fbpx
Wikipedia

Mary Surratt

Mary Elizabeth Jenkins Surratt[1][2][3] (1820 or May 1823 – July 7, 1865) was an American boarding house owner in Washington, D.C., who was convicted of taking part in the conspiracy which led to the assassination of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln in 1865. Sentenced to death, she was hanged and became the first woman executed by the U.S. federal government. She maintained her innocence until her death, and the case against her was and remains controversial. Surratt was the mother of John Surratt, who was later tried, but due to statute of limitations, was not convicted.

Mary Surratt
Surratt in 1850
Born
Mary Elizabeth Jenkins

1820 or May 1823
Died(1865-07-07)July 7, 1865 (aged 42 or 45)
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
Resting placeMount Olivet Cemetery
NationalityAmerican
Occupation(s)Boarding house and tavern owner
Known forBeing convicted as a conspirator in the assassination of Abraham Lincoln
Criminal statusExecuted (July 7, 1865; 157 years ago (1865-07-07))
Spouse
John Harrison Surratt
(m. 1840; died 1862)
ChildrenIsaac (b. 1841; died 1907)
Elizabeth Susanna "Anna" (b. 1843; died 1904)
John, Jr. (b. 1844; died 1916)
Conviction(s)Conspiracy to murder
Criminal penaltyDeath
Partner(s)
Date apprehended
April 17, 1865

Born in Maryland in the 1820s, Surratt converted to Catholicism at a young age and remained a practicing Catholic for the rest of her life. She wed John Harrison Surratt in 1840 and had three children with him. An entrepreneur, John became the owner of a tavern, an inn, and a hotel. The Surratts were sympathetic to the Confederate States of America and often hosted fellow Confederate sympathizers at their tavern.

Upon her husband's death in 1862, Surratt had to manage his estate. Tired of doing so without help, Surratt moved to her townhouse in Washington, D.C., which she then ran as a boardinghouse. There, she was introduced to John Wilkes Booth. Booth visited the boardinghouse numerous times, as did George Atzerodt and Lewis Powell, Booth's co-conspirators in the Lincoln assassination. Shortly before killing Lincoln, Booth spoke with Surratt and handed her a package containing binoculars for one of her tenants, John M. Lloyd.

After Lincoln was assassinated, Surratt was arrested, then tried by a military tribunal the following month, along with the other conspirators. She was convicted primarily due to the testimonies of Lloyd, who said that she told him to have the "shooting irons" ready, and Louis J. Weichmann, who testified about Surratt's relationships with John. Five of the nine judges at her trial asked that Surratt be granted clemency by President Andrew Johnson because of her age and gender. Johnson did not grant her clemency, though accounts differ as to whether or not he received the clemency request. Surratt was hanged on July 7, 1865, and later buried in Mount Olivet Cemetery.

Early life

Mary Elizabeth Jenkins (baptismal name, Maria Eugenia) was born to Archibald and Elizabeth Anne (née Webster) Jenkins[1][4][5] on a tobacco plantation near the southern Maryland town of Waterloo[6][7] (now known as Clinton).[1] Sources differ as to whether she was born in 1820[8] or 1823.[2][6][7][9][10][11] There is uncertainty as to the month as well, but most sources say May.[6][7][12][8]

She had two brothers: John Jenkins, born in 1822, and James Jenkins, born in 1825.[4][5] Her father died in the fall of 1825 when Mary was either two or five years old,[1][4][5] and Mary's mother then inherited their property (originally part of the His Lordship's Kindness estate).[13]

Although her father was a nondenominational Protestant and her mother Episcopalian,[5][14][15] Surratt was enrolled in a private Roman Catholic girls' boarding school, the Academy for Young Ladies in Alexandria, Virginia, on November 25, 1835.[1][13] Mary's maternal aunt, Sarah Latham Webster, was a Catholic, which may have influenced where she was sent to school.[5] Within two years, Mary converted to Roman Catholicism[5][14] and adopted the baptismal name of Maria Eugenia.[1][16] She stayed at the Academy for Young Ladies for four years,[1][15] leaving in 1839, when the school closed.[5][16] She remained an observant Catholic for the rest of her life.[1][15]

Married life

Mary Jenkins met John Harrison Surratt in 1839, when she was 16 or 19 and he was 26.[15][17][18] His family had settled in Maryland in the late 1600s.[15][17] An orphan, he was adopted by Richard and Sarah Neale of Washington, D.C., a wealthy couple who owned a farm.[18][19] The Neales divided their farm among their children, and Surratt inherited a portion of it.[18][19] His background has been described by historian Kate Clifford Larson as "questionable",[18] and he had fathered at least one child out of wedlock.[15][17][18] They wed in August 1840.[17][18][20] John converted to Roman Catholicism prior to the marriage,[15][17] and the couple may have wed at a Catholic church in Washington, D.C.[17][21] John purchased a mill in Oxon Hill, Maryland, and the couple moved there.[18] The Surratts had three children over the next few years: Isaac (born June 2, 1841), Elizabeth Susanna (nicknamed "Anna", born January 1, 1843), and John, Jr. (born April 1844).[22][23][24]

In 1843, John Surratt purchased from his adoptive father 236 acres (96 ha) of land straddling the DC/Maryland border, a parcel named "Foxhall" (approximately the area between Wheeler Road and Owens Road today).[25] Richard Neale died in September 1843, and a month later, John purchased 119 acres (48 ha) of land adjoining Foxhall.[25] John and Mary Surratt and their children moved back to John's childhood home in the District of Columbia in 1845 to help John's mother run the Neale farm.[18] But Sarah Neale fell ill and died in August 1845,[26] having shortly before her death deeded the remainder of the Neale farm to John.[27] Mary Surratt became involved in raising funds to build St. Ignatius Church in Oxon Hill (it was constructed in 1850), but John was increasingly unhappy with his wife's religious activities.[28] His behavior deteriorated over the next few years. John drank heavily, often failed to pay his debts, and his temper was increasingly volatile and violent.[22][28][29]

In 1851, the Neale farmhouse burned to the ground (an escaped family slave was suspected of setting the blaze).[30] John found work on the Orange and Alexandria Railroad. Mary moved with her children into the home of her cousin, Thomas Jenkins, in nearby Clinton.[31][32] Within a year, John purchased 200 acres (81 ha) of farmland near what is now Clinton, and by 1853, he constructed a tavern and an inn there.[33] Mary initially refused to move herself and the children into the new residence. She took up residence on the old Neale farm, but John sold both the Neale farm and Foxhall in May 1853 to pay debts and she was forced to move back in with him in December.[34]

With the money he earned from the tavern and sale of his other property, on December 6, 1853, John Surratt bought a townhouse at 541 H Street[35] in Washington, D.C., and began renting it out to tenants.[36][37][38][39] In 1854, John built a hotel as an addition to his tavern and called it Surratt's Hotel.[40]

 
A woodprint depicting Surrattsville and the Surratt home, printed in 1867 in Harper's Weekly.

