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Ford’s Theater 10th Street Erected 1865 Ticket. Sold for Over $20,000.
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John Wilkes Booth Autograph
An incredible four-line verse in the hand of John Wilkes Booth autograph, “J. Wilkes Booth.” The verse is written on an envelope dated “Washington D. C., 5 March 1865,” measuring 3.25″ x 6.25″. The envelope also has inscriptions by three other hands. Booth’s document signed poetic verse reads: “Now in this hour that we part,/ I will ask to be forgotten never/ But, in thy pure and guileless heart,/ Consider me thy friend dear Eva.” The text appears on the verso of the envelope on the inside of the flap. Experts are aware of approximately 300 letters that Booth wrote. After he killed Lincoln, the people who received these letters burnt them for fear they would be linked to Booth. It is estimated that only 17 Booth letters remain in private hands. Sometime in late 1864 or early 1865, Booth entered into a serious romance with Lucy Lambert Hale, daughter of John Parker Hale, New Hampshire’s former abolitionist senator. By March, Booth was secretly engaged to Lucy Hale. On March 4th, he attended Lincoln’s second inauguration as the invited guest of Lucy. It is tempting to consider that this envelope brings us into one of the periodic meetings between the conspirators planning to kidnap or assassinate the President. They gathered in Booth’s hotel room sharing a bottle of whiskey, discussing the fate of the Confederacy, and here, expressing a regretful sentiment. Booth is known to have confided to his actor friend Samuel Knapp Chester, “What an excellent chance I had to kill the President, if I had wished, on inauguration day!” (Chester testified at the Conspiracy Trial that this conversation took place at a table at the House of Lords saloon in New York City.) Beneath Booth’s verse is inscribed, in another hand “For of all sad words from tongue or pen/ the saddest are these – it might have been,” a quotation from John Greenleaf Whittier’s Maud Muller. Beside the quote is the date “March 5, 1865 In John’s room,” referring to Booth’s room at the National Hotel in Washington D.C. On the recto, in a third hand, are two lines of docketing “Jno Conness MSS” perhaps referring to Senator John Conness of California. Beneath this notation is a 3-line inscription from Whittier’s poem “Remembrance” which reads, “Touched by change have all things been/ Yet I think of thee as when/ We had speech of lip and pen.” And, in the same hand is the sentiment: “The above, though quoted, are the real sentiments of your friend, who trusts that the acquaintance and friendship formed will never be forgotten by either.” Signed “Jno P. M. W.” A rare John Wilkes Booth autograph item. Sold for $32,500.
Boston Corbett Autograph Document Signed
Boston Corbett autograph document signed detailing how he captured and slayed John Wilkes Booth, Lincoln’s assassin. Datelined Topeka, 19 January 1887, “Statement of Boston Corbett” reads: “In camp at Vienna, Virginia, on the morning of April 15th 1865 the news reached us that President Lincoln had been shot the night before…Our regiment the 16th N.Y. Cavalry was immediately ordered out in pursuit of the Assassin…Our Regt. was soon cut up into detachments…Col. N.B. Switzer…Major Bosworth…[and] First Lieut. Edward P. Doherty…They had photographs of Booth, Herold and Surratt…Captain Henry Wilson, who conveyed us to Belle Plain, where we landed and at once began the search between the two rivers Potomac and Rappahannock. At Port Conway the Ferryman recognized two of the pictures and said, Those two men crossed my ferry yesterday. Willie Jett, a Confederate officer, he said, aided them on their way, giving Booth a lift on his horse after crossing the river. We followed the clue given, captured Jett, who was compelled to guide us to the place where he had left the men. Arriving at Garretts Farm, the Lieut. said to me Booth is in that house, ride through the command, and see that every man’s pistol is in readiness for use. I did so…On entering the premises we found the men were no longer in the house, but had taken refuge in the barn. A surrender was demanded and refused. Booth declaring that he would not be taken alive. After much parleying Herold concluded to surrender, and was at once put under guard. The tobacco barn was then fired by Conger, the detective and Booth could then be seen. A single pistol shot from a Colts revolver brought him down and the capture was effected. A doctor was sent for who pronounced the wound fatal. Inside of three hours he was dead. Mr. Conger chose me as an Escort, and we started for Belle Plain and we there took steamer for Washington and before evening closed the news had flashed over the wires that Booth was taken. April 26 1865 was the day when God avenged Abraham Lincoln’s death…During the interval of our different Scouts I attended Prayer Meeting one night…I prayed, O Lord, lay not innocent blood to our charger, but bring the guilty speedily to punishment. Afterward when the Assassin lay at my feet, a wounded man, and I saw the bullet had taken effect about an inch back of the ear. And I remembered that Mr. Lincoln was wounded about the same part of the head. I said What a God we serve. I little thought when I offered that prayer a week ago that it would be answered in this way.” Corbett’s statement was displayed at Lincoln’s tomb. A 21″ x 16.5″ single-page document. Water, cello tape stains, toning. Matted. Good. Sold for $28,500.
