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    Bloody Crimes

    Page 46
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      Shubrick, William B., 151

      Simpson, Matthew, 184, 189, 282-84

      Sing Sing, N.Y., 232, 233

      slavery, 100, 258-59, 356, 357, 367, 382, 388, 401

      Brown’s raid and opposition to, xi-xii

      in Confederacy, 3

      Davis and, 49, 60-61, 357, 367, 401

      expansion of, 52, 54

      Lincoln’s opposition to, xii, 52-54, 60-61, 333-34

      U.S. Constitution and, 53

      smallpox, 262-63

      Smith, Anna Davis, 56

      Smith, Gerrit, 356

      Smith, Kirby, 14

      Smithsonian Institution, 49, 124

      Smithsonian National Museum of American History, 400

      Snow, Parker, 229

      Soldiers’ Home, 93

      South, 276

      agricultural empire of the, 2

      Brown as seen in, xii

      Davis as spokesman for, 50

      feeling of superiority in, 322

      impact of Lincoln’s death on, 196

      Johnson and, 121, 196, 199-200

      postwar, 361

      reconstruction of, 92

      Union army as seen by, xiv, 322

      South Carolina, 238, 245, 250, 252, 257, 268, 297

      secession by, 98-99

      Southern Express Company, 195

      Southern Historical Society, 361

      Southern Historical Society Papers, 363

      Speed, James, 157, 207

      Speed, Phillip, 157

      Spotswood Hotel, 356

      Springfield, Ill., 27, 59, 143, 145, 153, 155, 161, 163, 199, 201-2, 213, 247, 293, 295, 331, 391

      Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library in, 392-93

      Lincoln’s burial in, 271-78, 275, 283, 287, 389

      Springfield (Mass.) Republican, 340

      Stanton, Edwin M., 79, 92, 130, 136, 170, 180, 313

      arrests ordered by, 240

      Booth manhunt and, 111, 147, 204, 244, 268, 296

      on Davis capture, 330-32

      Davis’s captivity and, 339, 341, 352, 354

      Davis suspected of assassination involvement by, 276, 287, 297, 320, 326

      and fall of Richmond, 17, 18, 20, 34-36

      Grand Review and, 331

      Lincoln corpse photograph and, 234-37, 239-41, 248

      Lincoln’s corpse and, 138-40, 379-80

      Lincoln’s funeral and, 140-42, 184-85, 189

      Lincoln’s funeral train and, 154-58, 199, 200-204, 207-9, 217, 219, 225, 246, 274, 277

      at Petersen house, 113, 120-21

      post-funeral planning by, 143, 151, 153

      on Seward attack and Lincoln assassination, 110-11

      women’s clothes rumor propagated by, 324, 327-29, 344

      State Department, U.S., 110

      states’ rights, 363

      Stephens, Alexander, 47

      Stevens, Thaddeus, 220

      Stevenson, Job E., 258-59, 284

      Stone, Robert King, 109, 117, 133, 135-36, 169

      Stoneman, George, 88

      Confederate gold rumor and, 244-45

      Strong, George Templeton, 328

      Stuart, J. E. B., 2

      Sulivane, Clement, 8, 20, 31

      Sumner, Charles, 114-15

      Supreme Court, U.S., 52, 62, 171

      Surratt, Mary, 341, 344

      Sutherlin, William T., 37-38

      Swan, Otis D., 157

      Swancey’s Ferry, S.C., 256

      Swanson, Claude A., 387

      Syracuse, N.Y., 242

      Taft, Charles Sabin, 106-7, 108-9, 120, 124, 126-27, 133, 135

      Taft, William Howard, 398

      Taltavul’s Star Saloon, 96, 102

      Tanner, James, 126

      Taylor, Sarah Knox, 55-56, 58, 175, 357, 366, 376-77

      Taylor, Zachary, 9, 50, 55, 142, 188

      telegraph, 18-19, 20

      Texas, 14, 33, 80, 247

      as possible new Confederate center, 197, 219, 279, 299, 317

      T. Gurney & Son, 239-40

      Thomas, D. C., 126

      Thomas, George, Confederate gold rumor and, 244-45

      Thomas, Lorenzo, 141

      Thomas, William B., 157

      Thompson, Jacob, 268-69

      Tifton, Ga., 398-99, 399

      Tillson, Davis, 245

      torpedo general, 85-87

      Townsend, Edward D., 141, 203, 352

      Lincoln corpse photograph and, 230, 234-38, 248

      Lincoln’s funeral train and, 201-3, 209, 213-19, 225, 232-33, 243, 245-46, 248-50, 253, 255, 261-62, 271, 274-77, 294

