Abraham Lincoln Attends The Play Our American Cousin

On April 14, 1865 President Abraham Lincoln spent his day visiting with callers and attending a Cabinet meeting. Included at this Cabinet meeting was General Ulysses Grant and Lincoln explained to Grant that he was having a recurring dream about a ship “moving with great rapidity toward a dark and indefinite shore.”

Now that the Civil War was over, topics of discussion at the Cabinet meeting were the problems of reconstruction and the treatment of former Confederate leaders.

A Trip To Ford’s Theatre To See A Play

President Abraham Lincoln

President Abraham Lincoln

That evening, the Lincolns were planning a visit to Ford’s Theatre to see the play Our American Cousin. Lincoln asked General Grant to be his guest that night, but Grant declined the president’s invitation. Instead, Lincoln and his wife Mary would attend the performance of Our American Cousin accompanied by two other guests, Major Henry Rathbone and his fiancée Miss Clara Harris.

Previously, President Lincoln had found some brief refuge from the Civil War when he attended a play at Ford’s Theatre on November 9, 1863. Lincoln then saw a play named The Marble Heart and cast in this play was a young and well-regarded actor named John Wilkes Booth. Booth would not be acting in Our American Cousin on the evening of April 14, 1865 but he planned to be at Ford’s Theatre during the play’s performance.

The Lincolns, Major Henry Rathbone and Miss Clara Harris, were all enjoying the play. Two of the play’s characters exchange the following lines during the third act:

Mrs. Montchessington: I am aware, Mr. Trenchard, that you are not used to the manners of good society.

Asa Trenchard: Don’t know the manners of good society, eh? Well, I guess I know enough to turn you inside out, old gal – you sockdologizing old mantrap!

A Single Shot From A Derringer

John Wilkes Booth

Assassin John Wilkes Booth

After the above lines in the performance of the play the audience would always burst out loudly in laughter. John Wilkes Booth knew that at this particular moment in this scene of the play the audience’s loud laughter would happen as if on cue. At this time, Booth used a .44 caliber derringer to shoot President Lincoln in the back of his head at nearly point blank range.

Booth slashed Major Rathbone with a knife and then leapt onto the stage as he shouted: “Sic semper tyrannis” (“Thus always to tyrants”). Booth broke his leg as he landed on the stage, but he escaped out of Ford’s Theatre to a back alley and a waiting horse. All this occurred at about 10:15 P.M. It was Good Friday.

President Lincoln was unconscious but still alive. He was moved across the street from Ford’s Theatre to the Peterson house. Taken into a back bedroom, the six-foot-four inches tall Lincoln was placed diagonally upon a bed that was too short for him.

President Lincoln’s head wound was very severe. There was nothing much that could be done for the president now, except to watch and wait.

John Wilkes Booth, The Actor’s Final Curtain… The Assassin’s Death

Useless! Useless!

Assassination of President Lincoln

Assassination of President Lincoln

April 26, 1865

As President Abraham Lincoln is enjoying a play at Ford’s Theatre the evening of April 14, 1865, actor John Wilkes Booth sneaks up behind the president and shoots him in the head. Lincoln dies early the next morning. After Booth escapes from Ford’s Theatre, Federal cavalry and troops throughout Maryland and Virginia pursue the fugitive assassin.

Early The Morning Of April 26, John Wilkes Booth Is Nearing His Fate

Booth and David Herold (an accomplice in the assassination) are hiding in a tobacco barn owned by Richard H. Garrett near Bowling Green, Virginia. Federal troops commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Everton Conger surround the tobacco barn and Conger orders the suspects to come out and surrender. David Herold gives up and is quickly taken into custody.

John Wilkes Booth

John Wilkes Booth

For a few hours, John Wilkes Booth stages a standoff while he rants from within the barn. To force Booth out of Garrett’s tobacco barn, Conger orders his troops to set the barn on fire. As the barn burns, Sergeant Boston Corbett sees an opportunity and shoots Booth in the neck. The paralyzed and mortally injured assassin is drug from the burning barn to the porch of the Garrett house. Around seven in the morning, John Wilkes Booth dies on the Garrett porch.

As He Lay Dying, Booth Looked At His Hands And Spoke These Last Words:

“Useless! Useless!”