Anatomy of a Presidential Assassination, Part II
February 9, 2014
http://www.davesweb.cnchost.com/Lincoln2.html
The esteemed Dr. Francis Tumblety
Ford's Theater, circa 1865
The Navy Yard Bridge, John Wilkes Booth's passage out of town
Fanny Brown, one of Booth's many paramours
The rear view of Ford's Theater and 'Baptist Alley'
Another of Booth's paramours, this one unidentified
Lewis Paine, April 1865
This remarkable image of Paine, captured in April 1865, has been lovingly colorized
February 9, 2014
http://www.davesweb.cnchost.com/Lincoln2.html
I know what you must be thinking
here: “How the hell could you leave Francis Tumblety out of
the previous post? Compared to him, guys like Boston
Corbett, Henry Rathbone and Edwin Stanton seem perfectly
sane. And whose name was in the news in a weirder way in the
years following the assassination than the esteemed Dr.
Francis Tumblety? And in addition, doesn’t he deserve
honorable mention for the ridiculous facial hair alone?"
I can’t really argue much with any
of that. I think it was probably a subconscious omission so
that I would have something really good to start this post
with. Because as stories go, the Francis Tumblety story is
pretty damn good. And seriously strange. But before getting
to that, I must also quickly add Father Wiget to the list.
Not much can be dug up on him other than that he was
assigned as Mary Surrat’s spiritual adviser during the brief
period that she sat in her cell waiting to be executed, and
he died shortly thereafter.
Moving on now to the man of the
hour, Francis Tumblety was arrested on May 5, 1865, on
suspicion of being complicit in the plot to assassinate
Abraham Lincoln. Tumblety was an associate of – and by some
reports a sometime employer of – executed conspirator David
Herold. His arrest was ordered by Secretary of War Edwin
Stanton. To be fair to Tumblety though, it should be noted
that he was only one of some 2,000 people who were arrested
as possible conspirators. That’s how things work in a
democracy, you see – falsely imprison first, ask questions
later.
The esteemed Dr. Francis Tumblety
In any event, Tumblety was held for
nearly a month before being released on May 30, 1865. Prior
to his arrest, he had lived a very colorful life. Born circa
1833 and raised in New York, Tumblety was
widely viewed as a charlatan and a kook. While still a
minor, he reportedly peddled pornographic materials. He soon
transformed into a quack “Indian herb doctor” who was run
out of various parts of the country for running cons. In one
reported case, he was directly involved in the death of a
‘patient,’ though he suffered no repercussions for his
actions. According to one account, he kept a collection of
human uteruses on display in his Washington, DC
home.
Some twenty-three years after his
arrest in Washington,
Tumblety took up lodging in, of all places, a boardinghouse
in London’s
Whitechapel district. He was identified at that time, and
has been identified by various researchers since that time,
as being a prime suspect in the still unsolved Jack the
Ripper murders. Following an arrest on November 7, 1888 for
“gross indecency,” Tumblety fled the country on November 20
under an assumed name and quickly made his way back to the US,
where he died some five years later.
What are the odds, one wonders,
that the very same guy would be suspected of involvement in
two such completely different and seemingly unconnected
crimes? Two crimes separated by a vast ocean and the passage
of nearly two-and-a-half decades? Probably about the same
odds that a guy like John
Phillips would have connections to both the Black Dahlia
murder and the Manson bloodbath.
*******************************************************
Pictured below is the single-shot
derringer that, according to the legend we all know so well,
John Wilkes Booth used to assassinate President Abraham
Lincoln. One of the most iconic pieces of historical
memorabilia that this country has to offer, it has been
displayed for decades, viewed by millions, and written about
by thousands. But after the passage of 149 years, it doesn’t
appear that anyone has ever thought to question why Booth,
an intelligent and educated man by all accounts, would
choose such a ridiculous weapon to take with him on his
mission.
Let’s imagine that it is the
evening of April 14, 1865, and you are John Wilkes Booth.
