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Dr. Mudd's name on Booth's notes ?
04-12-2013, 11:55 AM (This post was last modified: 04-12-2013 10:05 PM by John E..)
Post: #1
Dr. Mudd's name on Booth's notes ?
David Homer Bates, in his book "Lincoln In the Telegraph Office", said that Eckert found a scrap of paper at one of the conspirators' meeting place (based on information from Powell's interrogation) that had the name "Mudd" on it. He also taped together scraps that mentioned an abduction plot.

Does this change anyone's opinion about Dr. Mudd's involvement in the kidnapping or assassination plots?

Do you think Bates is a reliable, second-hand source?

Why weren't the scraps of paper entered as evidence?
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04-12-2013, 06:35 PM
Post: #2
RE: Dr. Mudd's name on Booth's notes ?
That's a great question John. Bates was very observant. I have not read his book, but I've read some of this diaries (they may be on-line with LOC by now. They were being digitized in Feb 2012. I would think that Bates would be reliable. I don't think he had any axes to grind.

And no, doesn't change my thoughts of the doctor's involvement.
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04-12-2013, 09:37 PM
Post: #3
RE: Dr. Mudd's name on Booth's notes ?
I read Bates' book years ago-a good read!!
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04-13-2013, 04:03 AM
Post: #4
RE: Dr. Mudd's name on Booth's notes ?
This is a great question, John, and I agree with Mr. Hess that it is a fascinating read. I do not know how reliable it is, but isn't it the sole source of what we know of the Eckert-Powell conversations? Or is there another source?

I have a question. On p. 298 it says:

"A duplicate of this mutilated picture of Lincoln came by chance into the possession of Eckert under the following circumstances. While on his way to Cortlandt Street Ferry on November 26, 1864, Eckert found in a street car an unsealed envelop containing, among other papers, a letter giving directions, evidently referring to a kidnapping plot and also a picture of Lincoln with a rope around his neck and red ink-marks on the bosom of the shirt. These papers were afterward discovered to belong to Payne, the assassin, see chapter XXVII."

Seems that Eckert was "finding" all sorts of things. What is that all about?

P.S. That is two strange things found on streetcars. Mrs. Hudspeth testified she found her weird letters on a streetcar.
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04-13-2013, 05:42 AM (This post was last modified: 04-13-2013 05:43 AM by Gene C.)
Post: #5
RE: Dr. Mudd's name on Booth's notes ?
(04-13-2013 04:03 AM)RJNorton Wrote:  P.S. That is two strange things found on streetcars. Mrs. Hudspeth testified she found her weird letters on a streetcar.

Was her first name "STELLA"?

So when is this "Old Enough To Know Better" supposed to kick in?
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04-13-2013, 06:22 AM
Post: #6
RE: Dr. Mudd's name on Booth's notes ?
Marlon Brando thought so?

I just thought of two more "streetcar incidents" - John F. Parker thought he heard ducks squawking on a streetcar, and I think Ella Starr was on a streetcar when she first heard Booth had been killed.
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04-13-2013, 06:31 AM (This post was last modified: 04-13-2013 06:34 AM by BettyO.)
Post: #7
RE: Dr. Mudd's name on Booth's notes ?
Quote:"While on his way to Cortlandt Street Ferry on November 26, 1864, Eckert found in a street car an unsealed envelop containing, among other papers, a letter giving directions, evidently referring to a kidnapping plot and also a picture of Lincoln with a rope around his neck and red ink-marks on the bosom of the shirt. These papers were afterward discovered to belong to Payne, the assassin, see chapter XXVII."

Seems Lew Powell must have been pretty bored just sitting in his boarding house bedrooms drawing silly pictures! Big Grin

"The Past is a foreign country...they do things differently there" - L. P. Hartley
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04-13-2013, 09:24 AM (This post was last modified: 04-13-2013 09:25 AM by John E..)
Post: #8
Wink RE: Dr. Mudd's name on Booth's notes ?
I find Thomas Eckert and Alexander Gardner to be two of the most fascinating characters of the assassination drama. However, I think I'd (at a safe distance from Eckert of course) chew both these guys out for not writing memoirs of their experiences. Shame on Gardner for being so close to history and not saying much about it and for Eckert not jotting down those notes for Seward.

What were they thinking? Didn't they realize that 148 years later we'd be discussing this stuff?? Tongue
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04-13-2013, 07:30 PM
Post: #9
RE: Dr. Mudd's name on Booth's notes ?
(04-13-2013 06:22 AM)RJNorton Wrote:  Marlon Brando thought so?

I just thought of two more "streetcar incidents" - John F. Parker thought he heard ducks squawking on a streetcar, and I think Ella Starr was on a streetcar when she first heard Booth had been killed.
Willie Jett had his big psychotic breakdown on a streetcar in Baltimore. His father-in-law was a very prominent doctor and had him declared insane and sent back down to Virginia. He was commited to the sanitorium in WIlliamsburg where he died at about the ripe old age of 45. Believed to have been the same cause of death as Napoleon.....and it wasn't arsenic poisoning.
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04-14-2013, 06:28 AM
Post: #10
RE: Dr. Mudd's name on Booth's notes ?
Are we sure John F. Parker was sober when he heard the ducks?

Bill Nash
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