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John Surratt

John Harrison Surratt Jr. (April 13, 1844 – April 21, 1916) was an American Confederate spy who was accused of plotting with John Wilkes Booth to kidnap U.S. President Abraham Lincoln; he was also suspected of involvement in the Abraham Lincoln assassination. His mother, Mary Surratt, was convicted of conspiracy by a military tribunal and hanged; she owned the boarding house that the conspirators used as a safe house and to plot the scheme.

John Surratt
Surratt in 1868
Born
John Harrison Surratt Jr.

(1844-04-13)April 13, 1844
DiedApril 21, 1916(1916-04-21) (aged 72)
Burial placeNew Cathedral Cemetery
NationalityAmerican[1]
Alma mater
Occupation(s)U.S. postmaster, farmer, parochial school teacher, Pontifical Zouave, public lecturer, company treasurer
Known forCo-conspirator in plan to kidnap U.S. President Abraham Lincoln, Friend of John Wilkes Booth
Spouse
Mary Victorine Hunter
(m. 1872)
Children7
Parent(s)Mary Surratt
John Harrison Surratt
Espionage activity
AllegianceConfederate States of America
Service branchConfederate Secret Service
Rankcourier, spy

He eluded arrest following the assassination by fleeing to Canada and then to Europe. He thus avoided the fate of the other conspirators, who were hanged. He served briefly as a Pontifical Zouave but was recognized and arrested. He escaped to Egypt but was eventually arrested and extradited. By the time of his trial, the statute of limitations had expired on most of the potential charges. He was tried in civilian court in 1867 in Washington D.C. and was not convicted due to a hung jury. He was never tried again.

Early life edit

He was born in 1844, to John Harrison Surratt Sr. and Mary Elizabeth Jenkins Surratt, in what is today Congress Heights. His baptism took place in 1844 at St. Peter's Church, Washington, D.C. In 1861, he was enrolled at St. Charles College, where he was studying for the priesthood[2] and also met Louis Weichmann. When his father suddenly died in 1862, Surratt was appointed the postmaster for Surrattsville, Maryland.

Plot to kidnap Lincoln edit

Surratt served as a Confederate Secret Service courier and spy. After he had been carrying dispatches about Union troop movements across the Potomac River, Dr. Samuel Mudd introduced Surratt to Booth on December 23, 1864, and Surratt agreed to help Booth kidnap Lincoln. The meeting took place at the National Hotel, in Washington, D.C., where Booth lived.

Booth's plan was to seize Lincoln and take him to Richmond, Virginia, to exchange him for thousands of Confederate prisoners of war. On March 17, 1865, Surratt and Booth, along with their comrades, waited in ambush for Lincoln's carriage to leave the Campbell General Hospital to return to Washington. However, Lincoln had changed his mind and remained in Washington.

William H. Crook, one of Lincoln's bodyguards, claimed that Surratt had boarded the River Queen shortly before the Third Battle of Petersburg, using the name of Smith and demanding to see Lincoln (who was aboard at the time). Crook later stated his belief that Surratt "was seeking an opportunity to assassinate the President at this time".[3]

Assassination of Lincoln edit

After the assassination of Lincoln, on April 14, 1865, Surratt denied any involvement and said that he was then in Elmira, New York. He was one of the first people suspected of the attempt to assassinate Secretary of State William H. Seward, but the culprit was soon discovered to be Lewis Powell.

In hiding edit

When he learned of the assassination, Surratt fled to Montreal, Canada East, arriving on April 17, 1865. He then went to St. Liboire, where a Catholic priest, Father Charles Boucher, gave him sanctuary. Surratt remained there while his mother was arrested, tried, and hanged in the United States for conspiracy.

