Lincoln Discussion Symposium
Assassination Trivia - Printable Version

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RE: Assassination Trivia - RJNorton - 08-12-2017 12:43 PM

Congratulations, Dave and Thomas. And honorable mention to Laurie. It is a sketch of William Petersen. It was in the April 25, 1865, Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper.

[Image: petersen.jpg]



RE: Assassination Trivia - L Verge - 08-12-2017 12:58 PM

Interesting five-minute video on Dr. Abbott: http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/black-doctor-from-canada-served-in-u-s-civil-war-attended-dying-abe-lincoln-1.3034687

This is what sent me to Google.


RE: Assassination Trivia - RJNorton - 08-12-2017 01:30 PM

Laurie, there may be some confusion on which Dr. Abbott was at the bedside. Please see Kees' post here. (numbers 13 and 21)


RE: Assassination Trivia - L Verge - 08-12-2017 06:36 PM

(08-12-2017 01:30 PM)RJNorton Wrote:  Laurie, there may be some confusion on which Dr. Abbott was at the bedside. Please see Kees' post here. (numbers 13 and 21)

My own confusion over the assertion that the Doctor Abbott in question was what had me googling. The interesting detail to me in the video is that his descendant has his papers and the claim may be in those papers.

This Dr. Abbott and a fellow black doctor supposedly attended a reception at the White House in February of 1864, and raised eyebrows when spotted in the receiving line. Robert Lincoln supposedly went to his father's side and whispered something that Dr. Abbott took to be a question about whether or not the two doctors' "invasion" would be allowed - and it was.

I will be using that account in an upcoming issue of the Surratt Courier.


RE: Assassination Trivia - L Verge - 08-15-2017 07:00 PM

Changing the subject a bit, I am offering up some trivia related to the escape of John Wilkes Booth. Not a question - just some interesting history.

For those of you who have gone along with the Surratt Society's bus tours over Booth's escape route, you know that, near the end of the trail, there is a wonderful old home that is now enjoying a renewal thanks to the efforts of new owners. The home is named "Cleydael" and dates to the 1850s when built as a summer home for the very wealthy family of Dr and Mrs. Richard Henry Stuart (descended from the Stuart kings of England). Mrs. Stuart came from a very wealthy and prominent family in Maryland, the daughter of George Calvert (of the Lords Baltimore, proprietary owners of colonial Maryland) and Rosalie Stier Calvert.

It is Rosalie and her lineage that this is all about. Rosalie was the daughter of Henri-Joseph Stier and his wife, Marie-Louise Peeters, who fled Antwerp, Belgium, in 1794, during the French invasion. They settled in Annapolis originally, but began building an elegant Georgian mansion in my home county of Prince George's in Maryland. Baron von Stier and his wife returned to Belgium in 1805, leaving the task of completing the home to their daughter and her husband. It was named "Riversdale" and is a National Historic Landmark and museum. The Stiers left behind a magnificent art collection with many Old Masters, and their daughter became a remarkable essayist and chronicler of events just outside the new capital city of the U.S. Her writings describe visits by such leaders as "Little Tommy Jefferson" (whom she did not care for) and Henry Clay.

Fast forward: On an office wall in the museum is a drawing of an ancient castle on the outskirts of Antwerp. The castle is named "Cleydael" and was one of the ancestral homes of the Stiers. One of their granddaughters, Julia Calvert (b. 1814), would marry Dr. Richard Henry Stuart and move to King George County in Virginia. Their main mansion was on the banks of the Potomac River, but they built their summer home inland and named it after the "Cleydael" in Belgium. It was here that Booth and Herold would come in 1865 to seek food and shelter - only to be turned away and sent to the cabin of a free black man nearby. It was in the 1980s when James O. Hall made the connection between the American "Cleydael" and the European one and shared it with historians at "Riversdale" as well as Surratt House.

Return to the Belgian history of "Cleydael," and you'll learn that its name literally means "clay of the valley," and that is the Flemish motto over its entrance. The castle dates to the 1300s and was visited by Cromwell and the Duke of Alva, only two of the many famous men who stayed there. Legend has it that a guardian serpent with nine silver eyes resides in the moat that surrounds the castle. Today, there is a 65-acre golf course and buildings that surround the castle, but I believe that it is once again a private home.

Here's a short video with no narrative, just lovely music and beautiful views of the Belgian "Cleydael" that inspired the American "Cleydael:" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mqjEI_GsVbY

For a sneak peek at the American "Cleydael," go here: http://www.cleydaelestate.com/


RE: Assassination Trivia - RJNorton - 08-30-2017 08:30 AM

Who is this man?

[Image: manshead.jpg]



RE: Assassination Trivia - Eva Elisabeth - 08-30-2017 11:19 AM

Dr. Reed?


RE: Assassination Trivia - RJNorton - 08-30-2017 12:37 PM

Nope, Eva, not Dr. Reed.

Hint #1: Not all Lincoln assassination books mention this man. But, in the ones that do, his name would normally come up quite late in the book.


RE: Assassination Trivia - Steve - 08-30-2017 01:05 PM

It's the judge from the John Surratt trial, George P. Fisher.


RE: Assassination Trivia - L Verge - 08-30-2017 01:55 PM

(08-30-2017 01:05 PM)Steve Wrote:  It's the judge from the John Surratt trial, George P. Fisher.

OK, Steve, be forewarned - I am now on a mission to find out how you can come up with these hard answers so quickly...


RE: Assassination Trivia - RJNorton - 08-30-2017 03:03 PM

Good work, Steve. Yes, it is George Purnell Fisher, the judge in the John Surratt trial. Joseph H. Bradley, Surratt's lead attorney, was not happy with many of Fisher's trial decisions and apparently actually accosted the judge at one point. I do not know how accurate/inaccurate this drawing is (maybe someone will know):

https://www.awesomestories.com/asset/view/John-Surratt-Trial-Lawyer-Bradley-Assaults-Judge-Fisher//1


RE: Assassination Trivia - Steve - 08-30-2017 06:16 PM

(08-30-2017 01:55 PM)L Verge Wrote:  
(08-30-2017 01:05 PM)Steve Wrote:  It's the judge from the John Surratt trial, George P. Fisher.

OK, Steve, be forewarned - I am now on a mission to find out how you can come up with these hard answers so quickly...

Hint 1: It's an indispensable research tool. Big Grin


RE: Assassination Trivia - L Verge - 08-30-2017 06:23 PM

(08-30-2017 06:16 PM)Steve Wrote:  
(08-30-2017 01:55 PM)L Verge Wrote:  
(08-30-2017 01:05 PM)Steve Wrote:  It's the judge from the John Surratt trial, George P. Fisher.

OK, Steve, be forewarned - I am now on a mission to find out how you can come up with these hard answers so quickly...

Hint 1: It's an indispensable research tool. Big Grin

Which online source?


RE: Assassination Trivia - Steve - 08-30-2017 06:44 PM

(08-30-2017 06:23 PM)L Verge Wrote:  
(08-30-2017 06:16 PM)Steve Wrote:  
(08-30-2017 01:55 PM)L Verge Wrote:  OK, Steve, be forewarned - I am now on a mission to find out how you can come up with these hard answers so quickly...

Hint 1: It's an indispensable research tool. Big Grin

Which online source?

It's not a source in and of itself, but can be used to find sources.

Hint 2: Its name rhymes with "poodle". Big Grin


RE: Assassination Trivia - RJNorton - 08-31-2017 07:36 AM

Fill in the blank.

This letter to William Seward was signed __________________.

[Image: sewardthreat.jpg]