not assassinated by Charlotta Cordy [sic] but he committed suicide by cutting his own throat." McElwee asked: "Do you want us to understand you, Mr. Johnson, as saying that Mr. Stanton committed suicide?" Johnson replied: "Yes, he cut his damned throat from ear to ear but it was kept out of public print." With regard to Mrs. Surratt, McElwee wrote: Johnson said: "The execution of Mrs. Surrat [sic] was a crime of passion without justice or reason. She knew no more about the intentions of Boothe [sic]and his associates than any other person who chanced to know Booth or Asterot [sic]. They had simply boarded, as others had done, at her boarding house. She was entitled to a tral [sic] in open court and the record of the trial preserved. But her executioners knew the records would condemn them if kept till passion had subsided and they were destroyed." McElwee asked: "Is there no record of the condemnation and execution of Mrs. Surrat [sic]?" Johnson replied: "No sir, the records were immediately destroyed. They were not even kept till John [Surratt] was arrested and tried." McElwee: "If She was not guilty why did not you interpose Executive clemency?" Johnson: "If I had interfered with the exectution it would have been my death and a riot that would probably ended in war." McElwee: "Was there any appeal made to you for mitigating the sentence as reported after the execution?" Johnson: "No appeal reached me. Her daughter forwarded one but it was suppressed by Secretary Stanton. I heard of it afterwards but never saw it[.] It was a murder founded on perjury and executed to gratify passion. The chief witness afterwards confessed to his perjury." For many reasons, not the least of which are outright falsehoods, I do not consider the recollections of Mr. McElwee to be credible. Chance meetings that result in detailed "confessions" hours before a historic individual's death are always suspect, muchless when they are first reported nearly 50 years after the fact, out of character, and demonstrably false. For example, McElwee's Johnson is cowardly. Of his many flaws, few historians have described Andrew Johnson as a coward. I certainly would not. |
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