Scarce John Wilkes Booth Autograph from 1863
Single page measures 8″ x 6.5″. John Wilkes Booth writes his name and place of residence “J Wilkes Booth, Baltimore” neatly on a piece of hotel register leaf and pasted to a board above three other clipped entries from the same register including Col. Nelson A. Miles, Gen. Joseph Hooker, and “Abraham Lincoln,” in an aide’s hand, as well as the date “Wednesday 20th May 1863.” Upon his arrival in Washington in April of 1863, John Wilkes Booth was the darling of Washington, D.C., then known as Washington City. He was heralded for his realistic portrayals and the young actor was dubbed the “Darling of the Gods” and “The Pride of the American People.” He appeared in the city for seven performances including roles as Richard III and Hamlet. The press heaped praise on him declaring his Romeo to be the best ever played in that city. Contemporary accounts even mention President Lincoln present the night of Booth’s Washington debut on April 11. These register clippings came from a register maintained at the National Hotel, located only a few blocks from the White House, and one of the top hotels of the city. President Lincoln frequently visited the hotel to confer with military leaders and gave a stirring anti-slavery speech from the hotel balcony. John Wilkes Booth also stayed at this hotel when in Washington, most infamously during the days leading to the assassination. Booth’s signature is considered to be one of the rarest of all American autographs. This incredible document is the only existing relic unequivocally placing John Wilkes Booth and Abraham Lincoln in the same hotel, only days apart, and is worthy of inclusion in the finest collections of Civil War Americana. Nice John Wilkes Booth autograph. Sold for $20,939.
Extremely Scarce John Wilkes Booth Autograph Letter Signed Recounting an Incident for Which Booth Would be Tried for Assault & Battery — Composed to the Brother of Lincoln Assassination Co -Conspirator Michael O’Laughlen, Jr. — 1854 “…I knocked him down, which made him bleed like a butcher…I have to stand trial for assault and battery…”
Single page, octavo, datelined “Tudor Hall, Aug 8th, 1854,” to Samuel William “Billy” O’Laughlen, brother of Michael O’Laughlen, Jr., conspirator in the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln. Booth pens in full: “My Dear Fellow / In these last two weeks, I have had more excitement than I have had for a good while. First, and foremost, I went to a champagne drinking, and you had better believe that the road (home) seemed longer that night than it ever did before. 2dly we had a client [tenant] on the place whom we could not agree with. We had several sprees with him. In one he called my sister a liar. I knocked him down, which made him bleed like a butcher. We got the sheriff to put him off the place. He then warranted me and in a couple of weeks I have to stand trial for assault and battery, as you call it. I paid another visit to the Rocks of Deer Creek the other day. It looks just the same and Sunday I went to that large camp meeting with the hope of seeing you there, but I was disappointed. I saw John Em- there or that fellow that works in your shop. The Indian’s were up here the other day with their great Bear, excuse my bad writing and excuse me also for not writing to you sooner. Give my respects to all who ask after me. I have nothing more to say. Yours For Ever, / John W. Booth / (write soon).” The encounter with the “client” Booth mentions was doubtless the same episode his beloved sister, Asia, recounted in her memoir of the Booth family, “The Unlocked Book.” Their mother, after being widowed, rented the family farmland, stock, and hired slaves to an abusive man who insulted Mrs. Booth and her daughters. Young Wilkes went to redress matters and demand an apology, but ended up breaking a stick over the man’s head. Billy and Michael O’Laughlen were friends of Booth from boyhood, when they were neighbors in Baltimore during the acting family’s intermittent residence in that city. Booth’s signature is considered to be the one of rarest of all American autographs. His handwritten letters are even scarcer as the nation-wide manhunt after Lincoln’s assassination prompted many of those who possessed his papers to destroy them, fearful that they would be implicated in the conspiracy. This is one of his few surviving handwritten letters in private hands, and is revealing in that, aside from some adolescent boasting, touches upon a significant incident from his youth with a fine association. The left margin of the letter has been tipped to a strip of lined paper, with file holes. Minor soiling; otherwise, fine condition. Dark John Wilkes Booth autograph. Sold for $19,194.
