Awww...Peanuts
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09-05-2025, 09:40 AM
Post: #46
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RE: Awww...Peanuts
(09-05-2025 09:07 AM)RJNorton Wrote: Thank you to Steve again. Steve writes, " I have a couple of extra things to add to my Joseph Alexander Burroughs post. Steve, thank you so much. This is awesome work! And thanks to Cliff for getting this started. "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence." - Carl Sagan |
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09-05-2025, 05:32 PM
Post: #47
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RE: Awww...Peanuts
Thanks to Steve for this additional information. Steve writes, "I have a few more Burroughs/Burrows documents to post to the Forum. They're all obituaries from the Baltimore Sun. I finally found Joseph Alexander Burrows' obituary from December 1931. I also have the obituaries of three of his daughters. Two of the daughters Alice and Mary died in 1907, the same year as his wife Mary did. In fact the daughter Mary died about a week before her mother. Both daughters, like their mother, have a poem in their obituaries seemingly written by Joseph. In 1909 Joseph's daughter Emma died. There was no poem with her obituary, but I did want to point out it mentions a Roman Catholic service, which is interesting since, according to their marriage record, in 1873 Joseph and Mary were married in an Episcopal Methodist Church in Georgetown.
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09-06-2025, 11:51 AM
Post: #48
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RE: Awww...Peanuts
This is all fantastic work! A question to the forum: Steve raises a good point that signing with an "X" does not automatically imply illiteracy. What are everyone's thoughts for and against this? My take: it's a good indicator of illiteracy, but we can't make the assumption and close research doors that might otherwise glean new details. The consensus has taken it for granted Peanuts was illiterate, perhaps to the detriment of the research. Thoughts?
"Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence." - Carl Sagan |
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09-06-2025, 10:18 PM
Post: #49
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RE: Awww...Peanuts
According to Borroughs' trial testimony:
https://archive.org/details/conspiracytr...6/mode/2up Booth hit Borroughs with the butt of his knife and kicked him, knocking Borroughs down as Booth was mounting the horse. It's not inconceivable that Borroughs could've been injured/hurt when he was knocked down, more so if he had been holding the horse with his dominant/writing hand. Considering the circumstances, signing a statement with an "X" soon after isn't particularly strong evidence that Peanut Burroughs was illiterate by itself. |
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Today, 08:31 AM
Post: #50
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RE: Awww...Peanuts
Thanks to Steve for sending another clipping. He writes, "I just have an image and question to post to the Forum. In Borroughs' second statement of 24 April 1865, the transcriber listed Borroughs address as 511 10th Street. Doing a search of the 1865 directory brought up just one person at this address (or at least one person picked by the OCR reader on Ancestry.com). A Louisa Brent, widow of Thomas. Has that name ever popped up before? She could just own a boarding house, but it's probably best to check.
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Today, 12:13 PM
Post: #51
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RE: Awww...Peanuts
I think Ford's Theater was 511 10th. St.
"There are few subjects that ignite more casual, uninformed bigotry and condescension from elites in this nation more than Dixie - Jonah Goldberg" |
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