Lincoln's Assassination

Front Cover
SIU Press, Sep 17, 2014 - Biography & Autobiography - 155 pages

For 150 years, the assassination of Abraham Lincoln has fascinated the American people. Relatively few academic historians, however, have devoted study to it, viewing the murder as a side note tied to neither the Civil War nor Reconstruction. Over time, the traditional story of the assassination has become littered with myths, from the innocence of Mary Surratt and Samuel Mudd to John Wilkes Booth’s escape to Oklahoma or India, where he died by suicide several years later. In this succinct volume, Edward Steers, Jr. sets the record straight, expertly analyzing the historical evidence to explain Lincoln’s assassination.

The decision to kill President Lincoln, Steers shows, was an afterthought. John Wilkes Booth’s original plan involved capturing Lincoln, delivering him to the Confederate leadership in Richmond, and using him as a bargaining chip to exchange for southern soldiers being held in Union prison camps. Only after Robert E. Lee surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia and Richmond fell to Union forces did Booth change his plan from capture to murder. As Steers explains, public perception about Lincoln’s death has been shaped by limited but popular histories that assert, alternately, that Secretary of War Edwin Stanton engineered the assassination or that John Wilkes Booth was a mad actor fueled by delusional revenge. In his detailed chronicle of the planning and execution of Booth’s plot, Steers demonstrates that neither Stanton nor anyone else in Lincoln’s sphere of political confidants participated in Lincoln’s death, and Booth remained a fully rational person whose original plan to capture Lincoln was both reasonable and capable of success. He also implicates both Mary Surratt and Samuel Mudd, as well as other conspirators, clarifying their parts in the scheme.

At the heart of Lincoln’s assassination, Steers reveals, lies the institution of slavery. Lincoln’s move toward ending slavery and his unwillingness to compromise on emancipation spurred the white supremacist Booth and ultimately resulted in the president’s untimely death. With concise chapters and inviting prose, this brief volume will prove essential for anyone seeking a straightforward, authoritative analysis of one of the most dramatic events in American history.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
1 Now by God I Will Put Him Through
4
2 Black Flag Warfare
6
3 We Are Tired of War on the Old Camp Ground
10
4 John Wilkes Booth
15
5 The Action Team
19
6 An Unexpected Change in Plans
31
7 I Never Saw Him So Supremely Cheerful
36
13 Abandoned
75
14 Damn the RebelsThis Is Their Work
81
15 The Roundup
88
16 The Ring Closes
95
17 Tell My Mother I Die for My Country
105
18 Inter Arma Leges Silent
109
Epilogue
120
Acknowledgments
131

8 Caesar Must Bleed for It
43
9 Sic Semper Tyrannis
49
10 We Have Assassinated the President‍
56
Gallery of Illustrations
62
11 Dr Mudd
63
12 The Giant Sufferer
69
Notes
133
Index
149
Author Biography
156
Series Statement
157
Back Cover
158
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2014)

Edward Steers, Jr., a scientist retired from the National Institutes of Health, is the author, editor, coauthor, or coeditor of thirteen books, including Blood on the Moon: The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln; The Lincoln Assassination Encyclopedia; The Lincoln Assassination: The Evidence; The Trial: The Assassination of President Lincoln and the Trial of the Conspirators; and Lincoln Legends: Myths, Hoaxes, and Confabulations Associated with Abraham Lincoln.