Aided by ex-Confederate agents Beverly Tucker and Edwin Lee, Surratt, disguised, booked passage under a false name. He landed at Liverpool in September, where he lodged in the oratory at the Church of the Holy Cross.[4]

Surratt would later serve for a time in the Ninth Company of the Pontifical Zouaves, in the Papal States, under the name John Watson.[5][6]

An old friend, Henri Beaumont de Sainte-Marie, recognized Surratt and notified papal officials and the US minister in Rome, Rufus King.[7]

On November 7, 1866, Surratt was arrested and sent to the Velletri prison. He escaped and lived with the supporters of Garibaldi, who gave him safe passage. Surratt traveled to the Kingdom of Italy and posed as a Canadian citizen named Walters. He booked passage to Alexandria, Egypt, but was arrested there by US officials on November 23, 1866, still in his Pontifical Zouaves uniform.[8] He returned to the US on the USS Swatara to the Washington Navy Yard in early 1867.[9]

Trial edit

 
John Harrison Surratt Jr. in Papal Zouave uniform, c. 1867

Eighteen months after his mother was hanged, Surratt was tried in a Maryland civilian court. It was not before a military commission, unlike the trials of his mother and the others, as a US Supreme Court decision, Ex parte Milligan, had declared the trial of civilians before military tribunals to be unconstitutional if civilian courts were still open.

Judge David Carter presided over Surratt's trial, and Edwards Pierrepont conducted the federal government's case against him. Surratt's lead attorney, Joseph Habersham Bradley, admitted Surratt's part in plotting to kidnap Lincoln but denied any involvement in the murder plot. After two months of testimony, Surratt was released after a mistrial; eight jurors had voted not guilty, four voted guilty.

The statute of limitations on charges other than murder had run out, and Surratt was released on bail.[10]

Later life edit

Surratt tried to farm tobacco and then taught at the Rockville Female Academy. In 1870, as one of the last surviving members of the conspiracy, Surratt began a much-heralded public lecture tour. On December 6, at a small courthouse in Rockville, Maryland, in a 75-minute speech, Surratt admitted his involvement in the scheme to kidnap Lincoln. However, he maintained that he knew nothing of the assassination plot and reiterated that he was then in Elmira. He disavowed any participation by the Confederate government, reviled Weichmann as a "perjurer" who was responsible for his mother's death and said his friends had kept from him the seriousness of her plight in Washington. After that revelation, it was reported in Washington's Evening Star that the band played "Dixie" and a small concert was improvised, with Surratt the center of female attention.

Three weeks later, Surratt was to give a second lecture in Washington, but it was canceled because of public outrage.[11]

Surratt later took a job as a teacher in St. Joseph Catholic School in Emmitsburg, Maryland. In 1872, Surratt married Mary Victorine Hunter, a second cousin of Francis Scott Key. The couple lived in Baltimore and had seven children.[12]

Some time after 1872, he was hired by the Baltimore Steam Packet Company. He rose to freight auditor and, ultimately, treasurer of the company. Surratt retired from the steamship line in 1914 and died of pneumonia in 1916, at the age of 72.[13]

He was buried in the New Cathedral Cemetery, in Baltimore.[14]

In film edit

Surratt was portrayed by Johnny Simmons in the 2010 Robert Redford film The Conspirator.[15]

See also edit

  • James W. Pumphrey – Surratt introduced Booth to Pumphrey, who supplied Booth's getaway horse.