The area around the tavern was officially named Surrattsville that same year.[41] Travelers could take Branch Road (now Branch Avenue) north into Washington, D.C.; Piscataway Road southwest to Piscataway; or Woodyard Road northeast to Upper Marlboro.[42] Although Surrattsville was a well-known crossroads,[43][44] the community did not amount to much: just the tavern, a post office (inside the tavern), a forge, and a dozen or so houses (some of them log cabins).[42][45][46] John Surratt was the hamlet's first postmaster.[15][32][47][48]

He expanded his family's holdings by selling off land, paying down debt, and starting new businesses.[41] Over the next few years, Surratt acquired or built a carriage house, corn crib, general store, forge, granary, gristmill, stable, tobacco curing house, and wheelwright's shop.[15][47][49] The family had enough money to send all three children to nearby Roman Catholic boarding schools.[41] Isaac and John Jr. attended the school at St. Thomas Manor, and Anna enrolled at the Academy for Young Ladies (Mary's alma mater).[50] The family's debts continued to mount, however, and John Sr.'s drinking worsened.[17][51] John sold another 120 acres (49 ha) of land in 1856 to pay debts.[52] By 1857, Surratt had sold all but 600 acres (240 ha) of the family's formerly extensive holdings[15] (which represented about half the 1,200 acres (4.9 km2) he had originally owned).[53][54] Most of the family's slaves were also sold to pay debts.[50] Still, his alcoholism worsened. In 1858, Mary wrote a letter to her local priest, telling him that Surratt was drunk every single day.[48] In 1860, St. Thomas Manor School closed, and Isaac found work in Baltimore, Maryland.[50] The Surratts sold off another 100 acres (40 ha) of land, which enabled Anna to remain at the Academy for Young Ladies and for John Jr. to enroll at St. Charles College, Maryland (a Catholic seminary and boarding school in Ellicott's Mills).[50][55] The couple also borrowed money that same year against their townhouse in Washington, DC, and at some point used the property as collateral for a $1,000 loan.[36]

Civil War and widowhood

The American Civil War began on April 12, 1861. The border state of Maryland remained part of the United States ("the Union"), but the Surratts were Confederate sympathizers,[32][43][55][56] and their tavern regularly hosted fellow sympathizers.[43][55][57] The Surratt tavern was being used as a safe house for Confederate spies,[43][58] and at least one author concludes that Mary had "de facto" knowledge of this.[43] Confederate scout and spy Thomas Nelson Conrad visited Surratt's boarding house before and during the Civil War.[59]

On March 7, 1861, three days after Abraham Lincoln's inauguration as President of the United States, Isaac left Maryland and traveled to Texas, where he enlisted in the Confederate States Army (serving in the 33rd Cavalry, or Duff's Partisan Rangers, 14th Cavalry Battalion).[46][48][60] John Jr. quit his studies at St. Charles College in July 1861 and became a courier for the Confederate Secret Service, moving messages, cash, and contraband back and forth across enemy lines.[61] The Confederate activities in and around Surrattsville drew the attention of the Union government. In late 1861, Lafayette C. Baker, a detective with the Union Intelligence Service, and 300 Union soldiers camped in Surrattsville and investigated the Surratts and others for Confederate activities.[62] He quickly uncovered evidence of a large Confederate courier network operating in the area, but despite some arrests and warnings, the courier network remained intact.[62]

 
John H. Surratt, Jr. in 1868. Mary Surratt's son was a Confederate courier.

John Surratt collapsed suddenly and died on either August 25[10][63] or August 26[64][65] in 1862 (sources differ as to the date). The cause of death was a stroke.[46][63][66] The Surratt family affairs were in serious financial difficulties.[64] John Jr. and Anna both left school to help their mother run the family's remaining farmland and businesses.[43] On September 10, 1862, John Jr. was appointed postmaster of the Surrattsville post office.[67][68][69] Lafayette Baker swept through Surrattsville again in 1862, and several postmasters were dismissed for disloyalty,[62] but John Jr. was not one of them. In August 1863, he sought a job in the paymaster's department in the United States Department of War, but his application caused federal agents to be suspicious about his family's loyalties to the Union.[69] On November 17, 1863, he was dismissed as postmaster for disloyalty.[70][68][71]

The loss of John Jr.'s job as postmaster caused a financial crisis for the Surratt family.[54] When John Sr.'s estate was probated in late November 1862, the family owned only two middle-age male slaves.[67] However, by 1863, Louis J. Weichmann, a friend of John Jr. from St. Charles College, observed that the family had six or more slaves working on the property.[72] By 1864, Mary Surratt found that her husband's unpaid debts and bad business deals had left her with many creditors.[55] Several of her slaves ran away.[54][65][73][74] When he was not meeting with Confederate sympathizers in the city, her son was selling vegetables to raise cash for the family.[75] Mary was tired of running the farm, tavern, and other businesses without her son's help.[76] In the fall of 1864, she began considering moving to her townhouse in the city.[36]

On October 1, 1864, she took possession of the townhouse at 604 H Street NW in Washington, D.C.[54] The gray brick house had four stories and stood on a lot 29 feet (8.8 m) wide, 100 feet (30 m) deep.[6][36][77] The first floor, which was level with the street, had two large rooms, used as the kitchen and dining room.[6][77] The second floor had a front and back parlor, with the room in the rear used as Mary Surratt's bedroom.[6][78] The third floor had three rooms: two in the front and a larger one at the back.[6][79] The fourth floor, which was considered an attic, had two large and one small room, occupied by a servant.[6][79] Surratt began moving her belongings into the townhouse that month,[80] and on November 1, 1864, Anna and John Jr. took up residence there.[81] Mary Surratt herself moved into the home on December 1.[81] That same day, she leased the tavern in Surrattsville to a former Washington, D.C., policeman and Confederate sympathizer John M. Lloyd for $500 a year.[29][81][82] On November 30, December 8, and December 27, Mary Surratt advertised for lodgers in the Daily Evening Star newspaper.[29][54][83][84] She had initially said that she wanted only lodgers who were known to her personally or were recommended by friends, but in her advertisements, she said rooms were "available for 4 gentlemen."[84][85]

Some scholars have raised questions about Surratt's move into the city. Historians Kate Larson and Roy Chamlee have noted that although there is no definite proof, a case can be made that Surratt made the move into the city in furtherance of her and her son's espionage activities.[36][77] For example, Larson and Chamlee say that on September 21, 1864, John Surratt wrote to Louis J. Weichmann, observing that the family's plans to move into the city were advancing rapidly "on account of certain events having turned up,"[36][77] perhaps a cryptic reference to either his Confederate activities in general or the conspiracy to kidnap or kill Lincoln.[36] Larson has observed that although the move made long-term economic sense for Surratt, it also, in the short term, would have meant moving expenses and furnishing up to 10 rooms in the townhouse, money that she did not have.[77]

Chamlee, too, found little economic reason to move into the city and concluded that it would have been more profitable to rent the H Street boarding house entirely to lodgers.[36] During her time in the city, Surratt tried to keep her daughter away from what she felt were negative influences.[36] Moreover, Surratt still owed money on both the tavern and the townhouse and would take out yet another mortgage against the townhouse in January 1865.[36]

John Jr. transferred all his title to the family property to his mother in January 1865. That act may have additional implications. A traitor's property could be seized, and John's spy knowledge was certainly his motivation for relinquishing his title to the houses and land. Mary may have known of his motivation as well or at least suspected. If she did, she would have possessed at least de facto knowledge of the conspiracy.[86]

Conspiracy

 
Surratt's boarding house, c. 1890, little changed from how it looked during her occupancy.
 
