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Tidwell revisited
12-13-2020, 11:39 AM
Post: #46
RE: Tidwell revisited
(12-13-2020 10:32 AM)McCastle Wrote:  
(12-12-2020 09:52 PM)Susan Higginbotham Wrote:  
(12-12-2020 07:15 PM)McCastle Wrote:  Susan,

While I agree that the extensive work on Sarah Slater done by author and historian John Stanton is impressive, I have to ask the same question I posed to John many years ago... what if the name Sarah Slater was an alias?

Years ago, long before his passing, he took me on the "Cawood No Escape Tour" near his home at Mathias Point Va.

A good man, and I always enjoyed his company.

I suppose it's possible that "Slater" was an alias, but Weichman's trial testimony that Mrs. Slater was from North Carolina, spoke French, and could apply to the French consul for aid if needed coincides nicely with the background of the actual Sarah Slater.

I'm beginning to think that Weichmann's information may have come from George Atzerodt, who said Sarah was from "South" Carolina. Mary Surratt was already upset with Atzerodt for telling Weichmann too much. Again, this is just a guess.

I do agree that John Stanton's piece coincides nicely, but the dates being ten years off, leaves it somewhat questionable. Not wrong, just questionable.

I have seen only two eyewitness descriptions of Sarah Slater. I'm adding a third description of a female blockade runner, given by a fellow blockade runner on the Potomac River. I believe she had a solid French connection in Canada.

This should be an easy one to guess..

George Atzerodt
Slender / Medium Size
Black Hair
Black eyes
Age 20-21
Good Looking

David Barry
Slim / Delicate in Size
Dark Hair
Black eyes
age Under 30

????
Medium Height
Black Hair
Dark Eyes
Age 23-24
Remarkably Pretty
She loved the Confederacy with an "ardor" so intense...

I would have my doubts about the birth year on Sarah Slater's tombstone too (assuming that's what you're referring to) were she not buried next to her mother and sister. It was quite common for 19th-century ladies to shave off a few years, and since Sarah's closest surviving relatives were nephews, they probably simply took her at her word for her year of birth when they commissioned her tombstone.
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12-15-2020, 02:57 PM (This post was last modified: 08-22-2025 08:55 AM by McCastle.)
Post: #47
RE: Tidwell revisited
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12-15-2020, 05:17 PM
Post: #48
RE: Tidwell revisited
(12-15-2020 02:57 PM)McCastle Wrote:  Even Herold, I think may have used the name Henson at Dr. Mudd's house.

I have always found this topic confusing. Mudd's wife wrote that Herold called himself "Tyson" and Booth said his name was "Tyler." Dr. Mudd, however, said that Herold called himself "Henson" and Booth was "Tyser or Tyson." Who knows!
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12-15-2020, 06:45 PM
Post: #49
RE: Tidwell revisited
If I recall properly, the book the Lincoln Conspiracy by David Balsiger and Chales Sellier had Herold being miss-identified as Henson.
The book became a not so great movie and is on Internet Archive - https://archive.org/details/the-lincoln-conspiracy-1977

I also recall Ray Neff being involved in the narrative before he wrote his classic book, Dark Union.
He tries to prove it was a Herold look-a-like named Henson who accompanies a Booth look-a-like, Boyd and finally are caught/killed at Garrett's farm.

So when is this "Old Enough To Know Better" supposed to kick in?
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12-15-2020, 07:52 PM (This post was last modified: 08-22-2025 08:56 AM by McCastle.)
Post: #50
RE: Tidwell revisited
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12-16-2020, 02:49 PM
Post: #51
RE: Tidwell revisited
(12-15-2020 02:57 PM)McCastle Wrote:  Susan,

I believe you have made a reasonable case based on John Stanton's research, and there is a good chance that your work is correct.

By the way, I've done my own research into Sarah (I tracked down the identity of her second husband), and am not simply parroting John Stanton's. And of course, the person who laid the groundwork for future researchers was the late James O. Hall, all without the benefit of the Internet.
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