Abraham Lincoln assassination letter, dated 12 August 1900, from Dr. George Loring Porter to Louis Weichmann, chief prosecution witness at the conspirators’ trial. Porter, medical doctor for the imprisoned conspirators, was present at their execution as well as at John Wilkes Booth’s burial. He corroborates events and facts for Weichmann’s book on the assassination. Weichmann lived in Mary Surratt’s boardinghouse at the time of the assassination and was a suspected conspirator himself early on. Mary Surratt was a suspect as was her son, John, who fled to Canada and found sanctuary with a priest, escaping immediate prosecution. Mary Surratt was convicted and executed. Letter reads in part, ”…My thanks are due to you for the opportunity to read the manuscript of your work regarding the assassination. I can readily believe that you had opportunities for seeing many of the actors and observing their actions which no one else could possibly have had and what you saw you have stated clearly, forceably [sic] and interestingly. I await with much anticipation the perusal of the proposed book. You were right in your statement that Mrs. Surratt did not take the whiskey to Lloyds…I place no credence in the theory that any church incouraged [sic] the conspiracy although the actions taken by the Priests in Canada in providing for the secretion, safety, and escape of Surratt has been used as the ground for such a charge. With the exception of Mrs. S., I do not think that any of the active conspirators were subject to any denominational religious influence. As to my statement in the so-called lecture of John Surratt it is entitled to no credibility whatever beyond that which it may gain from the support of satisfactory independent testimony. I have no doubt of his guilt, nor of the fact that the failure of the jury to agree was due to religious and political influences and not to the lack of legal proof. The government wire to Fort Monroe was not cut — this was the one said to have been used by the government (this was partially laid in the river I have been told). The wires to Balt. were cut. I can not give the authority…” Porter was on a lecture circuit with his talk about the assassination entitled ”The Tragedy of the Nation.” He refers to a theory at the time that the assassination was a Catholic plot. Minor creasing to 8.25” x 11” three page letter, else very good. Abraham Lincoln assassination letter sold for $4,061.
Letter dated 20 June 1898 from Almarin C. Richards, Washington D.C. Police Superintendent and attendee at Ford’s Theatre the night of Lincoln’s killing. Richards writes to Louis Weichmann — whose controversial testimony was the key evidence in convicting assassination conspirator Mary Surratt — regarding Weichmann’s book about the assassination. In part, ”…you unfold the scheme of consummation of the plot for assassinating the chief officer of our government as well as the pursuit, capture and punishment of the chief operators in the tragedy…as to the inception, progress and outcome of this nefarious attempt to wreck our government…this supreme crime of the age…” Letter measures 8” x 10”. Some tearing at the folds and toning, else very good condition. Sold for $3,125.
Amazing autograph letter from Washington, D.C. Police Superintendent Almarin C. Richards, in the audience at Ford’s Theater the night President Lincoln was assassinated, to Louis Weichmann, chief prosecution witness at the assassination conspirators’ trial. Richards searched for suspected conspirators John Wilkes Booth and John Surratt at the boardinghouse of Mary Surratt, John’s mother. In the 24 December 1900 letter, he reviews his memory of events for the book on the assassination Weichmann was writing. Richards states, ”…The fact is well and certainly known that Booth was the assassin of Lincoln before 12 o’clock midnight of the day of the assassination…[actress] Laura Keene had stated before that hour that while she did not know who had shot the President but that the man who jumped from the President’s box on the night was J Wilkes Booth…there seemed to be a peculiar hesitancy on the part of the theatre people…to disclose information…yet Miss Keene did not hesitate to state as above indicated. It was information that I had that Booth had been an associate of John Surratt’s for a few weeks prior to the assassination that led me to visit Mrs. Surratt’s house soon after midnight on that night…” Signed, ”A.C. Richards”. Minor smudging to 7.75” x 9.75” letter, written upon both the front and verso of one sheet. Overall very good condition. Sold for $3,125.