Surratt's boarding house, which now houses a restaurant, is in the Chinatown neighborhood of Washington, D.C.

Louis J. Weichmann moved into Surratt's boarding house on November 1, 1864.[87] On December 23, 1864, Dr. Samuel Mudd introduced John Surratt Jr. to John Wilkes Booth.[88][89] Booth recruited John Jr. into his conspiracy to kidnap Lincoln.[88][90] Confederate agents began frequenting the boarding house.[88][91] Booth visited the boarding house many times over the next few months,[88][92][93] sometimes at Mary's request.[88]

George Atzerodt and Lewis Powell boarded at the townhouse for short periods.[88] Atzerodt, a friend of both John Jr. and Booth and a co-conspirator in the plot [94] to kidnap Lincoln, visited the boarding house several times in the first two months of 1865.[95] He stayed at the Surratt boarding house in February 1865 (for one night or several, sources differ), but he proved to be a heavy drinker, and Surratt evicted him after just a few days.[93][96]

He continued to visit the townhouse frequently afterward, however.[97] Powell posed as a Baptist preacher and stayed at the boarding house for three days in March 1865.[93][98] David Herold also called at the home several times.[91][97]

As part of the plot to kidnap Lincoln in March 1865, John, Atzerodt, and Herold hid two Spencer carbines, ammunition, and some other supplies at the Surratt tavern in Surrattsville.[88][99][100] On April 11, Mary Surratt rented a carriage and drove to the Surratt tavern.[101] She said that she made the trip to collect a debt owed her by a former neighbor.[101] However, according to her tenant, John Lloyd, Surratt told him to get the "shooting irons" ready to be picked up.[88][102] On April 14, Surratt said that she would once again visit the family tavern in Surrattsville to collect a debt.[88][103] Shortly before she left the city, Booth visited the boarding house and spoke privately with her.[88][104][105] He gave her a package, later found to contain binoculars, for Lloyd to pick up later that evening.[88][104][105] Surratt did so and, according to Lloyd, again told Lloyd to have the "shooting irons" ready for pickup and handed him a wrapped package from Booth.[88][99][106][107]

Booth's plan was to assassinate Lincoln and have Atzerodt kill Vice President Andrew Johnson and Powell kill Secretary of State William H. Seward. Booth killed Lincoln, Atzerodt never attempted to kill Johnson, and Powell stabbed Seward repeatedly but failed to murder him.[108] As they fled the city after Lincoln's assassination, Booth and Herold picked up the rifles and binoculars from Surratt's tavern.[88] Lloyd repaired a broken spring on Surratt's wagon before they left.[106][109][110]

Arrest and incarceration

Around 2 a.m. on April 15, 1865, members of the District of Columbia police visited the Surratt boarding house, seeking John Wilkes Booth and John Surratt.[88][111][112] Why the police came to the house is not entirely clear. Most historians conclude that Weichmann's friend, Department of War employee Daniel Gleason, had alerted federal authorities to Confederate activity centered on the Surratt house, but that does not explain why police rather than federal agents appeared there.[111] (Historian Roy Chamlee, however, says that there is evidence that Gleason did not tell police about his suspicions of Weichmann for several days.)[113] Within 45 minutes of the attack on Lincoln, John Surratt's name had become associated with the attack on Secretary of State William H. Seward.[114] The police as well as the Provost Marshal's office both had files on John Surratt Jr. and knew he was a close friend of Booth.[114] (It is possible that either James L. Maddox, property supervisor at Ford's Theatre and a friend of Booth's, or actor John Matthews, both of whom may have known about the plot to attack government officials, mentioned Surratt's name.)[114] Historian Otto Eisenschiml has argued that David Herold's attempt to steal a horse from John Fletcher may have led them to the Surratt boarding house,[115] but at least one other scholar has called the link uncertain.[111] Other sources claim that eyewitnesses had identified Booth as Lincoln's attacker, and the detectives had information (a tip from an unnamed actor and a bartender) linking John, Jr., to Booth.[88][116] Mary lied to the detectives that her son had been in Canada for two weeks.[88][117] She also did not reveal that she had delivered a package to the tavern on Booth's behalf only hours earlier.[118]

 
Lewis Powell was the co-conspirator whose untimely arrival at the Surratt boarding house on April 17 convinced many of Mary Surratt's guilt.

On April 17, a Surratt neighbor told U.S. military authorities that he overheard one of the Surratt's servants saying that three men had come to the house on the night of Lincoln's assassination and that one of the men had mentioned Booth in a theater.[119][120][121] (The servant was mistaken about the date, as John Surratt, Jr. had indeed been in Elmira, New York, on a mission for a Confederate general).[122] Other pieces of information also mentioned the boarding house as a key meeting place of the possible conspirators.[118] Either Colonel Henry H. Wells, Provost Marshal (head of the military police) of the District of Columbia, or General Christopher C. Augur told Colonel Henry Steel Olcott to arrest everyone in the house.[118][119]

Federal soldiers visited the Surratt boarding house again late on the evening of April 17.[118][123][124] John Jr. could not be found, but after a search of the house, the agents found in Mary's room a picture of Booth, hidden behind another photograph, pictures of Confederate leaders including Jefferson Davis, a pistol, a mold for making bullets, and percussion caps.[120][123][125] As Mary was being arrested for conspiracy to assassinate Lincoln, Powell appeared at her door in disguise.[126][127][128] Although Surratt denied knowing him,[92][127][129] Powell claimed that he was a laborer hired by Surratt to dig a ditch the next morning. The discrepancy and Powell's remarkably well-dressed and -groomed appearance, quite unlike a ditch-digger, prompted his arrest.[92][127][129] He was later identified as the man who had attempted to assassinate Secretary of State William Seward.[126]

After her arrest, she was held at an annex to the Old Capitol Prison before being transferred to the Washington Arsenal on April 30.[126][130] Two armed guards stood before the door to her cell from the beginning of her imprisonment until her death.[131] Her cell, while airy and larger than the others,[132] was sparsely furnished, with a straw mattress, table, wash basin, chair, and a bucket.[133][134][135] Food was served four times a day, always of bread; salt pork, beef, or beef soup; and coffee or water.[136] The other arrested conspirators had their heads enclosed in a padded canvas bag to prevent a suicide attempt.[137] Sources disagree as to whether Surratt was also forced to wear it.[132][137] Although the others wore iron manacles on their feet and ankles, she was not manacled.[132] (Rumors to the contrary were raised by reporters at the trial who could not see her or "heard" the clank of chains about her feet. The rumors were repeatedly investigated and denied.)[138] She began to suffer menstrual bleeding and became weak during her detention.[133][134][139] She was given a rocking chair and allowed visits from her daughter, Anna.[140][141] She and Powell received the most attention from the press.[142] The Northern press was also highly critical of her, claiming that she had a "criminal face" due to her small mouth and dark eyes.[143]

John Surratt Jr. was in Elmira at the time of the assassination, delivering messages on behalf of a Confederate general.[122] After learning of Lincoln's death, he fled to Montreal, Quebec, Canada.[144]

