The assassination of Abraham Lincoln shook the nation to its core. Having just witnessed the end of the Civil War, such tragedy was unexpected. The historic event occurred in Washington, D.C.; at the Ford’s theatre, to be precise. The assailant, John Wilkes Booth, supported the Confederacy and slavery. Discontented with Lincoln’s plans for the future, Booth killed the president. Not even two weeks later and Booth was killed for his crime.John Henry Wilson, a Captain in the First Regiment of Massachusetts Infantry, was stationed at Fort Stevens, Washington, D. C. when news came of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. The following letter to Wilson’s wife, Elizabeth, expecting their first child, reveals the immediate opinions Wilson encountered at the news of Lincoln’s death, his anguish about the event, the steps taken spontaneously by his army unit to apprehend the assassins, and the deliberate murder of an individual who expressed satisfaction over Lincoln’s death. Read the rest of this entry »
October 14th, 2010 at 12:24 pm