Your mission is to assassinate the president. In a crowded
theater. In the middle of Washington, which, at
the time, is heavily fortified and militarized. Because
there is, you know, a war going on. And the enemy’s base of
operations – in Richmond,
Virginia – is
only 100 miles away. So the nation’s capital is crawling
with armed military personnel, armed police patrols, and
armed thugs in the employ of Baker and Stanton.
Your mission then is not going to
be an easy one. The president is under armed guard, or at
least he’s supposed to be. He’s also supposed to be in the
company of General Ulysses S. Grant, who is known to always
be armed. Of course, Grant has fortuitously opted to get the
hell out of Dodge just hours before he was to have
accompanied the Lincolns
to the theater, but you shouldn’t have any way of knowing
that, just as you shouldn’t have any way of knowing that
Parker will desert his post. And there will be no shortage
of other armed personnel in Ford’s Theater, including Army
Captain Theodore McGowan (no relation), who is seated very
near the door to Lincoln’s
box seats.
So you have to assume that you’re
going to have to get past at least two armed attendants, and
probably more, to get to the president. And you’re going to
have to do that without firing a shot, since you only have
one and you will need to save that for Abe. And since the
only realistic chance you have of actually killing Lincoln
with your wildly inaccurate weapon is by sneaking up behind
him and delivering a contact wound to his head, you’re going
to have to get past any guards without making any noise. And
since Grant is supposedly also on the hit list, you’re going
to have to kill him as well, which I guess you’ll have to do
by bludgeoning him with your empty gun. That should work out
pretty well.
Ford's Theater, circa 1865
You’re not on a suicide mission, by
the way, so even if you somehow manage to successfully
assassinate the president, and presumably General Grant as
well, you’re still going to have some major problems on your
hands. First of all, you’re going to have to make your
escape from a theater full of people, many of them armed.
Because in April 1865, the beginning of the era that will be
mythologized as the ‘Wild West’ days, there are guns
everywhere and everyone is packing heat. And you, of course,
will have blown your wad and will be unarmed.
If you somehow manage to make your
way out of the theater, then you will face the daunting
prospect of making your way out of the city and across the Potomac. And as I may have
mentioned, DC is swarming with armed soldiers, armed spies
and armed police, as well as armed citizens. And your only
means of defending yourself will be with a dagger, which
probably isn’t going to be very effective.
Your goal is to reach the Navy Yard
Bridge, which will get you across the Potomac
and to relative safety. But even if you reach it, you’ve
still got a big hurdle to overcome: the bridge has a strict
curfew and the armed guard is under standing orders not to
allow anyone to cross without explicit authorization. If you
attempt to cross without anyway, you will be shot. A gun
might come in handy, but you won’t have one.
The Navy Yard Bridge, John Wilkes Booth's passage out of town
To recap then, you have set a very
ambitious goal for yourself. You must first get to the
president, who is sitting in a private box in a crowded
theater with at least two armed attendants. You must then
kill the president with a single shot, because your weapon
doesn’t allow for second chances, and also somehow kill
General Grant. You must then, in an unarmed state, make an
escape first from the theater and then from the city, and
you must get past an armed guard at the bridge. And you have
to do all of that with just one bullet. It’s hard to see how
anything could go wrong with such a brilliant plan.
Of course, it doesn’t have to be
this way. There are other weapons available. Weapons better
suited to your mission. And as an alleged Southern
operative, you should surely know that. It was, after all,
Confederate guerilla groups that pioneered the shock-and-awe
tactic of using overwhelming force in the form of multiple
revolvers. We’ve all seen images of Wild West gunslingers
riding hard with their reins in their teeth, six-shooters
blazing in both hands. It’s only natural to dismiss such
images as a hackneyed Hollywood
creation. But strangely enough, it’s actually not. Rebel
groups like Mosby’s Rangers and Quantrill's Raiders really
did train to do exactly that. And they wore custom-made
holsters that could hold as many as six revolvers, three on
each side. That allowed them to get off as many as 36 shots
before their overwhelmed Union adversaries, armed with
muskets, could reload and get off so much as a second shot.
