New Gallery – Samuel Arnold

One of the eight individuals tried for conspiracy in Lincoln’s assassination, Samuel Bland Arnold received a sentence of life imprisonment for his involvement in John Wilkes Booth’s initial abduction plot.  Arnold was one of Booth’s boyhood friends from his school days in Baltimore, and had served in the service of the Confederacy early in the war.  When Booth introduced Arnold to another boyhood friend of his, Michael O’Laughlen, the two joined Booth’s conspiracy to capture Abraham Lincoln and ferry him south.  Arnold later became disenfranchised with Booth and his grandiose scheme, and left Washington to take a job in Virginia a few weeks before the assassination.  He was found out and arrested when investigators found an incriminating letter in Booth’s papers addressed from “Sam”.  He served almost four years imprisonment at Fort Jefferson on the Dry Tortugas before being pardoned by Andrew Johnson.  From then on he lived the quiet life of a hermit.  In 1902, he finally allowed his version of the story to be told.

I hope you enjoy this new Picture Gallery of images relating to Samuel Arnold.

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Replica Booth Diaries for Sale

A month ago, I noticed an eBay auction selling, “John Wilkes Booth’s Diary National Treasure 2 Prop Replica“. I decided to contact the seller to ask about it. I learned that the piece was a handmade creation by an Italian replica prop maker. The creator’s name is Pasquale Marsella and he has an entire website showing his self-created prop replicas for his favorite move series, Indiana Jones. His cinematic interests are multifaceted and he also very much enjoys the National Treasure movies. Due to this he meticulously replicated items from that movie series such as the President’s Book of Secrets and Booth’s diary. After e-mailing for a bit, I inquired with him how many diaries he had for sale. Mr. Marsella told me he still had about 10 -15 completed leather covers in his possession, the interiors of which still needed to be completed. Up until now he was just selling them to other prop collectors for their National Treasure collections. However, the detail is so fine and the craftsmanship is so good, I told him he was missing out on a whole other market: Lincoln assassination researchers and collectors.

Over the past month, Mr. Marsella and I have been working together to tweak and adjust his original design. As stated, his original product was a replica of a replica. It was very good at a glance, but details like the interior pages themselves were not the same as the original Booth diary. Using John Wilkes Booth’s FBI file and images of the diary the Secret Service took of it in the 1970’s, Mr. Marsella and I have been able to duplicate the interior of the diary exactly. The written pages are now in Booth’s handwriting, and the diary has the exact number of present and missing pages as the original. I know that Mr. Marsella is very proud of his new design and is happy to offer his hand-made diaries to readers of this blog at a generously discounted rate.

Diary collage

Remember, these diaries are all hand-made by Mr. Marsella, with hand tooled leather and printed pages to match the interior of Booth’s diary exactly. The diaries will be aged to replicate the original diary housed at Ford’s Theatre.

In addition to a remarkable replica of Booth’s diary, Mr. Marsella is also throwing in copies of the CDVs of Booth’s ladies found inside the diary and a replica map that was used at the trial of the conspirators.

Mr. Marsella is offering all of these replicas; the diary, CDVs, and map, for the cost of $400 plus $25 shipping. I truly believe the workmanship is worth every penny and the rarity of a good replica makes it a great deal. For comparison, it would cost you $2,500 to purchase a replica diary from the original propmaster on National Treasure 2 and this pricey version would not be as exact as the one Mr. Marsella has created.

For those of you out there who are interested in buying your own replica John Wilkes Booth diary please email me at: boothiebarn (at) gmail (dot) com. Update: Pasquale has no more John Wilkes Booth diaries for sale and will not be making any more. Thank you all for supporting his wonderful creations. From there I’ll send you instructions on how to send Mr. Marsella payment. Please note that Mr. Marsella needs 25 days after payment is received to age and assemble the diary properly.

If it helps convince you, I have an order in for a diary as does the Surratt House Museum which will be putting the replica on display.

If you have any questions for me, or questions I can pass along to Mr. Marsella, please feel free to ask them in the comments below.

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A Busy Conference Weekend

Well the 2013 Surratt Conference has come and gone and what a tremendous event it was!  I’m happily exhausted after such a wonderful weekend socializing and listening to the most knowledgable group of people in the field of the Lincoln assassination.

This was a very special conference for me as I had the honor of presenting about the Garrett family in front of my friends and colleagues.  My speech was graciously received and I was overwhelmed by the kind words extended to me regarding it.  I feel so fortunate to be part of such a supportive and collaborative field of scholars.