Trial

The trial for the alleged conspirators began on May 9.[64] A military tribunal, rather than a civilian court, was chosen as the venue because government officials thought that its more lenient rules of evidence would enable the court to get to the bottom of what was then perceived by the public as a vast conspiracy.[145] All eight alleged conspirators were tried simultaneously.[127] Historians have conflicting views regarding Surratt's innocence. Historian Laurie Verge commented, "Only in the case of Dr. Samuel Alexander Mudd is there as much controversy as to the guilt or innocence of one of the defendants."[146] Lincoln assassination scholar Thomas Reed Turner says that of the eight people accused of plotting to kill Lincoln, the case against Surratt remains "the most controversial... at that time and since."[99]

A room on the northeast corner of the third floor of the Arsenal was made into a courtroom, and the prisoners were brought into the room through a side door, which prevented them from passing by or being harassed by spectators.[133][147] Surratt was given special considerations during the trial because of her illness and gender. In the courtroom, she sat apart from the other prisoners.[133][148] Sources differ as to whether an armed guard sat on either side of her, as was done for other prisoners during the trial.[148][149] While the others wore wrist and ankle manacles in the courtroom, she did not.[132][138][150] She was also permitted a bonnet, fan, and veil to hide her face from spectators.[150] As her illness worsened during the trial, she was moved to a larger and more comfortable prison cell.[150]

Surratt was charged with abetting, aiding, concealing, counseling, and harboring her co-defendants.[151] The federal government initially attempted to find legal counsel for her and the others, but almost no attorneys were willing to take the job for fear they would be accused of disloyalty to the Union.[152] Surratt retained Reverdy Johnson as her legal counsel.[126][153] A member of the military commission trying the conspirators challenged Johnson's right to defend Surratt, as he had objected to requiring loyalty oaths from voters in the 1864 presidential election.[126][154] After much discussion, this objection was withdrawn, but damage had been done to his influence, and he did not attend most of the court sessions.[126][155] Most of Surratt's legal defense was presented by two other lawyers: Frederick Aiken and John Wesley Clampitt.[126][152]

 
Louis J. Weichmann, whose testimony proved critical in convicting Mary Surratt.

The prosecution's strategy was to tie Surratt to the conspiracy. Powell's arrival at her boarding house, three days after the president's murder, was critical evidence against her, the government argued.[126] The prosecution presented nine witnesses, but most of their case rested on the testimony of just two men: John M. Lloyd and Louis J. Weichmann.[126][127] Lloyd testified on May 13 and 15, 1865[156] on the hiding of the carbines and other supplies at the tavern in March and the two conversations he had with her in which she told him to get the "shooting irons" ready.[99][126][157] Weichmann's testimony was important, as it established an intimate relationship between her and the other conspirators.[99][127]

Weichmann testified May 16 to 19[156] and said that he had resided at the boarding house since November 1864. He had seen or overheard John Jr. meeting and talking with Atzerodt, Booth, and Powell many times over the past four and a half months.[129] Weichmann had driven Surratt to the tavern on April 11 and 14, confirmed that she and Lloyd had spent much time in private conversation, testified that he saw Booth give her the package of binoculars, and attested that she had turned the package over to Lloyd.[129][158] Weichmann also testified at length about the Surratt family's ties to the Confederate spy and courier rings operating in the area and their relationships with Atzerodt and Powell.[129] He also testified about the December 23 meeting with Booth and John (which he also attended) and their subsequent meeting with Booth at Booth's room at the National Hotel.[129] Finally, he told the military tribunal about the general excitement in the boarding house in March 1865 after the failed attempt to kidnap Lincoln.[129]

Other prosecution witnesses reinforced Weichmann's testimony. Lodger Honora Fitzpatrick confirmed visits by Atzerodt, Booth, and Powell to the boarding house.[129] Emma Offut, Lloyd's sister-in-law, testified that she saw (but did not hear) Surratt speaking for long periods of time with Lloyd on April 11 and 14.[129] Government agents testified about their arrest of Surratt, Powell's arrival, and her denial that she knew Powell.[129] The fact that Powell sought refuge in the boarding house after Lincoln's murder left a bad impression of her.[99] Surratt's refusal (or failure) to recognize him also weighed against her.[127] The agents also testified about their search of the house, and the evidence (the photographs, the weapons, etc.) discovered there.[129] Lloyd's testimony was the most important for the prosecution's case,[92][158][159] for it indicated that she had played an active role in the conspiracy in the days before Lincoln's death.[109] The prosecution rested its case on May 22.[129]

The defense strategy was to impeach the testimony of the key prosecution witnesses: Lloyd and Weichmann. It also wished to show that she was loyal to the Union, her trips to Surrattsville were of an innocent nature, and she had not been aware of Booth's plans.[109] There were 31 witnesses who testified for the defense.[109] George H. Calvert testified that he had pressed Surratt to pay a debt, Bennett Gwynn said Surratt had sought payment from John Nothey to satisfy the Calvert debt, and Nothey agreed that he had received a letter from Surratt for him to appear at the tavern on April 11 to pay what was owed.[109] Several witnesses impugned Lloyd's character by testifying about his alcoholism,[109] while others said he was too intoxicated on the day of Lincoln's assassination to remember that day clearly.[109][160] Augustus Howell, a Confederate agent, testified Weichmann was an untrustworthy witness, as he had sought to become a Confederate spy himself.[160][161] (The prosecution had attempted to show that Howell was a Confederate spy and should not be trusted.)[162]

Anna Surratt testified that it was Weichmann who had brought Atzerodt into the boarding house, that the photograph of Booth was hers, and that she owned photographs of Union political and military leaders.[162][163] Anna denied ever overhearing any discussions of disloyal activities or ideas in the boarding house, and that Booth's visits to the house were always short.[162] Anna explained her mother's failure to recognize Powell by asserting she could not see well.[162][164] Augusta Howell, a former servant, and Honora Fitzpatrick, a former slave, testified to Mary's poor eyesight as well.[160][161][162][164][163] The former servant and the former slave both said Surratt had given Union soldiers food.[162][163] Numerous witnesses were called at the end of the defense's case to testify to her loyalty to the Union, her deep Christian faith, and her kindness.[162][164] During the prosecution's rebuttal, government lawyers called four witnesses to the stand, who testified as to Weichmann's unimpeachable character.[162]

Johnson and Aiken presented the closing arguments for the defense. Johnson attacked the jurisdiction of a military tribunal over civilians, as had Mudd's attorney.[162] Aiken also challenged the court's jurisdiction.[165] He also reiterated that Lloyd and Weichmann were unreliable witnesses and that the evidence against her was all circumstantial.[166] The only evidence linking Surratt to the conspiracy to kill Lincoln, he said, came from Lloyd and Weichmann, and neither man was telling the truth.[166] (Dorothy Kunhardt has written that there is evidence the latter's perjured testimony was suborned by Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton.)[167]