Intriguing autograph letter signed by Almarin C. Richards, Washington DC Police Superintendent and attendee at Ford’s Theatre the night of President Lincoln’s killing. Here, Richards writes to Louis Weichmann, former friend of Mary and John Surratt, about the ”Catholic plot” to assassinate the President and Weichmann’s persecution by the Catholics for his role in Mary Surratt’s execution. Anti-Catholic sentiment ran high during the Civil War. Letter in pen reads, ”…Of course I know nothing of the course of Father Walter and other Washington Catholics toward you relating to Mrs. [Mary] Surratt and the Conspiracy. I do know however that I would rather stand in your place in relation to that matter than in that of those who are seeking to make it appear that Mrs. Surratt was innocent of the crime with which she was charged and for which she forfeited her life. The fact that certain prominent Catholics in Washington have so persistently persecuted you and others who were prominent in bringing her and the other conspirators to justice has done more to lead many people to believe that the assassination was the outcome of a Catholic plot than any or all other circumstances. In fact there is nothing else developed that could lead to a suspicion that could in any way inculpate any one of the authorities of that church. Mrs. Surratt was privy to the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States and justly expiated her offense upon the gallows. Whether she should have her executive clemency extended to her is quite another question. Very Truly Yours, A.C. Richards”. 8” x 10” letter is datelined Eustis, FL, 3 July 1898, written to Weichmann for a book that he was writing on the assassination. Slight separation at the folds, else very good condition. Sold for $3,125.
Incredible autograph letter detailing the moments immediately after President Lincoln’s murder, and the subsequent investigation by eyewitness Almarin C. Richards, the Washington D.C. Police Superintendent. The five page letter is addressed to Louis Weichmann, whose controversial testimony was the key evidence in convicting the plot’s conspirators – including the first women to be executed in the United States, Mary Surratt. Mary Surrat, her son John Surrat, Dr. Mudd and John Wilkes Booth allegedly conspired to assassinate Lincoln at Mary Surratt’s boarding house, of which Weichmann was a longtime resident. In part: ”My Dear Sir: Responding to yours of the 10th inst. I have to say that in April 1865 I was major superintendent of the metropolitan police of the District of Colombia. It so happened that I was in Ford’s theater on the night of April 14th 1865 at the time of the assassination of President Lincoln. It became my duty at once to seek and ascertain the identity of the President’s assassin. Within a short time, less than an hour I had positive and undoubted information that the man who had been seen to vault from the box occupied by the President and others was Wilkes Booth. Very soon thereafter I was authentically informed that Booth had frequently been in the company of John H. Surratt and others during the then presiding four weeks and that Booth and others then not known by name to me were known to have frequently visited the house of John. H. Surratt’s mother. Between the hours of 12 and 1 o’clock that night in company with several of my officers I visited the house of Mrs. Surratt and paid and conversed with her giving her, as I then presumed the first information she had received of the assassination of the president. You were sleeping in Mrs. Surratt’s house that night and one of my officers reported to me that he had seen you in your room. As of that hour I had no grounds for suspecting that Mrs. Surratt was implicated in the conspiracy to assassinate the President. She was not arrested. A guard of police officers was left to observe who came to or left the house, when I left for other duties. At about half past eight the next Saturday (April 15th) morning, very soon after I reached my office you came in and, introducing yourself, stated that you were and had been for sometime a border of Mrs. Surratt’s house and that in view of the assassination and developments that had come to your knowledge within a few hours believed that you were in presence of facts and a knowledge of circumstances that proved materially and in developing the fact that a band of men had for some time previous been concocting a plot to assassinate the President you then and there gave many facts and incidents you had already observed together with meetings at Mrs. Surratts house, on the street and at hotels of the men you believed had comprised the plot for the assassination of the President and other principle officers of the government. You gave names, dates, incidents and circumstances connected with the plot…the course you pursued…was of intrinsic value in aiding in establishing the fact of a conspiracy…” Each page measures 8” x 10”. Minor separation at folds and toning else very good. Sold for $3,120.