What really made the whole weekend special for me was that a descendant of the Garrett family, with whom I’ve been in contact with and visited a few months back, was able to attend the conference.  Today, I took him into Virginia to visit the site of the Garrett house and the church where the Garretts attended.  It really was the most fitting way to end one of the best weekends of my life.  Attached are a few pictures of this weekend, and I only wish I took more.

The title slide of my presenation about the Garrett family

The title slide of my presentation about the Garrett family

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Judges Richard Hughes and I at our author's hour table to discuss the Garrett family

Judges Richard Hughes, the great great-grandson of Richard Henry Garrett, and I at our author’s hour table to discuss the Garrett family

Judge Richard Hughes, far right, at the Garrett site with his mother and brothers in 1957

Judge Richard Hughes, far right, at the Garrett site with his mother and brothers in 1957

Judge Richard Hughes, great great-grandson of Richard Henry Garrett, at the Garrett site in 2013

Judge Richard Hughes, great great-grandson of Richard Henry Garrett, at the Garrett site in 2013

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My Article in “Knife World”

I am shamelessly pleased to announce, that I have an article published in the April edition of “Knife World” magazine.   The article entitled, “Cloak and Daggers: Cutting through the Confusion of the Lincoln Assassination Knives”, contains my research into the the knives used by Booth and his conspirators.

Cloak and Daggers Knife World April 2013

This article in Knife World is a rewrite of the one published in March of 2012 by the Surratt Courier.  The core of the article explains my belief that Ford’s Theatre currently has an incorrect knife identified and displayed as “Booth’s knife”.  After the original article was published, a wonderful colleague and supporter of mine, Jim Garrett, took it over to Ford’s Theatre where he volunteers.  He raised some heck over there, putting copies of my article into the hands of anyone he could find.  With his help, I was able to visit the NPS’ storage facility in Landover, MD.  It was there that I was able to see and hold the knife I believe was taken from Booth’s body upon his death at Garrett’s farm.  A few months later, Ford’s Theatre was contacted by the editor of Knife World who was looking for some information about their knives.  Remembering the heck he raised, Ford’s passed the editor’s request onto Jim, who then forwarded it to me.  After I sent the editor a copy of my article for the Courier, he asked me if I would revise it for his audience and publication.  I was more than happy to do so. I provided them with photographs and illustrations and they arranged the whole thing beautifully.

If you are interested, you can order a copy of the April 2013 edition of “Knife World” with my article inside.  The price for the one issue is $6.00 and that includes shipping.  You can order by emailing them your request at knifepub@knifeworld.com or by calling (865) 397-1955.

I’m very proud of this article because it is reaching a different group of people than would usually read about the assassination.  What’s more, this is the first piece of work that I’ve ever been paid for.  In my eyes this makes me an author and that is a very good feeling.

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Sign up for the Surratt Conference!

To many of the readers of BoothieBarn, the Surratt Society Conference on the Lincoln Assassination needs no introduction.  Held annually for the last thirteen years, the conference is a social and educational gathering of those interested in the drama that played out in April of 1865.  It attracts Civil War buffs, amateur historians, and noted authors in the field of Lincoln’s assassination.  It is organized and put on by the Surratt Society in conjunction with the Surratt House Museum.  This year the conference is being held on the weekend of March 15 – 17, just two weeks away!  The Surratt House offers two bus tours on the Friday and Sunday of the conference weekend.  The bulk of the “conference” part takes place on Saturday, March 16.  The day’s events consist of a full breakfast, three presentations, a full lunch, three more presentations, an author’s hour, a social hour, and an evening  banquet with entertainment.  The Surratt Conference is hands down the most stimulating and fun gathering of minds in the Lincoln assassination field.

This, the 14th annual conference, has the following wonderful speakers and topics being presented:

  • Betty Ownsbey, author of Alias “Paine”, will be presenting new information on conspirator Lewis Powell in advance of the new second edition of her book.
  • Dr. Tom Bogar will give a thrilling look into the stories and people who worked backstage or were performing at Ford’s Theatre the night Lincoln was assassinated.  This is in advance of his new book, “Backstage at the Lincoln Assassination’.
  • Dr. Blaine Houmes, M.D.,  who gave a phenomenal talk two years ago at the conference, will return examining more, “Medical Mysteries of the Lincoln Conspiracy”.
  • Dr. Kenneth Heineman will present about Thomas Ewing, the lawyer who defended conspirators Dr. Samuel Mudd, Samuel Arnold, and Edman Spangler at the conspiracy trial of 1865.
  • Wesley Harris, author of an upcoming book about the weapons of the conspirators, is following up on last year’s presentation and giving us an even deeper look at the “Tools of the Assassins”
  • The entertainment for the evening banquet is a sit down with Erik Jendresen, the mastermind behind the recent “Killing Lincoln” docu-drama that debuted on NatGeo.  Erik will talk about his experience researching and filming this wonderful piece.

