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Kathy Canavan Invterview
10-10-2015, 05:36 PM
Post: #1
Kathy Canavan Invterview
Check out Kathy Canavan's interview:

https://kentuckypress.wordpress.com/2015...n-canavan/

Fantastic! Kudos, Kathy!!!

"The Past is a foreign country...they do things differently there" - L. P. Hartley
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10-11-2015, 04:08 AM
Post: #2
RE: Kathy Canavan Invterview
Betty, thanks for posting this link. Kathy, your book is wonderful. I've used it for numerous questions in the trivia section of the forum. It is filled with fascinating details. For example I did not realize Laura Keene had been drinking a lot on the night of the 14th previous to reading your book.
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10-11-2015, 08:03 AM
Post: #3
RE: Kathy Canavan Invterview
I just received Kathy's book in the mail a couple of days ago and very much look forward to reading it.
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10-11-2015, 10:15 AM
Post: #4
RE: Kathy Canavan Invterview
A great interview of a great author of a great book. Overall, I would rate this..........Great!
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10-14-2015, 09:26 AM
Post: #5
RE: Kathy Canavan Invterview
Here's Kathy's current article:

http://www.delawareonline.com/story/life.../73887424/

Kudos, Kathy!
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10-14-2015, 10:58 AM
Post: #6
Read Kathy's Article in Delaware Online -
Great article!

Thanks, Kathy for bringing this to my attention!

http://www.delawareonline.com/story/life.../73887424/

"The Past is a foreign country...they do things differently there" - L. P. Hartley
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10-14-2015, 02:10 PM
Post: #7
RE: Kathy Canavan Invterview
I have run home the last two nights, gulped down dinner, and headed to the sofa to read Kathy's book. Tonight, I should be able to finish it.

I have loved every single page! Kathy is a wonderful writer to begin with; add to that her background as a crime reporter, and she has managed to make this old, jaded Lincoln assassination addict (who thought she had read everything on the subject) sit up and hang on every sentence - so many details that I did not want to miss a thing.

Great research and great writing style make Lincoln's Final Hours rise to the top of the list of ones that I would recommend to anyone showing the least bit of interest in the assassination story. Those who think they know it all will find some extra tidbits too as well as finding it an enjoyable read.

Thomas - in another post, I urged you to become a polished historian. Read Kathy's book, and you will get an excellent example of how to make an "old story" new again and attractive to future readers (without having to resort to theories and trickery).

There are HISTORIANS, and then there are PUBLIC HISTORIANS. The latter category has the ability to relate history to members of the general public and are usually found in the museum world of tours and programming. Kathy has made the words in her book do the same type of talking and teaching that a public historian is good at. I now have to convince her to move to Southern Maryland and become a guide at Surratt House!
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10-14-2015, 04:10 PM
Post: #8
RE: Kathy Canavan Invterview
Yes - kudos Kathy! I started reading the book yesterday and it has the same qualities I loved about Tom Bogar's work - most informative including "something new", well founded, and most readable at the same time. One that makes reading time pass quickly (while one wants more thereof...)
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10-14-2015, 06:24 PM
Post: #9
RE: Kathy Canavan Invterview
Laurie -

I agree 100 % with your opinion of Kathy's book! It's wonderful history told in a wonderfully clear, concise and interesting manner - I, too have learned a lot of new things!

"The Past is a foreign country...they do things differently there" - L. P. Hartley
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10-15-2015, 04:34 AM
Post: #10
RE: Kathy Canavan Invterview
Just curious - does anyone have an opinion - was William Petersen's death accidental or did he commit suicide like the New York Times printed?
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10-26-2015, 11:40 AM
Post: #11
RE: Kathy Canavan Invterview
I also just finished reading Kathy's book a few days ago. I have always been fascinated by the obscure details of historic events and this book is a masterpiece on that score. I will read it several times to absorb the details I missed. However, I am curious about the key ring of Booth's pictured on page 53. Kathy does not reveal exactly where the key ring was found and if it was ever determined what those keys fit. I'd love to see an answer to these questions. The two identical small keys on the left in the picture appear to be handcuff keys. The other small keys might fit Booth's trunk(s) while the largest key appears to be a door key size. I hope the answers are out there somewhere. I could query the NPS but this forum should be quicker. Extreme kudos to Kathy!
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10-31-2015, 08:27 AM
Post: #12
RE: Kathy Canavan Invterview
(10-26-2015 11:40 AM)Dennis Urban Wrote:  I also just finished reading Kathy's book a few days ago. I have always been fascinated by the obscure details of historic events and this book is a masterpiece on that score. I will read it several times to absorb the details I missed. However, I am curious about the key ring of Booth's pictured on page 53. Kathy does not reveal exactly where the key ring was found and if it was ever determined what those keys fit. I'd love to see an answer to these questions. The two identical small keys on the left in the picture appear to be handcuff keys. The other small keys might fit Booth's trunk(s) while the largest key appears to be a door key size. I hope the answers are out there somewhere. I could query the NPS but this forum should be quicker. Extreme kudos to Kathy!

