The Lincoln Assassination Riddle by Williams Frank J.;Burkhimer Michael; & Michael Burkhimer

The Lincoln Assassination Riddle by Williams Frank J.;Burkhimer Michael; & Michael Burkhimer

Author:Williams, Frank J.;Burkhimer, Michael; & Michael Burkhimer
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: The Kent State University Press


Notes

1. Michael T. Bernath, Confederate Minds: The Struggle for Intellectual Independence in the Civil War South (Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 2010), 3–5.

2. Ian Binnington, Confederate Visions: Nationalism, Symbolism, and the Imagined South in the Civil War (Charlottesville: Univ. of Virginia Press, 2013), 11, 21, 33–34.

3. “The Last Days of Payne,” New York World, Apr. 3, 1892.

4. “Lewis Powell’s Exploits—Reminiscences of the Remarkable Youth Who Stabbed Seward; Adventures as a Guerrilla; Daring Enterprises, Hand to Hand Fights and Hairbreadth Escapes,” Philadelphia Weekly Times, June 3, 1882; John W. Munson, Reminiscences of a Mosby Guerrilla (New York: Moffitt, Yard and Company, 1906).

5. Munson, Reminiscences of a Mosby Guerrilla; “Lewis Powell’s Exploits.”

6. Ralph B. Williamson, Mosby’s Rangers: A Record of Their Operations (New York: James J. Williamson, Ralph B. Kenyon, Publisher, 1896), 315.

7. Pass Book, chap. 9, vol. 34, for the period Feb. 14–Nov. 20, 1864, Richmond, National Archives.

8. John C. Brennan, “Confederate Plan to Abduct President Lincoln,” Surratt Society News 6, no. 3 (March 1981), 5; Maj. W. W. Goldsborough, The Maryland Line in the Confederate States Army (Baltimore: Guggenheimer, Weil and Company, 1900), 246–48.

9. “Lewis Powell’s Exploits,” Philadelphia Weekly Times, June 3, 1882.

10. “They Knew Payne,” Richmond Dispatch, Dec. 11, 1902.

11. John Stanton, Laurie Verge, Aug. 27–28, 2012, posts to “Mosby’s Men in Southern Maryland,” thread in Roger Norton’s Lincoln Discussion Symposium, accessed May 27, 2014, http://rogerjnorton.com/LincolnDiscussionSymposium/thread-138.html.

12. “The Last Days of Payne,” New York World, Apr. 3, 1892.

13. P. J. Staudenraus, Mr. Lincoln’s Washington: Selections from the Writings of Noah Brooks, Civil War Correspondent (South Brunswick, N.J.: Yoseloff, 1967), 459.

14. Eric H. Walther, “The Fire Eaters and Seward/Lincoln,” Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association 32, no. 1 (2011): 18–32.

15. Ben: Perley Poore, The Conspiracy Trial for the Murder of the President, and the Attempt to Overthrow the Government by the Assassination of Its Principal Officers, 2 vols. (Boston: J. E. Tilton & Company, 1865), 2:22.

16. Michael W. Kauffman, American Brutus: John Wilkes Booth and the Lincoln Assassination (New York: Random House, 2005), 213.

17. Impeachment of the Charges against Andrew Johnson, Second Session Thirty-Ninth Congress and First Session Fortieth Congress, 1867 (Washington, D.C.: GPO, 1867), 674.

18. Maggie MacLean, “The Diary of Fanny Seward,” Civil War Women, Jan. 1, 2014, http://civilwarwomenblog.com/fanny-seward/.

19. Poore, Conspiracy Trial, 1:471–79, 2:31.

20. Ibid., 1:473.

21. Ibid., 2:21–22.

22. MacLean “Diary of Fanny Seward.”

23. “Last Days of Payne.”

24. Herbert Hendlin and Ann Pollinger Haas, “Posttraumatic Stress Disorders in Veterans of Early American Wars,” Psychohistory Review 12, no. 4 (1984): 25–30; Judith Pizarro, Roxane Cohen Silver, and JoAnn Prause, “Physical and Mental Health Costs of Traumatic War Experiences among Civil War Veterans,” Arch Gen Psychiatry 63 (Feb. 2006): 193–200.



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