Lincoln's Secret Spy: The Civil War Case That Changed the Future of Espionage
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11-13-2014, 04:54 PM
Post: #24
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RE: Lincoln's Secret Spy: The Civil War Case That Changed the Future of Espionage
This is a sidebar to Jane's delving into the espionage side of the Civil War. When I get a request similar to what follows, I always turn to either Jane or Dave Gaddy for guidance (now that I don't have Bill Tidwell and Mr. Hall). This past week, I received the following email from a gentleman who had been advised by Harold Holzer to contact me as he searched for more information on a Civil War ancestor from Southern Maryland:
"My great grandfather Constantine Aloysius Bowling was a Confederate soldier under J.E.B. Stuart in the 1st Maryland Cavalry. He is mentioned in this letter from the Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln... To Charles A. Dana [1] [1] Executive Mansion, Washington, Oct. 17, 1864. Will Mr. Dana please report to me on the case of Constantine Bowling? A. LINCOLN ANNOTATION [1] ALS, owned by Dale Carnegie, New York City. Constantine Bowling has not been identified, and no report from Dana has been found. I have filled in some of the blanks. As the story goes, he told his family the he was visiting a girlfriend in Baltimore (Mary Surratt?). He was later captured near Washington and beaten badly somewhere along the lines. He returned home in late 1864 / early 1865 to his hometown of Bryantown, MD and was treated by our family doctor at the time ...Samuel Mudd. 1. Why would he risk so much going that far behind enemy lines? 2. Why was he in Washington? 3. Why Linclon was so interested in him? 4. Why was someone as prominent as Charles Dana involved? If you could find the time to point me in the right direction for some answers, I wold greatly appreciate it. Thank you for your time." I was certainly intrigued because my great-aunt, Mary Emma Huntt, married an Aloysius Bowling of Southern Maryland in the 1880s. Could this have been her father-in-law? We now think that is very doubtful. However, Jane immediately found the roll of prisoners in Old Capitol Prison, and this Mr. Bowling was a prisoner there from October 1863-October 1864. We noted that he was released from Old Capitol within ten days of this letter to Charles Dana - and at almost the same time that Booth was beginning to form his operatives for the kidnap plot. Could Bowling have been a link? She also found reference to 48 pages on Bowling in another source that she is currently exploring. There is also a "down home" story about Bowling. He grew up in Bryantown (a very familiar name in the Lincoln assassination story), and the story is that he hid in the rafters of the belfry at St. Mary's Catholic Church in the village with secret papers while Union soldiers searched the area for him. Sounds like a Walter Bowie or Col. Mosby stunt to me! That church, of course, is where Dr. Mudd made a special trip for Mass on that Sunday in November of 1864, and met John Wilkes Booth. The intriguing part of the whole story (to Jane and me) is why Lincoln would turn to Charles Dana, the well-respected journalist for assistance on the case of Aloysius Bowling - but then again, Dana had served Lincoln in the past as a special investigator. If you want to join in the hunt, have at it. It would be nice if we could finish the story for this descendant of Bowling. |
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