Judge Advocate John Bingham presented the closing argument for the prosecution.[166] The military tribunal had jurisdiction, he said, not only because the court itself had ruled at the beginning of the trials that it did but because they were crimes committed in a military zone, during a time of war, and against high government officials in carrying out treasonous activities.[166] Bingham pointed out that the Surratt boarding house was where the conspiracy was planned, and Atzerodt, Booth, and Powell had all met with Surratt.[166] Booth had paid for the rental of the carriage that took Surratt to Surrattsville each time, and Bingham said that was evidence that Surratt's trips were critical to the conspiracy.[166] Bingham also said that Lloyd's testimony had been corroborated by others and that his unwillingness to reveal the cache of weapons in the tavern was prompted by his subservient tenant relationship to Surratt.[166] Bingham concluded by reiterating the government's key point: Powell had returned to the Surratt house seeking Surratt, and that alone was proof of her guilt.[166] Bingham also pointed out for the tribunal that the charge a person was indicted for was irrelevant. Under the law of conspiracy, if one person carries out a crime, all conspirators are guilty of the same crime.[166][168]

The trial ended on June 28, 1865.[64][169] Surratt was so ill the last four days of the trial that she was permitted to stay in her cell.[169] In the opinion of historian Roy Z. Chamlee, both legal teams appeared to have flaws in their cases, and except for Reverdy Johnson, neither team employed highly skilled attorneys.[169] The government's case was hindered by its failure to call as a witness the man who shared Lloyd's carriage when he talked with Surratt and could have verified Lloyd's version of the "shooting irons" story or Metropolitan Police Chief A.C. Richards whose investigation had had the most success in the early days of the investigation.[169] The government did not fully investigate Booth's meetings with Surratt at noon or the evening of the murder, and its questioning and cross-examination of witnesses was poorly prepared and weak.[169] What is most important, according to historian Roy Z. Chamber Jr., is that the government had botched the attempt to apprehend John Jr.[169] The defense's case, too, had a problem. The defense never followed up on inconsistencies in Weichmann's chronology of Mary's last visit to the tavern, which could have undermined Weichmann's entire credibility.[169]

 
A newspaper drawing of Surratt receiving comfort from one of the priests permitted to visit her in her prison cell.

The military tribunal considered guilt and sentencing on June 29 and 30.[169] Surratt's guilt was the second-last to be considered, as her case had problems of evidence and witness reliability.[169] The sentence was handed down on June 30.[170] The military tribunal found her guilty on all charges but two.[171] A death sentence required six of the nine votes of the judges.[170][172] Surratt was sentenced to death, the first woman executed by the federal government.[6][24] The sentence was announced publicly on July 5.[173][174][175] When Powell learned of his sentence, he declared that she was completely innocent of all charges.[176] The night before the execution, Surratt's priests and Anna Surratt both visited Powell and elicited from him a strong statement declaring Mary innocent. Although it was delivered to Captain Christian Rath, who was overseeing the execution, Powell's statement had no effect on anyone with authority to prevent Surratt's death.[177] George Atzerodt bitterly condemned her, implicating her even further in the conspiracy.[176] Powell's was the only statement by any conspirator exonerating Surratt.[177]

Anna Surratt pleaded repeatedly for her mother's life with Judge Advocate General Joseph Holt, but he refused to consider clemency.[64] She also attempted to see President Andrew Johnson several times to beg for mercy but was not granted permission to see him.[64]

Five of the nine judges signed a letter asking President Johnson to give Surratt clemency and commute her sentence to life in prison because of her age and sex.[170][178] Holt did not deliver the recommendation to Johnson until July 5, two days before Surratt and the others were to hang.[170] Johnson signed the order for execution but did not sign the order for clemency.[170][178] Johnson later said he never saw the clemency request; Holt said he showed it to Johnson, who refused to sign it.[64][170] Johnson, according to Holt, said in signing the death warrant that she had "kept the nest that hatched the egg."[178]

Execution

Construction of the gallows for the hanging of the conspirators condemned to death began immediately on July 5, after the execution order was signed.[173] It was constructed in the south part of the Arsenal courtyard, was 12 feet (3.7 m) high and about 20 square feet (1.9 m2) in size.[179] Rath, who oversaw the preparations for the executions, made the nooses.[180] Tired of making nooses and thinking that the government would never hang a woman, he made Surratt's noose the night before the execution with five loops rather than the regulation's seven.[177][180] He tested the nooses that night by tying them to a tree limb and a bag of buckshot and then tossing the bag to the ground (the ropes held).[180] Civilian workers did not want to dig the graves out of superstitious fear, so Rath asked for volunteers among the soldiers at the Arsenal and received more help than he needed.[180]

At noon on July 6, Surratt was informed she would be hanged the next day. She wept profusely.[181] She was joined by two Catholic priests (Jacob Walter and B.F. Wiget)[140][182] and her daughter Anna.[179] Father Jacob remained with her almost until her death.[183] Her menstrual problems had worsened, and she was in such pain and suffered from such severe cramps that the prison doctor gave her wine and medication.[140][184] She repeatedly asserted her innocence.[140] She spent the night on her mattress, weeping and moaning in pain and grief, ministered to by the priests.[177][185] Anna left her mother's side at 8 A.M. on July 7 and went to the White House to beg for her mother's life one last time.[185] Her entreaty rejected, she returned to the prison and her mother's cell at about 11 A.M.[186] The soldiers began testing the gallows about 11:25 A.M.; the sound of the tests unnerved all the prisoners.[187] Shortly before noon, Mary Surratt was taken from her cell and then allowed to sit in a chair near the entrance to the courtyard.[187] The heat in the city that day was oppressive. By noon, it had already reached 92.3 °F (33.5 °C).[188] The guards ordered all visitors to leave at 12:30 P.M.[186] When she was forced to part from her mother, Anna's hysterical screams of grief could be heard throughout the prison.[189][190]

Clampitt and Aiken had not finished trying to save their client, however. On the morning of July 7, they asked a District of Columbia court for a writ of habeas corpus, arguing that the military tribunal had no jurisdiction over their client.[191][192][193] The court issued the writ at 3 A.M., and it was served on General Winfield Scott Hancock.[191][192][194] Hancock was ordered to produce Surratt by 10 A.M.[194] General Hancock sent an aide to General John F. Hartranft, who commanded the Old Capitol Prison, ordering him not to admit any US marshal, as that would prevent the marshal from serving a similar writ on Hartranft.[191] Johnson was informed that the court had issued the writ and promptly cancelled it at 11:30 A.M. under the authority granted to him by the Habeas Corpus Suspension Act of 1863.[191][193][195] General Hancock and United States Attorney General James Speed personally appeared in court and informed the judge of the cancellation of the writ.[194]

 
Aftermath of the execution of Mary Surratt, Lewis Powell, David Herold, and George Atzerodt on July 7, 1865.