References edit

  1. ^ . Surrattmuseum.org. Archived from the original on October 28, 2016. Retrieved October 28, 2016.
  2. ^ Trindal, Elizabeth Steger (1996), Mary Surratt: An American Tragedy, Pelican Pub. Co., p. 46, ISBN 978-1-56554-185-6, LCCN 95050031
  3. ^ Crook, William Henry; Gerry, Margarita Spalding (1910). Through five administrations; reminiscences of Colonel William H. Crook, body-guard to President Lincoln. New York, London: Harper & Brothers. pp. 45–47. OCLC 1085597035.
  4. ^ Steers, Edward (October 21, 2005), Blood on the Moon: The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln, University Press of Kentucky, pp. 231–, ISBN 0-8131-9151-3
  5. ^ Shuey v. United States, 92 U.S. 73 (1875).
  6. ^ Howard R. Marraro. "Canadian and American Zouaves in the Papal Army, 1868–1870". Canadian Catholic Historical Association Report, 12 (1944–45). pp. 83–102. Retrieved December 23, 2011. Footnote 1 lists documents and works related to Surratt.
  7. ^ Martinkus, Mary Salesia (1953). Diplomatic Relations between the United States and the Vatican During the Civil War (MA thesis). Loyola University Chicago. pp. 40–42. Retrieved June 4, 2016.
  8. ^ Hatch, 2016, p. 130
  9. ^ Hatch, 2016, p. 134
  10. ^ Loux, Arthur F. (August 20, 2014), John Wilkes Booth: Day by Day, McFarland, p. 224, ISBN 978-0-7864-9527-6
  11. ^ "The Text of John Surratt's Lecture at Rockville, Maryland". Washington Evening Star. December 7, 1870. Retrieved August 30, 2011.
  12. ^ Trindal, Elizabeth Steger (1996), Mary Surratt: An American Tragedy, Pelican Pub. Co., p. 233, ISBN 978-1-56554-185-6, LCCN 95050031
  13. ^ "John H. Surratt Dead! Last Of The Alleged Conspirators In The Lincoln Assassination". The New York Times. 1916-04-22. p. 11. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  14. ^ Jampoler, Andrew C. A., The Last Lincoln Conspirator: John Surratt's Flight from the Gallows, Naval Institute Press, 2009
  15. ^ Puente, Maria (April 14, 2011). "Redford's 'Conspirator' lets Mary Surratt testify". USA Today. Retrieved February 26, 2015.

Sources edit

  • Hatch, Frederick (June 20, 2016), John Surratt: Rebel, Lincoln Conspirator, Fugitive, McFarland, ISBN 978-1-4766-6513-9
  • Jampoler, Andrew C. A. (2008). The Last Lincoln Conspirator. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-59114-407-6.
  • Leonard, Elizabeth D. (2005). Lincoln's Avengers; Justice, Revenge, and Reunion after the Civil War. New York: W.W. Norton. ISBN 0-393-32677-2.
  • Serup, Paul (2008). Who Killed Abraham Lincoln?. Salmova Press. ISBN 978-0-9811685-0-0.
  • Swanson, James L. (2006). Manhunt: The Twelve Day Chase for Lincoln's Killer. New York: William Morrow. ISBN 0-06-051849-9.
  • Winkler, H. Donald (2003). Lincoln and Booth; More Light on the Conspiracy. Nashville: Cumberland House. ISBN 1-58182-342-8.

External links edit

  • John Surratt
  • Text of John Surratt's public lecture giving his version of the conspiracy
  • A of John Surratt's two-year flight and eventual capture
  • John H. Surratt's career as a teacher after the assassination aftermath

