25 Facts About John Wilkes Booth, the Man Who Killed Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln's life and death made him one of the most famous leaders in world history. Of course, that death made his killer, John Wilkes...
Published 2 years ago in Ftw
Abraham Lincoln's life and death made him one of the most famous leaders in world history. Of course, that death made his killer, John Wilkes Booth, an infamous figure.
What do you REALLY know about the man who killed Lincoln? Keep reading to learn the insane facts kept out of the history books you read growing up!
What do you REALLY know about the man who killed Lincoln? Keep reading to learn the insane facts kept out of the history books you read growing up!
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John Wilkes Booth was surprised to find little public sympathy after his assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Formerly anti-Lincoln newspapers condemned the act and while some Southerns were happy Lincoln was dead others feared it would spur retribution upon the already defeated Confederate states.-u/jamescookenotthatone10
There is a photograph featuring both Abraham Lincoln and John Wilkes Booth. It was taken one month before the assassination, at Lincoln's 2nd Presidential Inauguration. Booth wrote in his diary afterward: "What an excellent chance I had, if I wished, to kill the President on Inauguration day."-u/literally12sofus11
The descendants of Dr. Samuel Mudd, who harbored and set John Wilkes Booth’s broken leg after killing President Lincoln, still believe he was innocent and did not know it was Booth at his house that night, even though he was famous, Dr. Mudd had met him multiple times, and he knew of the plot.-u/FoosFights12
Lincoln’s bodyguard, a drunk previously reprimanded for drinking on the job, was not at his post to protect POTUS the night Lincoln died. Instead, he was at the Star Saloon next door drinking; the same saloon where John Wilkes Booth was seeking the liquid courage to assassinate the President.-u/mbradford0322
Lincoln's assassin, John Wilkes Booth, had a father and a brother who were both named Junius Brutus, after the assassin of Julius Caesar. The three of them performed in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, and on the night of the assassination, Booth is alleged to have shouted "Sic semper tyrannis."-u/vosetirrumabo