The Montreal Link
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06-14-2018, 10:39 PM
Post: #2
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RE: The Montreal Link
(06-14-2018 08:08 PM)L Verge Wrote: For many years, Lincoln assassination researchers have had an interest in Montreal's part in the conspiracy. A new book on the subject is now available, thanks to the research and literary skills of another "amateur historian" (which is what the college professors like to term those without a degree in the field). Laurie: I haven't read Mr. Sheehy's book, yet, but I am already favorably disposed toward it inasmuch as I have long argued for a Richmond-Montreal axis in connection with the year of Confederate terror against the North (spring of 1864, through spring of 1865) and the assassination and attempted assassinations that occurred in Washington on April 14, 1865. Recall, particularly, the assignment to Montreal by President Davis, in the wake of the Wistar and Dahlgren-Kilpatrick raids on Richmond, of James Holcombe, Clement Clay and Jacob Thompson, carrying drafts for $1 million in gold ($2.2. million in Federal greenbacks at the time) and only verbal instructions to carry out such operations as shall conduce the interests of the Confederate States of America. Recall, further, that according to the testimony of Godfrey Hyams at the trial of the conspirators, he, Hyams, was employed by Dr. Luke Pryor Blackburn, also in Montreal, to spread yellow fever in the North, a scheme that included sending "infected" shirts to the White House, as a gift from an anonymous benefactor, and that in connection with this scheme, Hyams met regularly with Davis's appointees, Holcombe, Clay and Thompson. These men, said Hyams, promised him extraordinary amounts of money as compensation for his services and advised him that the Confederate government had appropriated $200,000 for the scheme. Despite efforts by Confederate agent Kensey Johns Stewart, also in Montreal, to persuade Davis to desist from the scheme, it was at least partially carried out and the shirts were in fact delivered to the White House, according to Hyams. A smoking gun? Yes, and one that has been there, in the trial transcript, for 153 years. I have expanded on the foregoing facts in an article, which includes Stewart's letter to Davis. John |
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