Fascinating and very scarce autograph letter signed regarding details of the plot to abduct and assassinate President Lincoln. Letter by Almarin C. Richards, Washington DC Police Superintendent and attendee at Ford’s Theatre the night of the killing, writes to Louis Weichmann, the prosecution’s chief conspiracy witness. Richards refers to the abortive attempt to capture and abduct the President to Virginia, and to the conspirator’s meetings with Mary Surrat, Dr. Mudd and the infamous assassin, John Wilkes Booth. In full, ”My Dear Sir: Yours of the 4th inst. to hand, you request of me a statement of the facts you reported to me on Saturday April 15th 1865 and subsequently. I recall, generally that you reported very important facts in relation to your being present on occasions when Booth met Surratt, Dr Mudd, Payne and others at hotels on the street and at Mrs. Surratt’s house. Also that you observed several movements of these conspirators that satisfied you that they, sometime in March, I think made an abortive attempt to capture and abduct the President to Virginia. Also I recall your statements in relation to your trip to Surrattsville with Mrs S [Surratt] on Friday the 14th of April. I think it was &c. &c. but just at that time I was getting so many reports from different persons that I fear I might confound reports made by you with those made by others. I kept no memoranda of those events and must rely entirely on memory. Thirty three years is a long time to retain particulars. Now I wish you would write me giving a statement of what you did report to me. Such a statement will refresh my memory and enable me to segregate your statements from those made by others. Also indicate the ground you want covered by my statement. On receipt of that I will prepare such a paper as will will meet your desires…I have written to [Detective James] McDevitt for certain facts and ought to hear from him soon. He is a little slow sometimes in answering letters. Very truly yours, A.C. Richards.” The 8” x 10” 2pp. letter is datelined Eustis, FL, 9 May 1898. Minor smudging, chipping and toning. Overall in very good condition with bold, clear handwriting. Sold for $3,049.
Large 6.5″ x 8.5″ Albumen Photo of Lincoln Conspirator John Surratt in the Zouave Uniform in Which He Was Captured — Scarce Image Taken by Mathew Brady
Extremely rare 1867 albumen photograph of Lincoln conspirator John Surratt in the Papal Zouave military uniform in which he was captured. Large photo taken by Mathew Brady’s studio measures 6.5″ x 8.5″. Surratt – the son of conspirator Mary Surratt, who were hung along with George Azelrodt, Lewis Powell and David Herold – had earlier connived with John Wilkes Booth to kidnap Lincoln but denied any participation in the assassination plot. Surratt had met Booth while a confederate spy and participated in many secret meetings with the conspirators at his mother’s boarding house. After Lincoln’s assassination he fled to Europe where he served in the Papal Zouaves. He was eventually extradited to the U.S. where he stood trial but was never convicted of conspiracy because the statute of limitations had expired by the time his trial concluded. This extremely rare picture was taken by Mathew Brady and Co. in 1867 after his capture and is stamped by the Brady studio. It was sold to the public during Surratt’s high-profile 1867 trial. Photo is oval, measuring 6.5″ x 8.5″, and is mounted to 10″ x 12″ with a band of gold trim. Photo is captioned, in part: “Entered according to Act of Congress, by John H. Surratt, in the year 1868, in the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of the District of Columbia. John H. Surratt, in the Papal Zouave uniform in which he was captured”. Significant dampstaining on upper right, two chips out of upper edge, some foxing and a discreet 1.5″ tear along the left. Picture is nice and clear. Good condition. Sold for $2,756.
1865 Lincoln Trial Ticket
1865 ticket to the trial of Abraham Lincoln’s conspirators. Ticket is signed by David Hunter, General and Commander of the Army in Missouri. The Military Commission convened on 8 May 1865 in a newly created courtroom on the third floor of the Old Arsenal Penitentiary in Washington. General David Hunter was one the voting members of the commission. Ticket is dated “April 14th” in reference to Lincoln’s assassination date. Ticket measures 3.25″ x 2″. Three vertical creases appear on right side. Overall good condition. Sold for $1,430.
Original Abraham Lincoln Mourning Badge With Tintype of the Fallen President — Rare
Original Abraham Lincoln mourning badge worn during his state funeral, which lasted from 18 April to 4 May 1865. Suspended from the Eagle pin is a red, white and blue ribbon, to which is attached a tintype photo of the late President, framed in gilded medal. The pin is veiled with a black mesh material in respect for the beloved President. Lincoln’s funeral was marked with a funeral train that carried his body through seven states and 444 communities. Photo measures 0.75” x 1” with an overall vertical pin measurement of 2.5”. Some wear and holes to ribbon; very good condition. Sold for $1,220.
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