Dennis,

The NPS claims that those keys were found on Booth's body when he was cornered and killed at the Garrett farm. Unfortunately, I have never found any evidence to support this assertion. In none of the lists of items retrieved from Booth's body, (or from Herold's person for that matter), are any keys listed. The NPS gets their information about these keys from the 1940 transfer list and put the artifact into their collection from the Judge Advocate General's office. That transfer list is full of errors as to what artifacts are what. The transfer list just says, "Booth's keys".

I honestly don't know where they came from. I've put forth the idea that they actually might be David Herold's keys which could have been collected from the Herold household during the investigation. One of the Herold sister's discussed how her brother often came in late at night and had a night key, but that a day or two before the assassination, Herold's mother took the key away from him. It would make sense to me that the detectives might take that key along with the picture of Herold they wanted. This is merely an idea.

The keys could be Booth's, but they definitely weren't taken from Booth's body. Perhaps they were found in his room at the National, I don't know. It irks me that Ford's has the keys on display in the museum as having come from Booth's body when there really isn't any evidence for that.
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10-31-2015, 07:31 PM
Post: #13
RE: Kathy Canavan Invterview
(10-31-2015 08:27 AM)Dave Taylor Wrote:  
(10-26-2015 11:40 AM)Dennis Urban Wrote:  I also just finished reading Kathy's book a few days ago. I have always been fascinated by the obscure details of historic events and this book is a masterpiece on that score. I will read it several times to absorb the details I missed. However, I am curious about the key ring of Booth's pictured on page 53. Kathy does not reveal exactly where the key ring was found and if it was ever determined what those keys fit. I'd love to see an answer to these questions. The two identical small keys on the left in the picture appear to be handcuff keys. The other small keys might fit Booth's trunk(s) while the largest key appears to be a door key size. I hope the answers are out there somewhere. I could query the NPS but this forum should be quicker. Extreme kudos to Kathy!

Dennis,

The NPS claims that those keys were found on Booth's body when he was cornered and killed at the Garrett farm. Unfortunately, I have never found any evidence to support this assertion. In none of the lists of items retrieved from Booth's body, (or from Herold's person for that matter), are any keys listed. The NPS gets their information about these keys from the 1940 transfer list and put the artifact into their collection from the Judge Advocate General's office. That transfer list is full of errors as to what artifacts are what. The transfer list just says, "Booth's keys".

I honestly don't know where they came from. I've put forth the idea that they actually might be David Herold's keys which could have been collected from the Herold household during the investigation. One of the Herold sister's discussed how her brother often came in late at night and had a night key, but that a day or two before the assassination, Herold's mother took the key away from him. It would make sense to me that the detectives might take that key along with the picture of Herold they wanted. This is merely an idea.

The keys could be Booth's, but they definitely weren't taken from Booth's body. Perhaps they were found in his room at the National, I don't know. It irks me that Ford's has the keys on display in the museum as having come from Booth's body when there really isn't any evidence for that.

I agree with the information in your post. Apparently the NPS has not tried to identify what the keys fit. If any of Booth's trunks still are extant, the keys should be tried; ditto with the handcuffs. The set of keys does not strike me as a set of night keys; too many different sizes. More likely they belonged to someone who had a number of lockable possessions, such as theatre trunks and handcuffs. I tend to think they were found in Booth's room at the National. I'd like to see this mystery solved.
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11-20-2015, 09:12 AM
Post: #14
RE: Kathy Canavan Invterview
Kathy is giving a talk on Sunday. Hope all goes well, Kathy!

http://www.delawareonline.com/story/life.../76029466/
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