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A Different Viewpoint of Lew Powell's Character
07-14-2012, 06:53 AM
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RE: A Different Viewpoint of Lew Powell's Character
(07-13-2012 02:46 PM)Linda Anderson Wrote:  Fanny recorded in her diary in January 1866 that a Mr. Peabody had told her "that I would meet very few - or none who had experienced what I did in being a witness. and said such a shock was quite sufficient to have killed a person instantly."

Fanny gave an interview "not many months" before her death:

"I could not stir, I could not scream with terror. He [Powell] sprang from the bed and rushed past me, out of the room, striking at everyone in his way except me.
""He afterward said he could not strike that young girl watching there by her father,' remarked Fred Seward."

"The Presidential Assassins-Mrs. Surratt-Booth-Fanny Seward's Story"
Chicago Tribune - 11/23/1873

Thanks, Linda! I had never heard this particular story -- sounds right to me. There are so many conflicting stories that Powell injured Fanny. From what I've found, he never touched her other than perhaps shoving her out of the way. This confirms that...

"The Past is a foreign country...they do things differently there" - L. P. Hartley
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RE: A Different Viewpoint of Lew Powell's Character - BettyO - 07-14-2012 06:53 AM

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