On July 7, 1865, at 1:15 P.M.,[196][197] a procession led by General Hartranft escorted the four condemned prisoners through the courtyard and up the steps to the gallows.[190][196] Each prisoner's ankles and wrists were bound by manacles.[198] Surratt led the way,[190][199] wearing a black bombazine dress, black bonnet, and black veil.[200][201] More than 1,000 people, including government officials, members of the US armed forces, friends and family of the accused, official witnesses, and reporters, watched.[202] General Hancock limited attendance to those who had a ticket, and only those who had a good reason to be present were given a ticket.[203] (Most of those present were military officers and soldiers, as fewer than 200 tickets had been printed.)[199]

Alexander Gardner, who had photographed the body of Booth and taken portraits of several of the male conspirators while they were imprisoned aboard naval ships, photographed the execution for the government.[203] Hartranft read the order for their execution.[196] Surratt, either weak from her illness or swooning in fear (perhaps both), had to be supported by two soldiers and her priests.[190][199] The condemned were seated in chairs, Surratt almost collapsing into hers.[201] She was seated to the right of the others, the traditional "seat of honor" in an execution.[180] White cloth was used to bind their arms to their sides and their ankles and thighs together.[197][198] The cloths around Surratt's legs were tied around her dress below the knees.[197] Each person was ministered to by a member of the clergy. From the scaffold, Powell said, "Mrs. Surratt is innocent. She doesn't deserve to die with the rest of us."[204] Fathers Jacob and Wiget prayed over her and held a crucifix to her lips.[201][205] About 16 minutes elapsed from the time the prisoners entered the courtyard until they were ready for execution.[201]

A white bag was placed over the head of each prisoner after the noose was put in place.[198] Surratt's bonnet was removed, and the noose put around her neck by a U.S. Secret Service officer.[197][201][206] She complained that the bindings about her arms hurt, and the officer preparing said, "Well, it won't hurt long."[207] Finally, the prisoners were asked to stand and move forward a few feet to the nooses.[201][206] The chairs were removed.[206] Her last words, spoken to a guard as he moved her forward to the drop, were "Please don't let me fall."[204][207]

Surratt and the others stood on the drop for about 10 seconds,[200] and then Captain Rath clapped his hands.[180][197][206] Four soldiers of Company F of the 14th Veteran Reserves knocked out the supports holding the drops in place, and the condemned fell.[198][208] Surratt, who had moved forward enough to barely step onto the drop, lurched forward and slid partway down the drop, her body snapping tight at the end of the rope, swinging back and forth.[180] She appeared to die relatively quickly with little struggle.[209] Atzerodt's stomach heaved once and his legs quivered; then, he was still.[210][211] Herold and Powell struggled for nearly five minutes, strangling to death.[180][210][211]

Burial

 
Grave of Mary Surratt (with modern headstone) at Mount Olivet Cemetery.

Each body was inspected by a physician to ensure that death had occurred.[198][202][210] The bodies of the executed were allowed to hang for about 30 minutes[202][206][212] and soldiers began to cut them down at 1:53 p.m.[198] A corporal raced to the top of the gallows and cut down Atzerodt's body, which fell to the ground with a thud.[198] He was reprimanded, and the other bodies were cut down more gently.[198] Herold's body was next, followed by Powell's.[198] Surratt's body was cut down at 1:58 p.m.[198] As Surratt's body was cut loose, her head fell forward. A soldier joked, "She makes a good bow" and was rebuked by an officer for his poor use of humor.[24][198]

Upon examination, the military surgeons determined that no one's neck had been broken by the fall.[24][198] The manacles and cloth bindings were removed but not the white execution masks, and the bodies were placed into the pine coffins.[198][202] The name of each person was written on a piece of paper by acting Assistant Adjutant R. A. Watts,[206] and inserted in a glass vial, which was placed into the coffin.[202] The coffins were buried against the prison wall in shallow graves, just a few feet from the gallows.[202] A white picket fence marked the burial site.[213] The night that she died, a mob attacked the Surratt boarding house and began stripping it of souvenirs until the police stopped them.[207]

Anna Surratt unsuccessfully asked for her mother's body for four years.[214] In 1867, the War Department decided to tear down the portion of the Washington Arsenal where the bodies of Surratt and the other executed conspirators lay.[215] On October 1, 1867, the coffins were disinterred and reburied in Warehouse No. 1 at the Arsenal, with a wooden marker placed at the head of each burial vault.[213][215] Booth's body lay alongside them.[213] In February 1869, Edwin Booth asked Johnson for the body of his brother.[215] Johnson agreed to turn the body over to the Booth family, and on February 8 Surratt's body was turned over to the Surratt family.[213][214][216][217] She was buried in Mount Olivet Cemetery in Washington, D.C., on February 9, 1869.[216][217] Lloyd is buried 100 yards (91 m) from her grave in the same cemetery.[218]

Surviving family and home

 
"Like Mudds, Surratts Want Name Cleared", The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Sunday, September 2, 1979

Anna Surratt moved from the townhouse on H Street and lived with friends for a few years, ostracized from society.[218] She married William Tonry, a government clerk.[218] They lived in poverty for a while after he was dismissed from his job, but in time, he became a professor of chemistry in Baltimore and the couple became better off.[218] The strain of her mother's death left Anna mentally unbalanced, and she suffered from periods of extreme fear that bordered on insanity.[218] She died in 1904.[216][219]

After the dismissal of charges against him, John Jr. married and he and his family lived in Baltimore near his sister, Anna.[218] Isaac Surratt also returned to the United States and lived in Baltimore.[218] He died unmarried in 1907.[216][220] Isaac and Anna were buried on either side of their mother in Mount Olivet Cemetery.[218] John Jr. was buried in Baltimore in 1916.[218] In 1968, a new headstone with a brass plaque replaced the old, defaced headstone over Mary Surratt's grave.[221]

Mary Surratt's boarding house still stands and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2009.[222] Those interested in Mary Surratt formed the Surratt Society.[218] The Surrattsville tavern and house are historical sites run today by the Surratt Society as a historic house museum.[180] The Washington Arsenal is now Fort Lesley J. McNair.[180]