john, surratt, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, january, 201. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources John Surratt news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message John Harrison Surratt Jr April 13 1844 April 21 1916 was an American Confederate spy who was accused of plotting with John Wilkes Booth to kidnap U S President Abraham Lincoln he was also suspected of involvement in the Abraham Lincoln assassination His mother Mary Surratt was convicted of conspiracy by a military tribunal and hanged she owned the boarding house that the conspirators used as a safe house and to plot the scheme John SurrattSurratt in 1868BornJohn Harrison Surratt Jr 1844 04 13 April 13 1844Washington D C U S DiedApril 21 1916 1916 04 21 aged 72 Baltimore Maryland U S Burial placeNew Cathedral CemeteryNationalityAmerican 1 Alma materSt Charles College MarylandEnglish College RomeOccupation s U S postmaster farmer parochial school teacher Pontifical Zouave public lecturer company treasurerKnown forCo conspirator in plan to kidnap U S President Abraham Lincoln Friend of John Wilkes BoothSpouseMary Victorine Hunter m 1872 wbr Children7Parent s Mary SurrattJohn Harrison SurrattEspionage activityAllegianceConfederate States of AmericaService branchConfederate Secret ServiceRankcourier spyHe eluded arrest following the assassination by fleeing to Canada and then to Europe He thus avoided the fate of the other conspirators who were hanged He served briefly as a Pontifical Zouave but was recognized and arrested He escaped to Egypt but was eventually arrested and extradited By the time of his trial the statute of limitations had expired on most of the potential charges He was tried in civilian court in 1867 in Washington D C and was not convicted due to a hung jury He was never tried again Contents 1 Early life 2 Plot to kidnap Lincoln 3 Assassination of Lincoln 4 In hiding 5 Trial 6 Later life 7 In film 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksEarly life editHe was born in 1844 to John Harrison Surratt Sr and Mary Elizabeth Jenkins Surratt in what is today Congress Heights His baptism took place in 1844 at St Peter s Church Washington D C In 1861 he was enrolled at St Charles College where he was studying for the priesthood 2 and also met Louis Weichmann When his father suddenly died in 1862 Surratt was appointed the postmaster for Surrattsville Maryland Plot to kidnap Lincoln editSurratt served as a Confederate Secret Service courier and spy After he had been carrying dispatches about Union troop movements across the Potomac River Dr Samuel Mudd introduced Surratt to Booth on December 23 1864 and Surratt agreed to help Booth kidnap Lincoln The meeting took place at the National Hotel in Washington D C where Booth lived Booth s plan was to seize Lincoln and take him to Richmond Virginia to exchange him for thousands of Confederate prisoners of war On March 17 1865 Surratt and Booth along with their comrades waited in ambush for Lincoln s carriage to leave the Campbell General Hospital to return to Washington However Lincoln had changed his mind and remained in Washington William H Crook one of Lincoln s bodyguards claimed that Surratt had boarded the River Queen shortly before the Third Battle of Petersburg using the name of Smith and demanding to see Lincoln who was aboard at the time Crook later stated his belief that Surratt was seeking an opportunity to assassinate the President at this time 3 Assassination of Lincoln editAfter the assassination of Lincoln on April 14 1865 Surratt denied any involvement and said that he was then in Elmira New York He was one of the first people suspected of the attempt to assassinate Secretary of State William H Seward but the culprit was soon discovered to be Lewis Powell In hiding editWhen he learned of the assassination Surratt fled to Montreal Canada East arriving on April 17 1865 He then went to St Liboire where a Catholic priest Father Charles Boucher gave him sanctuary Surratt remained there while his mother was arrested tried and hanged in the United States for conspiracy Aided by ex Confederate agents Beverly Tucker and Edwin Lee Surratt disguised booked passage under a false name He landed at Liverpool in September where he lodged in the oratory at the Church of the Holy Cross 4 Surratt would later serve for a time in the Ninth Company of the Pontifical Zouaves in the Papal States under the name John Watson 5 6 An old friend Henri Beaumont de Sainte Marie recognized Surratt and notified papal officials and the US minister in Rome Rufus King 7 On November 7 1866 Surratt was arrested and sent to the Velletri prison He escaped and lived with the supporters of Garibaldi who gave him safe passage Surratt traveled to the Kingdom of Italy and posed as a Canadian citizen named Walters He booked passage to Alexandria Egypt but was arrested there by US officials on November 23 1866 still in his Pontifical Zouaves uniform 8 He returned to the US on the USS Swatara to the Washington Navy Yard in early 1867 9 Trial edit nbsp John Harrison Surratt Jr in Papal Zouave uniform c 1867Eighteen months after his mother was hanged Surratt was tried in a Maryland civilian court It was not before a military commission unlike the trials of his mother and the others