      Townsend, George Alfred, 145-46, 185-87, 192-93, 198

      on cleaning out of Lincoln’s office, 324-26

      Treasury Department, U.S., 93, 108, 141-42, 150, 151, 156, 158, 187, 192, 287, 336-37

      Tredegar Iron Works, 11, 401

      Trenholm, George, 9, 32, 33, 38

      Tucker, Beverly, 268-69, 314

      Tuscarora, 330

      Tyger River, 250

      Tyler, E. B., 214

      Ulke, Henry, 128-30

      Ulke, Julius, 128-30

      Union Army, 82, 87, 92, 182, 213-14, 275, 289, 356

      approach to Richmond by, 5, 13-14, 18-21, 26, 30, 31

      cavalry of, 88, 194, 244-45, 278-79, 299-302, 304-18

      Davis honored by, 321-22

      Grand Review of, 329-30, 331, 333, 336-37

      Lincoln’s popularity with, 75-76

      prisoners from, 46, 344

      in Richmond, 44

      as seen by South, xiv

      as threat to Davis, 200

      see also Army, U.S.

      Union League Association, 220

      Union League Club, 157

      Union Pacific Railroad, 391

      United Confederate Veterans, 386

      United Daughters of the Confederacy, 386, 399

      United States Military Railroad, 27, 208-9, 277, 331, 382

      Urbana, Ohio, 259

      U.S. Army Medical Museum, 136, 137, 395

      U.S. Arsenal, tragedy at, 177-81, 342

      Usher, John P., 117

      Valentine, Edward, 386

      Vanderbilt, Cornelius, 356

      Vicksburg, battle of, 112

      Vicksburg, Miss., 3, 76, 123, 156, 248

      Vignodi, Professor, 344

      Vincent, Thomas, 116

      Virginia, 40-41, 95, 121, 194, 206, 297, 317, 401

      aristocracy of, 3

      as Confederacy’s principal state, 37, 70, 82

      Walker, J. M., 83

      Wallace, Lew, 215, 240

      War Department, Confederate, 288

      War Department, U.S., 18, 35, 101, 150, 152, 154, 181, 190, 235, 239-41, 249, 296, 297, 330, 341, 344, 350, 352, 380

      War of 1812, 132, 141

      Washington, D.C., 1-2, 16, 18, 19, 27, 48, 73, 75, 77, 78, 90, 100, 119, 121, 123, 126, 130, 141, 152-53, 155, 167, 173,

      Washington, D.C. (cont’d) 178, 199, 203, 209, 213, 214, 234, 237, 239, 242, 271, 273, 275, 276, 277, 281, 287, 295, 296, 331, 358, 361, 371, 383, 391, 393

      antebellum, 352

      boardinghouse culture in, 98

      Davis’s capture and, 318-19, 321, 323-24, 326

      Davis’s death and, 380

      fall of Richmond celebrated in, 34-36, 39, 102

      Grand Review in, 329-30, 331, 333, 336-37

      Lee’s surrender celebrated in, 79-80, 81, 84, 92-93, 102

      Lincoln’s funeral ceremonies planned in, 141, 143, 148-52

      reaction to Lincoln’s assassination in, 116

      Richmond’s nearness to, 3

      Washington, Ga., 73, 92, 273, 278-80, 288-89

      Washington, George, 53, 143, 170, 188, 221, 265, 278, 293, 382

      Washington and Lee University, 386

      Washington Daily Morning Chronicle, 180, 323-24

      Washington Evening Star, 34-35, 124, 170, 171-72, 173, 178-79, 180

      Washington Navy Yard, 94, 156, 164

      Washington Post, 381

      wax figures:

      of Booth, 344, 392-93

      of Davis, 344-45

     
    of Lincoln, 344, 392

      Webster, Daniel, 52

      Weitzel, Godfrey, 47, 62, 63

      Welles, Gideon, 75, 79-80, 92, 108, 110-12, 119, 138, 170, 207, 237, 324, 330-31, 336

