On
Good Friday, April 14, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln and his wife, Mary,
attended a performance of the popular play Our
American Cousin at Ford’s Theatre in Washington, D.C. Just five days
before, Confederate General Robert E. Lee had surrendered his army to Union
General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Courthouse in
Arriving at the theater after the play had started, Lincoln and his wife settled into the presidential box to enjoy the comedy, which featured famed actress Laura Keene. Major Henry Rathbone and Clara Harris, his fiancée, accompanied the
Making
his escape, Booth slashed Major Rathbone with a dagger he held in his left hand
before leaping to the stage below, breaking his leg in the process. The
astonished crowd heard the well-known actor call out the State of
Twelve days after the assassination, Union troops finally found and surrounded Booth, who had taken refuge in a Virginia barn. The soldiers set the barn on fire to force the killer out. One of the soldiers shot Booth as he crept toward the door armed with a carbine. Before he died, Booth said: “Tell my mother—tell my mother that I did it for my country—that I die for my country.” As those nearby helped raise his hands so he could see them, Booth uttered his final words: “Useless. Useless.”
Booth
had not acted alone in killing the president. He had gathered around him a band
of followers who planned at first to kidnap
As a shocked nation attempted to deal with the dreadful news coming from
Before
his death,
In early May Wallace received orders to join other Union officers as judges on a military commission authorized by the new president, Andrew Johnson, to try those charged with plotting to kill Lincoln and other government officials. The finding of the commission would be final, with no chance for appeal except directly to President Johnson.
The
North wanted vengeance for the dead president. Government officials also wanted
quick action. Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles noted in his diary that
Secretary of War Edwin Stanton had told him he wanted those responsible for the
assassination “to be tried and executed before President Lincoln was buried.”
The eight persons on trial at the Old Arsenal Penitentiary in
Mary Surratt, who ran a boardinghouse where the conspirators met, and Dr. Mudd, who treated Booth’s broken leg, were charged with aiding those planning the killing. Arnold and O’Laughlin were accused of being involved in the assassination plot. Powell, Atzerodt, Spangler, and Herold were indicted for their participation in the attacks on government officials. During their confinement, many of the prisoners were shackled and had to wear heavy cloth hoods over their heads.
At first, the military commission met in secret. Only later did the government agree to open the trial to selected members of the public and press. Those who wanted to attend had to receive a special pass from Major General David Hunter, who served as president of the commission. Hundreds of witnesses appeared before the commission on behalf of the prosecution and defense from May 9 to June 29. During the long, hot days of testimony, Wallace, the only lawyer among the army officers on the commission, passed the time by making sketches of the commission members, the spectators, and all of the defendants except for Mary Surratt, who spent most of the trial with her face hidden by a veil.
Those
on trial for the
The prosecution, however, continued to hammer away at the accused, even attempting to involve leaders of the Confederacy (especially Jefferson Davis) in the plot. On June 29 the commission met in secret to make its decision. It took the commission only a day and a half to reach a verdict—guilty for all. Powell, Herold, Atzerodt, and Mary Surratt were sentenced to death and were hanged on July 7 at the Old Arsenal Penitentiary.
At
the time of the trial, only a few voices were raised in protest in the North.
One newspaper, the New York World,
dismayed by what went on, lashed out at the commission for its “heat and
intolerance.” Although debate still rages today on the fairness of the
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