In addition to these doctors and experts, the organizers of the Surratt Conference also made the mistake of asking me to speak.  I am both honored and terrified at this opportunity.  Here’s the little bio they put together about me:

DAVID TAYLOR, a second grade teacher, formerly of Illinois, has relocated to Maryland to be closer to the assassination story.  A Life member of the Surratt Society, Mr. Taylor has contributed several articles to the Society’s Courier newsletter.  Mr. Taylor enjoys thoroughly researching various facets of the assassination, and writes about them on his online blog: http://www.boothiebarn.com.  Although his research has taken him down many different avenues from weapons, to Ford’s Theatre playbills, to a conspirator’s family quilt, he has always held a special interest in the Garrett family of Caroline County, Virginia and their surprise houseguest, John Wilkes Booth.  In his talk, Mr. Taylor will discuss the Garretts, their accounts of what transpired the night of April 26th, 1865, and the legacy Booth’s visit had on their lives.

The subject of my presentation, as stated, is the Garrett family who unknowingly housed John Wilkes Booth from about 3 o’clock April 24th until his death in the early morning hours of April 26th.  I have done considerable research about this family, finding them to be my main interest in the assassination story.  I am deeply honored that one of the attendees of the conference is going to be a descendant of the Garrett family who has greatly helped me in my research.  The two of us will be meeting and talking with folks during the Author’s Hour.  In anticipation for the conference, I’ve changed the header image on the blog to one of the pictures I have discovered (and photoshopped) of the Garrett House.

cropped-garrett-house-on-fire-header.jpg

If you have not already done so, consider signing up for the conference which is housed at the Colony South Hotel and Conference Center in Clinton, Maryland.  For more information, or to sign up, call the Surratt House Museum at (301) 868-1121.  The cost is $190 per person.

I look forward to seeing you there.  Please though, only bring one tomato per attendee.  More than that and it will take forever to clean up the stage for the speaker that follows me. 🙂

~Dave Taylor

P.S. You may notice a lack of postings here on BoothieBarn for the next two weeks.  This is due to the fact that I am focusing my free time on my conference presentation.  Thank you for understanding.

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The Grave of James W. Pumphrey

“James W. Pumphrey owned a livery stable on C Street in Washington, D.C., just behind the National Hotel where Booth stayed when he was in town. Booth became a patron of Pumphrey’s, renting horses from him on several occasions, including the night of the assassination.  Booth stopped by Pumphrey’s stable shortly after noon on April 14th, asking to reserve a particularly horse, and to have it ready at 4 o’clock that afternoon.  When Booth stopped by the livery the horse had already been rented to somone else and Booth had to settle for a bay mare.” – Steers, Assassination Encylopedia

Pumphrey's Obit

James W. Pumphrey is buried with his father Levi, in D.C.'s Congressional Cemetery.

James W. Pumphrey is buried with his father Levi, in D.C.’s Congressional Cemetery.

Congressional Cemetery has a wonderful news article about James Pumphrey trying to cheat the gas company in 1883 (bottom of page 5).

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A Brother’s Sorrow

Parker House, Boston, 7 o’clock, a.m.
Saturday, April 15, 1865.

Edwin Booth, Esq.
My Dear Sir: A fearful calamity is upon us. The President of the United States has fallen by the hand of an assassin, and I am shocked to say suspicion points to one nearly related to you as the perpetrator of this horrid deed. God grant it may not prove so! With this knowledge, and out of respect to the anguish which will fill the public mind as soon as the appalling fact shall be fully revealed, I have concluded to close the Boston theatre until further notice. Please signify to me your co-operation in this matter.

In great sorrow, and in haste,
I remain, yours very truly,
Henry C. Jarrett.

Edwin Booth

Franklin Square, Boston, April 15,1865.