Portrayals

Surratt was portrayed by actress Virginia Gregg in the 1956 episode "The Mary Surratt Case," telecast as part of the NBC anthology series The Joseph Cotten Show.[223] She was portrayed by Robin Wright in the 2011 film The Conspirator, which was directed by Robert Redford.[224]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Cashin, p. 287.
  2. ^ a b Steers, 2010, p. 516.
  3. ^ Larson, p. xi.
  4. ^ a b c Trindal, p. 13.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Larson, p. 11.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Griffin, p. 152.
  7. ^ a b c Buchanan, p. 60.
  8. ^ a b "Surratt, Mary," in The New Encyclopædia Britannica, p. 411.
  9. ^ Johnson, p. 96.
  10. ^ a b Heidler, Heidler, and Coles, p. 1909.
  11. ^ Phelps, p. 709.
  12. ^ Van Doren and McHenry, p. 1010.
  13. ^ a b Trindal, p. 14.
  14. ^ a b "Surratt, Mary E. Jenkins (1823–1865)" in Women in the American Civil War, p. 532.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Leonard, p. 43.
  16. ^ a b Trindal, p. 17.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g Cashin, p. 288.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h Larson, p. 12.
  19. ^ a b Trindal, p. 19.
  20. ^ Trindal, p. 20.
  21. ^ One source says it is not clear that they married in a Catholic church. See: Jampoler, p. 25. Another claims they were married in a private home on Good Hope Road in Prince George's County, Maryland. See: Trindal, p. 20.
  22. ^ a b Steers, 2001, p. 138-40.
  23. ^ Trindal, p. 20, 22.
  24. ^ a b c d Gillespie, p. 68.
  25. ^ a b Trindal, p. 22.
  26. ^ Trindal, p. 25.
  27. ^ Larson, p. 12-13.
  28. ^ a b Larson, p. 13.
  29. ^ a b c Kauffmann, p. 167.
  30. ^ Larson, p. 14.
  31. ^ Larson, p. 16.
  32. ^ a b c "Surratt, Mary Eugenia Jenkins (1817–1865)," in Historical Dictionary of Reconstruction, p. 217.
  33. ^ Larson, p. 17.
  34. ^ Larson, p. 18.
  35. ^ With the imposition of the quadrant street naming system and other changes to the streets in the District of Columbia, the current address of the townhouse is 604 H Street NW.
  36. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Chamlee, p. 165.
  37. ^ Kauffmann, p. 412.
  38. ^ Griffin, p. 153.
  39. ^ At least one source says that the property was deeded to John as payment for debt and that he did not purchase it. See: Steers, 2010, p. 520.
  40. ^ Phillips, p. 87.
  41. ^ a b c Larson, p. 20.
  42. ^ a b Oldroyd, Osborn Hamiline (May 21, 2008). Oldroyd, p. 245. ISBN 9780722288351. Retrieved July 7, 2011.
  43. ^ a b c d e f Steers, 2001, p. 80.
  44. ^ Griffin, p. 148.
  45. ^ Harris, p. 193; Townsend, 1886, p. 42.
  46. ^ a b c Townsend, George Alfred (December 6, 2006). Townsend, 1874, p. 712. Retrieved July 7, 2011.
  47. ^ a b Busch, p. 17.
  48. ^ a b c Steers, 2010, p. 517.
  49. ^ Larson, p. 20-21.
  50. ^ a b c d Larson, p. 21.
  51. ^ Kauffmann, p. 436; Trindal, p. 43.
  52. ^ Trindal, p. 43.
  53. ^ Commire and Klezmer, p. 23.
  54. ^ a b c d e James, p. 410.
  55. ^ a b c d Cashin, p. 289.
  56. ^ Gamber, p. 96; Morseberger and Morsberger, p. 167.
  57. ^ Larson, p. 24.
  58. ^ Kauffmann, p. 155.
  59. ^ Conrad, Thomas Nelson. The Rebel Scout. Washington, DC: The National Publishing Co., 1904, p. 153-154.
  60. ^ Jampoler, p. 23; Griffin, p. 154.
  61. ^ Cashin, p. 289-290; Chamlee, p. 531; Evans, p. 339-340.
  62. ^ a b c Chamlee, p. 102.
  63. ^ a b Larson, p. 25.
  64. ^ a b c d e f g Schroeder-Lein and Zuczek, p. 286.
  65. ^ a b Zanca, p. 20.
  66. ^ Trindal, p. 247.
  67. ^ a b Trindal, p. 65.
  68. ^ a b Oldroyd, Osborn Hamiline (October 9, 2007). Oldroyd, p. 156. ISBN 9780722288351. Retrieved July 7, 2011.
  69. ^ a b Kauffmann, p. 433.
  70. ^ Steers, 2001, p. 81.
  71. ^ "Surratt, Mary E. Jenkins (1823–1865)" in Women in the American Civil War, p. 533; Larson, p. 37-38.
  72. ^ Zanca, p. 26.
  73. ^ Steers, 2001, p. 138.
  74. ^ Maryland adopted a new constitution on November 1, 1864, which emancipated all slaves in that state.
  75. ^ Chamlee, p. 101; Leonard, p. 88.
  76. ^ Steers, 2010, p. 518.
  77. ^ a b c d e Larson, p. 39.
  78. ^ Larson, p. 39-40.
  79. ^ a b Larson, p. 40.
  80. ^ Steers, 2001, p. 139.
  81. ^ a b c Oldroyd, Osborn Hamiline (October 9, 2007). Oldroyd, p. 159. ISBN 9780722288351. Retrieved July 7, 2011.
  82. ^ Larson, p. 38.
  83. ^ Trindal, p. 86; Larson, p. 42.
  84. ^ a b Chamlee, p. 164-165.
  85. ^ Stern, p. 42.
  86. ^ Chaconas, Joan L. (2003). The Trial: The Assassination of President Lincoln and the Trial of the Conspirators. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky. p. 63.
  87. ^ Trindal, p. 85; Weichmann and Richards, p. 28; Chamlee, p. xi.
  88. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Verge, p. 53.
  89. ^ Trindal, p. 276; Griffin, p. 155; Jones, p. 239.
  90. ^ Steers, 2007, p. 171.
  91. ^ a b Evans, p. 288.
  92. ^ a b c d Steers, 2010, p. 519.
  93. ^ a b c Heidler and Heidler, p. 1910.
  94. ^ Ownsbey, p. 55.
  95. ^ Leonard, p. 46; Busch, p. 56.
  96. ^ Griffin, p. 186; Gamber, p. 109; Ownsbey, p. 54.
  97. ^ a b Rehnquist, p. 215.
  98. ^ Ownsbey, p. 41, 51–52.
  99. ^ a b c d e f Turner, p. 155.
  100. ^ Griffin, p. 212; Kauffmann, p. 187-188.
  101. ^ a b Larson, p. 77; Steers, 2010, p. 349; Kauffmann, p. 208.
  102. ^ Trindal, p. 161; Larson, p. 130.
  103. ^ Larson, p. 83.
  104. ^ a b Larson, p. 83-84.
  105. ^ a b Swanson, p. 19.
  106. ^ a b Swanson, p. 22.
  107. ^ Trindal, p. 157.
  108. ^ Wallenfeldt, Jeff (April 7, 2018). "Assassination of Abraham Lincoln". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved May 15, 2018.
  109. ^ a b c d e f g Verge, p. 56.
  110. ^ Leonard, p. 97; Larson, p. 86.
  111. ^ a b c Turner, p. 156.
  112. ^ Steers, 2010, p. 173.
  113. ^ Chamlee, p. 10.
  114. ^ a b c Chamlee, p. 11.
  115. ^ Eisenschiml, p. 272-273.
  116. ^ Steers, 2010, p. 173, 519; Chamlee, p. 19.
  117. ^ Busch, p. 22; Pittman, p. 140; Trindal, p. 120; Larson, p. 93.
  118. ^ a b c d Steers, 2010, p. 174.
  119. ^ a b Turner, p. 157.
  120. ^ a b Trindal, p. 267.
  121. ^ Larson, p. 98; Steers, 2010, p. 301.
  122. ^ a b Steers, 2010, p. 177.
  123. ^ a b Verge, p. 52-53.
  124. ^ Pittman, p. 122.
  125. ^ Chamlee, p. 345; Swanson, p. 193; Pittman, p. 123.
  126. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Verge, p. 54.