      Welles, Mary Jane, 108, 119-20, 133

      Western Railroad Corporation, 187

      Westfield, N.Y., 246

      West Point, U.S. Military Academy at, 48, 54, 55, 232

      Wheeler, Joseph, 238

      White House, 3, 15, 16, 18, 60, 78, 84, 93, 96, 103, 110, 111, 114, 119, 130, 131, 140, 151, 153, 156, 161, 164, 167, 215, 337, 400

      East Room viewing and funeral in, 146, 148-50, 152, 158-59, 160-63, 181, 183-91, 187, 197-98, 199, 249, 277, 281, 285

      Lincoln’s corpse in Guest Room of, 132-39, 143-46, 160

      Lincoln’s corpse transported to, 126-27, 131-32, 207

      Mary Lincoln’s delayed departure from, 286, 287, 324, 335, 389

      other funerals in, 165, 170-71, 173

      in War of 1812, 132

      White House of the Confederacy, 2, 3, 5, 15, 60, 170, 174, 397, 401-2

      evacuation of, 9-10, 12-13, 22, 24-25

      Lincoln at, 47, 62-64, 66, 73

      photographs sold of, 63

      Union seizure of, 31, 32

      Whitman, Walt, xiv, 34, 124, 262, 294-95

      Wilcox’s Mills, Ga., 204

      Wilde, Oscar, 363-65, 364

      William P. Clyde, 330

      Willis, Lee H., 376

      Wilson, Henry, 164

      Wilson, James, 256-58, 296-98, 313, 320-22, 330

      Winslow, Edward F., 257

      Wirt, William, 52

      Wirz, Henry, 344, 350, 356

      Wisconsin, 57

      Wise, John S., 30

      Wofford, William T., 67-68

      Wood, John Taylor, 9, 25, 33, 88, 92, 122, 302, 310, 312-13, 318

      Woodward, Janvier J., 133-36, 138, 354

      Wormley, James, 158

      wrestling, 55

      Yates, Richard, 151

      York, Pa., 218

      Yorkville, S.C., 243

      Acknowledgments

      A number of people helped in my pursuit of Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis:

      My splendid editor, Henry Ferris, recognized from the start how pairing the final journeys of the two presidents could enhance the power of each story. Our countless conversations and late night editing sessions in his New York office improved the book in immeasurable ways. Henry’s assistants, Peter Hubbard, now an editor in his own right, and Danny Goldstein, brought diligence and enthusiasm to the project.

      I am also grateful to the rest of my HarperCollins team: Michael Morrison and Liate Stehlik for supporting this book with energy and personal interest, Lynn Grady and Jean Marie Kelly for bringing it to its audience, and miracle-worker Sharyn Rosenblum, the best publicist in the business.

      At the Museum of the Confederacy, President S. Waite Rawls III and historian John Coski provided valuable information about Jefferson Davis. Thanks also to Waite for a moving, late afternoon private tour of the Confederate White House.

      At the Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library at Beauvoir, Mississippi, Chairman Richard V. Forte Sr. and curator Richard R. Flowers answered questions about Davis’s last sanctuary and provided the surprising photo of Oscar Wilde. Lynda Lasswell Crist, editor of the Papers of Jefferson Davis at Rice University, was a superb guide to the writings of the lost man of American history. Lynda answered questions with good cheer, and supplied numerous documents and transcripts. With the impressive papers project, a model for future historians, she has made a major contribution to the study of American history.

      At the Library of Congress, John Sellers is a living treasure who shared his vast expertise on the Lincoln and Civil War manuscript collection. His retirement is a loss to all those who pursue the Lincoln story. In the rare book division, Clark Evans, with his usual effusive charm, made available a number of treasures documenting the final days of Lincoln and Davis. W. Ralph Eubanks, director of publishing and a fine author in his own right, helped me obtain a number of superb photographs and illustrations, as did Helena Zinkham and Barbara Orbach Natanson in the prints and photographs division. I must also thank John Y. Cole, director of the Center for the Book and author impresario of the National Book Festival, for his support and efforts to spread Lincoln scholarship to a wide popular audience at the best book event in America.