Henry C. Jarrett, Esq.
My Dear Sir: With deepest sorrow and great agitation, I thank you for relieving me from my engagement with yourself and the public. The news of the morning has made me wretched indeed, not only because I have received the unhappy tidings of the suspicions of a brother’s crime, but because a good man, and a most justly honoured and patriotic ruler, has fallen, in an hour of national joy, by the hand of an assassin. The memory of the thousands who have fallen in the field, in our country’s defence, during this struggle, cannot be forgotten by me, even in this, the most distressing day of my life. And I most sincerely pray that the victories we have already won may stay the brand of war and the tide of loyal blood. While mourning, in common with all other loyal hearts, the death of the President, I am oppressed by a private woe not to be expressed in words. But whatever calamity may befall me and mine, my country, one and indivisible, has my warmest devotion.

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A Thomas Jones Afternoon

Thomas Austin Jones is known to the Lincoln assassination field for his role in aiding John Wilkes Booth and David Herold during their escape. After arriving at the home of Confederate sympathizer Col. Samuel Cox, John Wilkes Booth and David Herold were led to a nearby pine thicket to hide while Cox called for his foster-brother, Thomas Jones. Cox told Jones in no uncertain terms, “Tom, we must get those men…across the river.” Jones had been a chief agent of the Confederacy and later wrote the following about his duties and role:

“…I contracted with Col. William Norris, Chief of the Signal Service of the Confederacy, to act as Chief Agent for Maryland to forward all dispatches and other papers connected with the Confederacy, and to furnish said government with files of northern papers which were supplied promptly with but little interruption, receiving said papers the next morning after their publication. Also, it was part of my duty to aid all Confederate scouts and agents to and from Richmond who came with proper passes from the proper authority in Richmond…”

Jones was arrested and imprisoned for his treasonous activities in 1861. After signing an oath of allegiance he was released in March of 1862. He returned to his home in Charles County, MD and continued his secret mail line. When Booth and Herold were left in his care, Jones was vital at keeping them hidden and supplied with food and water while waiting for a chance to put the two men across the river to Virginia. After hiding out in the pine thicket for five days, Jones finally got the chance he was waiting for and sent Booth and Herold off in a boat on the evening of April 20th. Jones was subsequently arrested in the government’s round-up of possible conspirators and sympathizers. Without knowledge or evidence of how vital Jones had been to the assassins, the government released him in June of 1865. Jones lived out his life quietly until, many years later, he admitted to journalist George Alfred Townsend of his involvement in the great saga. He wrote his own book recounting his time caring for Booth and Herold. Though it did not sell well in Jones’ time, it is now referenced often today. Thomas Jones died in March of 1895.

The following are some of the pictures I took today as I visited some of the sites associated with Thomas Jones.

Huckleberry sign

Huckleberry, one of Thomas Jones' homes in Charles County, Md and the one he was living in at the time of Lincoln's assassination.

Huckleberry, one of Thomas Jones’ homes in Charles County, Md and the one he was living in at the time of Lincoln’s assassination.

Huckleberry 2

Port Tobacco, MD. In addiion to being the residence of conspirator George Atzerodt before he became involved in Booth's scheme, it was also the location of a meeting between Thomas Jones and detective William Williams.

Port Tobacco, MD. In addition to being the residence of conspirator George Atzerodt before he became involved in Booth’s scheme, it was also the location of a meeting between Thomas Jones and detective William Williams.

As stated on the sign, detective William Williams offered $100,000 to anyone in the Brawner hotel who could furnish him with information that would lead to the capture of Booth. Thomas Jones was there but kept silent even though he was the one caring for Booth and Herold as they hid in the pine thicket. The Brawner hotel was located in the background of the photograph, near the fenceline.

As stated on the sign, detective William Williams offered $100,000 to anyone in the Brawner hotel who could furnish him with information that would lead to the capture of Booth. Thomas Jones was there but kept silent even though he was the one caring for Booth and Herold as they hid in the pine thicket. The Brawner hotel was once located in the background of the photograph.

When asked by author Osborn Oldroyd if he ever considered Williams’ $100,000 offer to betray Booth, Jones responded:

“No, indeed; my word could not be bought for a hundred times that amount. I considered it a sacred trust. The little I had accumulated was irrevocably lost, but, thank God, I still possessed something I could call my own, and its name was honor.”

References:
Thomas A. Jones, Chief Agent of the Confederate Secret Service in Maryland by John and Roberta Wearmouth

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