Those semi-mythical figures in
American history that we know as Frank and Jesse James, and
Jim, Bob, John and Cole Younger, and Bill, Grat, Bob and
Emmett Dalton, learned the skills they later employed as
Wild West ‘outlaws’ while riding with the likes of William
Quantrill and “Bloody Bill” Anderson. But that’s not really
the point here – the point here is that revolvers are easy
to come by and might serve you better than a
nearly-worthless single-shot derringer. And according to the
official story, you definitely have access to at least two
of them (pictured below).
There are other things you might
want to consider as well, such as not committing the crime
as John Wilkes Booth. You are, after all, a famous stage
actor, which means that you are also a wardrobe and makeup
guy. Because in your era, you and your contemporaries have
to handle those duties yourselves, so you travel with a
couple large trunks full of stuff like wigs and fake beards.
You could easily don a convincing disguise so as not to be
easily recognized. Then you don’t have to worry about
getting out of the city alive; all you have to do is make it
out of the theater, quickly ditch the disguise, and then you
can circle around and rejoin the crowd at Ford’s without
arousing any suspicion at all.
And you do, after all, have a lot
at stake. Even if you manage to make an escape from DC, your
lifestyle and career will be distant memories. All the fame,
all the female adoration, all the success, all the wealth …
it will all be gone if you commit the crime as John Wilkes
Booth. So you might want to put on a disguise. And replace
that derringer with a revolver or two. And maybe bring an
accomplice or two along for additional firepower. You have
quite a few co-conspirators to choose from.
You also might want to reconsider
whether Ford’s Theater is the best place to do this.
According to numerous historians, Lincoln
has a bad habit of ignoring advice from aides and strolling
around Washington
unescorted at times, leaving him seriously vulnerable. That
might make it a bit easier to successfully pull this off.
Fanny Brown, one of Booth's many paramours
In summary then, your best bet is
probably to make the attempt on Lincoln’s life when he
is alone and unprotected. And you should probably bring
along some more impressive firepower, just in case. If you
are determined to do it in the theater, you should don a
disguise and bring along a couple other gunmen in case one
or more of you are killed or physically prevented from
reaching the president. The dumbest thing you could probably
do would be to go it alone, as John Wilkes Booth, and arm
yourself only with a derringer. But I guess you can’t argue
with success … right?
Meanwhile, one of your
comrades-in-arms, Lewis Paine/Payne/Powell, has a difficult
task ahead of him as well. His goal is to kill Lincoln’s
Secretary
of State, William Seward, who is recuperating at his stately
manor in the heart of DC after being severely injured in a
fall from a horse-drawn carriage just nine days earlier.
Seward had suffered a broken lower jaw, a fractured right
arm, torn ligaments in his foot, and heavy bruising over
much of his body.
The 63-year-old secretary is
therefore physically vulnerable, but assassinating him is
still not going to be easy. For starters, Paine is going to
have to gain access to the estate. Then he’s going to have
to find Seward without knowing the layout of the home or
which floor or which of the many rooms the secretary is in.
And he’s going to have to get past a lot of people, because
there are no less than eight other able-bodied adults in the
home, five of them men, two of whom are military personnel.
And there are readily accessible weapons in the home. And,
as I may have mentioned, there are armed patrols all over
the city, and they are quite capable of quickly responding
to any signs of a disturbance at the Secretary of State’s
residence.
The rear view of Ford's Theater and 'Baptist Alley'
The attack on Seward has been all
but written out of our history books, but in 1865 it was
portrayed as an integral component of the plot against Lincoln,
particularly during the show trial of the alleged
conspirators. It is now mentioned only in passing, if at
all. Which is probably because the story doesn’t make a
whole lot of sense.
In the home are: William Seward,
the injured Secretary of State; William Bell, Seward’s black
servant; Frederick Seward, William’s son as well as his
Assistant Secretary of State; Major Augustus Seward, another
son and a career Army officer (who will be promoted in a few
weeks to lieutenant colonel); Private George Robinson,
Seward’s personal attendant (who will be promoted to
sergeant in a few weeks); Emerick Hansell, a US State
Department courier; Frances Seward, the secretary’s wife
(who will be dead very soon); Fanny Seward, his daughter
(who will be dead fairly soon); and, finally, the wife of
one of the Seward sons.