      At the Surratt Society, Joan Chaconas, Laurie Verge, and Sandra Walia rendered the same generous assistance that they gave to Manhunt. Their expertise and good humor make Mary Surratt’s country tavern and the James O. Hall Research Center two of the most interesting and informative sites on the Lincoln assassination trail.

      Many thanks to my “first readers” Michael Burlingame, Ronald K. L. Collins, and Edward Steers Jr. for reading the manuscript with keen eyes, and making valuable suggestions.

      At Ford’s Theatre, my friend Paul Tetreault offered good counsel, a public venue to share my research, and the opportunity to participate in the preservation of an American landmark. Paul is a remarkable catalyst and visionary who understands the potential of Ford’s as both a working playhouse and a museum that tells the story of Lincoln’s life and death. At the National Park Service, Kym Elder, Rae Emerson, and Gloria Swift were always ready to provide assistance, advice, and encouragement.

      At the Heritage Foundation, Attorney General Edwin Meese III and Todd Gaziano, director of the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies, provided me with a collegial home during the time I wrote this book. Jessica Kline gave valuable assistance with all computer mysteries. Interns Laura Clauser and Andrew O’Dell helped track down a number of hard-to-find documents and articles.

      My friend and literary agent, Richard Abate, grasped the dramatic possibilities of this story about the end days of the two Civil War presidents and made a number of invaluable suggestions on how to think about and tell this tale. He critiqued the manuscript, provided his usual telling insights, and in a number of ways above and beyond the call of an agent, gave this book his “last measure of devotion.”

      I also thank my television agent at WME Entertainment, Julie Weitz, for her tireless efforts in translating my work into another medium.

      My wife, Andrea E. Mays, occupied with her own book on the hunt for Shakespeare’s First Folio, read the manuscript several times, made countless editorial improvements, helped sift through the abundance of art works to select the images, and, whenever I got bogged down in the trees, cut me a path to clarity. Andrea lived with this book for more than two years and helped me bring alive the saga of Lincoln and Davis. Our boys, Cameron and Harrison, ages thirteen and eleven, were our companions on visits to historic sites, my assistants at book signings, and coaches on storytelling. “Readers want blood,” said Cameron. “And knives,” added Harrison.

      Finally, my father, Lennart J. Swanson, traveled with me for much of this journey. In a way, he began this book by taking me on an unforgettable trip to Gettysburg when I was ten years old. We have been traveling on that path ever since.

      James L. Swanson

      Washington, D.C.

      July 7, 2010

      Also By James L. Swanson

      Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln’s Killer

      Copyright

      The maps on pages 275, 300, and 380 were created by Kieran McAuliffe.

      All interior artworks, unless otherwise indicated, are from the author’s private collection. Grateful acknowledgment is made to the Library of Congress for photographs that appear on the front and back endpapers. Additionally, the author wishes to thank the following for use of the photographs that appear throughout the text: Library of Congress (pp. 4, 112, 137, 191, 211, 226, 264, 334, 335, 343, 346, 362, 377, 399, 403); Ed Steers, Jr. (p. 104); Ford’s Theatre, National Park Service (p. 129); National Museum of Health and Medicine, Walter Reed Army Medical Center (p. 135); Stack’s (p. 142); Indiana Historical Society (pp. 203, 260); Terrell Library, Washington State University (p. 207); Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Mus
    eum (p. 230); U.S. Army Center of Military History (p. 360); The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library, Beauvoir (p. 364); New Orleans Public Library (pp. 379, 384); North Carolina State Archives (p. 385); Wes Cowan (p. 395).

      BLOODY CRIMES. Copyright © 2010 by James L. Swanson.

      All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

      EPub Edition © AUGUST 2010 ISBN: 978-0-061-98985-8

      FIRST EDITION

      Designed by Richard Oriolo

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Swanson, James L.

      Bloody crimes : the chase for Jefferson Davis and the death pageant for Lincoln’s corpse / James L. Swanson.—1st ed.

      p. cm.

      Includes bibliographical references and index.

      1. Davis, Jefferson, 1808–1889—Captivity, 1865–1867. 2. Lincoln, Abraham, 1809–1865—Death and burial. 3. Fugitives from justice—United States—Case studies. 4. Political prisoners—United States—Case studies. 5. United States—History—Civil War, 1861–1865—Prisoners and prisons. I. Title.

      E477.98.S93 2010

      973.7’7092—dc22

      2010029404

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