as a US Supreme Court decision Ex parte Milligan had declared the trial of civilians before military tribunals to be unconstitutional if civilian courts were still open Judge David Carter presided over Surratt s trial and Edwards Pierrepont conducted the federal government s case against him Surratt s lead attorney Joseph Habersham Bradley admitted Surratt s part in plotting to kidnap Lincoln but denied any involvement in the murder plot After two months of testimony Surratt was released after a mistrial eight jurors had voted not guilty four voted guilty The statute of limitations on charges other than murder had run out and Surratt was released on bail 10 Later life editSurratt tried to farm tobacco and then taught at the Rockville Female Academy In 1870 as one of the last surviving members of the conspiracy Surratt began a much heralded public lecture tour On December 6 at a small courthouse in Rockville Maryland in a 75 minute speech Surratt admitted his involvement in the scheme to kidnap Lincoln However he maintained that he knew nothing of the assassination plot and reiterated that he was then in Elmira He disavowed any participation by the Confederate government reviled Weichmann as a perjurer who was responsible for his mother s death and said his friends had kept from him the seriousness of her plight in Washington After that revelation it was reported in Washington s Evening Star that the band played Dixie and a small concert was improvised with Surratt the center of female attention Three weeks later Surratt was to give a second lecture in Washington but it was canceled because of public outrage 11 Surratt later took a job as a teacher in St Joseph Catholic School in Emmitsburg Maryland In 1872 Surratt married Mary Victorine Hunter a second cousin of Francis Scott Key The couple lived in Baltimore and had seven children 12 Some time after 1872 he was hired by the Baltimore Steam Packet Company He rose to freight auditor and ultimately treasurer of the company Surratt retired from the steamship line in 1914 and died of pneumonia in 1916 at the age of 72 13 He was buried in the New Cathedral Cemetery in Baltimore 14 In film editSurratt was portrayed by Johnny Simmons in the 2010 Robert Redford film The Conspirator 15 See also editJames W Pumphrey Surratt introduced Booth to Pumphrey who supplied Booth s getaway horse References edit The Surratt Family Tree Surratt House Museum Surrattmuseum org Archived from the original on October 28 2016 Retrieved October 28 2016 Trindal Elizabeth Steger 1996 Mary Surratt An American Tragedy Pelican Pub Co p 46 ISBN 978 1 56554 185 6 LCCN 95050031 Crook William Henry Gerry Margarita Spalding 1910 Through five administrations reminiscences of Colonel William H Crook body guard to President Lincoln New York London Harper amp Brothers pp 45 47 OCLC 1085597035 Steers Edward October 21 2005 Blood on the Moon The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln University Press of Kentucky pp 231 ISBN 0 8131 9151 3 Shuey v United States 92 U S 73 1875 Howard R Marraro Canadian and American Zouaves in the Papal Army 1868 1870 Canadian Catholic Historical Association Report 12 1944 45 pp 83 102 Retrieved December 23 2011 Footnote 1 lists documents and works related to Surratt Martinkus Mary Salesia 1953 Diplomatic Relations between the United States and the Vatican During the Civil War MA thesis Loyola University Chicago pp 40 42 Retrieved June 4 2016 Hatch 2016 p 130 Hatch 2016 p 134 Loux Arthur F August 20 2014 John Wilkes Booth Day by Day McFarland p 224 ISBN 978 0 7864 9527 6 The Text of John Surratt s Lecture at Rockville Maryland Washington Evening Star December 7 1870 Retrieved August 30 2011 Trindal Elizabeth Steger 1996 Mary Surratt An American Tragedy Pelican Pub Co p 233 ISBN 978 1 56554 185 6 LCCN 95050031 John H Surratt Dead Last Of The Alleged Conspirators In The Lincoln Assassination The New York Times 1916 04 22 p 11 Retrieved 2020 11 14 Jampoler Andrew C A The Last Lincoln Conspirator John Surratt s Flight from the Gallows Naval Institute Press 2009 Puente Maria April 14 2011 Redford s Conspirator lets Mary Surratt testify USA Today Retrieved February 26 2015 Sources editHatch Frederick June 20 2016 John Surratt Rebel Lincoln Conspirator Fugitive McFarland ISBN 978 1 4766 6513 9 Jampoler Andrew C A 2008 The Last Lincoln Conspirator Annapolis Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 407 6 Leonard Elizabeth D 2005 Lincoln s Avengers Justice Revenge and Reunion after the Civil War New York W W Norton ISBN 0 393 32677 2 Serup Paul 2008 Who Killed Abraham Lincoln Salmova Press ISBN 978 0 9811685 0 0 Swanson James L 2006 Manhunt The Twelve Day Chase for Lincoln s Killer New York William Morrow ISBN 0 06 051849 9 Winkler H Donald 2003 Lincoln and Booth More Light on the Conspiracy Nashville Cumberland House ISBN 1 58182 342 8 External links editJohn Surratt Text of John Surratt s public lecture giving his version of the conspiracy A map and timeline of John Surratt s two year flight and eventual capture John H Surratt s career as a teacher after the assassination aftermath Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Surratt amp oldid 1215517707, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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