Payne of course is going it alone,
just like Booth, for reasons that have apparently never
required an explanation. The five able-bodied men in the
house, at least a couple of whom are likely armed, will pose
a physical challenge. The three women will pose less of a
physical threat, but one or more of them are very likely to
run out into the street to summon any nearby patrols. And
just the fact that there are so many people in the way will
make it extremely difficult for Powell to control the
situation.
Another of Booth's paramours, this one unidentified
Paine’s mission is not unlike
Booth’s; he must enter the building, work his way past any
resistance to get to his target, take out his target, work
his way back out of the building past any resistance, and
then somehow find his way out of Washington. But unlike
Booth, Payne won’t have even a single bullet to work with.
Instead, he is going in armed only with a bludgeon and a
knife. And he’ll be coming out with nothing but the clothes
on his back.
Technically speaking, he will be
carrying a gun, but it doesn’t work and so is only useful as
a bludgeon. In a city overflowing with guns, Paine has
chosen to bring one that doesn’t work. Which means that,
luckily for the Sewards, no one is going to die.
Paine though is going to leave
quite a trail of destruction once he enters the estate,
which sits just a half-dozen blocks from Ford’s Theater.
Frederick Seward will be left gravely injured, with his head
reportedly split open and his skull fractured in two places.
Major Augustus Seward will also receive severe head
injuries, with one report claiming that he was half scalped.
Private Robinson will also be seriously wounded, with deep
stab wounds to his chest. Emerick Hansell will receive at
least one deep, very serious chest wound as well. Fanny
Seward will be wounded as well, in some unspecified manner.
And William Seward – who is lying in bed on his back, unable
to defend himself – will be brutally stabbed about the head
and neck, but will, despite his already weakened condition,
miraculously survive.
**********************************************************
It is difficult to believe that the
attack on Secretary of State Seward ever took place at all.
Lewis Paine supposedly gravely wounded six people in
hand-to-hand combat, four of them able-bodied men, and yet,
as photos taken soon after his arrest just days later
reveal, he didn’t have so much as a scratch on him. He
supposedly left his hat, gun and knife behind, creating a
handy evidence trail, but why would he leave his only
weapons behind? He also allegedly left a bloodstained coat
with gloves and a fake moustache in the pocket in the woods
just outside of DC. Lewis Paine was apparently a very
considerate attempted assassin.
Lewis Paine, April 1865
The descriptions of the conditions
of the victims came from the first three people to
conveniently arrive at the crime scene: Secretary of War
Edwin Stanton, Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles, and
Surgeon General Joseph Barnes. You know, just your typical
first responders. None of them reported seeing Augustus
there. Stanton
initially claimed that only William Seward, Fred Seward and
George Robinson were injured; Augustus Seward, Emerick
Hansell and Fanny Seward were later added to the victim
list, apparently so that the prosecution would have suitable
witnesses. It was an entire month before Fanny Seward came
forward with her account of the attack.
Augustus was later presented at
trial as both a victim of and an eyewitness to the attack –
the attack that very likely didn’t take place, in the home
he wasn’t actually in at the time. His testimony was wildly
at odds with that of Robinson, with both men claiming that
they had been in the room and personally witnessed the
attack on William Seward. Not only did their accounts
significantly differ, but neither really explained why it
was that with the two of them in the room, and with
Frederick and Hansell in the home as well, they were unable
to defend the secretary.
This remarkable image of Paine, captured in April 1865, has been lovingly colorized
It is impossible to determine
whether the alleged attack ever took place, but it appears
extremely unlikely. It does not seem logistically possible
for one barely armed man to have done what Paine is supposed
to have done. And it doesn’t seem physically possible for
him to have done so without sustaining a single visible
injury. There is no tangible evidence that Paine ever
entered the home. The only ‘evidence’ that has ever existed
is the dubious (and conflicting) accounts told by the
alleged victims and by the high-ranking cabinet officials
who just happened to be first on the scene.
Let’s now briefly review the key
elements of this story: two assassins; three targets;
numerous people to get through to get to those targets;
numerous other people to get by to flee the scene; a city
essentially under martial law; and one – exactly one –
bullet. Anyone see anything wrong with that scenario?
… to be continued
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