  127. ^ a b c d e f g Cashin, p. 291.
  128. ^ Ownsbey, p. 137.
  129. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Verge, p. 55.
  130. ^ Trindal, p. 130; Hartranft, Steers, and Holzer, p. 22; Steers, 2001, p. 209; Swanson and Weinberg, p. 15; Jampoler, p. 18.
  131. ^ Watts, p. 87; Ownsbey, p. 108.
  132. ^ a b c d Watts, p. 88.
  133. ^ a b c d Trindal, p. 147.
  134. ^ a b Weichmann and Richards, p. 318.
  135. ^ Roscoe, p. 251.
  136. ^ Ownsbey, p. 110.
  137. ^ a b Klement, p. 35; Miller, p. 251-252.
  138. ^ a b Turner, p. 158-159.
  139. ^ Steers, 2010, p. 512.
  140. ^ a b c d Goodrich, p. 274
  141. ^ Trindal, p. 192.
  142. ^ Kunhardt and Kunhardt, p. 198.
  143. ^ Larson, p. xii.
  144. ^ Surratt traveled to the United Kingdom in September 1865 and then Rome. He joined the Papal Zouaves, but in April 1866, he was recognized and arrested on November 7, 1866. He escaped again, and traveled to Alexandria, Egypt. Arrested again, he was returned to the US and tried in June 1867. His first trial ended in a hung jury, and he was indicted in the District of Columbia for treason. Because the statute of limitations had run out on the charges, the indictments were dismissed. In December 1870, Surratt admitted publicly in a lecture in Rockville, Maryland, that he was part of Booth's plan to kidnap Lincoln which made him culpable for the assassination that occurred a month later. See Chaconas, p. 62-64.
  145. ^ Boritt and Forness, p. 351.
  146. ^ Verge, p. 51.
  147. ^ Watts, p. 89-90; Federal Writers' Project, p. 326.
  148. ^ a b Jampoler, p. 21.
  149. ^ Watts, p. 91.
  150. ^ a b c Chamlee, p. 440.
  151. ^ Watts, p. 92.
  152. ^ a b Boritt and Forness, p. 352.
  153. ^ Heidler and Heidler, p. 1076; Larson, p. 144.
  154. ^ Steers, 2001, p. 221; Larson, p. 146.
  155. ^ Chamlee, p. 270; Trindal, p. 150.
  156. ^ a b Leonard, p. 109.
  157. ^ George Atzerodt made a statement to James McPhail, the civilian Provost Marshal of Baltimore, on May 1, 1865. McPhail, accompanied by Atzerodt's brother-in-law, John L. Smith, interviewed Atzerodt, who revealed that Mudd was much more intimately involved in the kidnap and murder plots against Lincoln than other evidence suggested. Confirming some of Lloyd's testimony, Atzerodt also said that Surratt had gone to the tavern on April 15 specifically to retrieve the weapons hidden there a month earlier by Atzerodt, Herold, and John Jr. However, McPhail turned the statement over to Atzerodt's attorney, William E. Doster, rather than to John F. Hartranft. Doster, perhaps realizing how damaging it was, did nothing with it. The testimony was only briefly and tangentially raised at the trial. In 1977, historian Joan Chaconas contacted Doster's grandson, who showed her papers containing Atzerodt's statement: "Had it been revealed, it most likely would have sent Dr. Samuel Mudd to the gallows." For information on the statement, its loss, and its rediscovery, see Steers and Holzer, p. 26-28 (quote on p. 27). For information on McPhail's role as provost marshal, see Fishel, p. 335.
  158. ^ a b Leonard, p. 108.
  159. ^ Griffin, p. 349.
  160. ^ a b c Leonard, p. 118.
  161. ^ a b Verge, p. 56-57.
  162. ^ a b c d e f g h i Verge, p. 57.
  163. ^ a b c Leonard, p. 120.
  164. ^ a b c Leonard, p. 119.
  165. ^ Verge, p. 57-58.
  166. ^ a b c d e f g h i Verge, p. 58.
  167. ^ Kunhardt and Kunhardt, p. 201.
  168. ^ Steers, "'Let the Stain of Innocent Blood...", 2010, p. 177-179.
  169. ^ a b c d e f g h i Chamlee, p. 434.
  170. ^ a b c d e f Steers, "'Let the Stain of Innocent Blood...", 2010, p. 189.
  171. ^ Surratt was found not guilty of harboring and concealing assassination conspirators Samuel Arnold and Michael O'Laughlen. She was also found not guilty of conspiring with Edmund Spangler. See Verge, p. 58.
  172. ^ Watts, p. 99-100.
  173. ^ a b Cashin, p. 299.
  174. ^ Jordan, p. 177.
  175. ^ It has been alleged by various sources that the federal government did not intend to execute her but to lure John, Jr., out of hiding to defend her. Historian Joan Cashin pointed out that the scant two days between her sentencing and execution did not provide enough time to lure him out of hiding. See Cashin, p. 299; Swanson, p. 365.
  176. ^ a b Chamlee, p. 454-456.
  177. ^ a b c d Chamlee, p. 462.
  178. ^ a b c Kunhardt and Kunhardt, p. 204.
  179. ^ a b Leonard, p. 131.
  180. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Swanson and Weinberg, p. 31.
  181. ^ Goodrich, p. 272.
  182. ^ Leonard, p. 130.
  183. ^ Steers, 2010, p. 567.
  184. ^ Chamlee, p. 461.
  185. ^ a b Goodrich, p. 276.
  186. ^ a b Goodrich, p. 279.
  187. ^ a b Chamlee, p. 469.
  188. ^ Trindal, p. 200.
  189. ^ Goodrich, p. 281; Trindal, p. 220.
  190. ^ a b c d Chamlee, p. 470.
  191. ^ a b c d Watts, p. 101.
  192. ^ a b Trindal, p. 211.
  193. ^ a b Steers, 2010, p. 4.
  194. ^ a b c Jordan, p. 178.
  195. ^ Article I, Section 9 of the United States Constitution permits the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus during times of rebellion or whenever the public safety requires it. On April 27, 1861, President Lincoln issued an executive order suspending the writ of habeas corpus. Although successfully challenged in the courts (Ex parte Milligan, 71 U.S. 2 (1866)), Congress passed the Habeas Corpus Suspension Act of 1863 affirming Lincoln's executive order. This act gave Johnson the power to suspend the DC criminal court's writ. See Latimer, p. 41-42.
  196. ^ a b c Jordan, p. 179.
  197. ^ a b c d e Leonard, p. 132.
  198. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Swanson and Weinberg, p. 29.
  199. ^ a b c Swanson, p. 364.
  200. ^ a b Pitman, p. 435.
  201. ^ a b c d e f Chamlee, p. 471.
  202. ^ a b c d e f Leonard, p. 134.
  203. ^ a b Swanson and Weinberg, p. 24.
  204. ^ a b Kunhardt and Kunhardt, pp. 210–211.
  205. ^ Zanca, p. 55.
  206. ^ a b c d e f Watts, p. 102.
  207. ^ a b c Swanson, p. 365.
  208. ^ Leonard, p. 133-134.
  209. ^ . The New York Times. September 17, 2018. Archived from the original on September 17, 2018. Retrieved January 28, 2020.
  210. ^ a b c Kauffmann, p. 374.
  211. ^ a b Katz, p. 184.
  212. ^ Kunhardt and Kunhardt, p. 214.
  213. ^ a b c d Ownsbey, p. 152.
  214. ^ a b Trindal, p. 230.
  215. ^ a b c Steers, 2001, p. 257.
  216. ^ a b c d Steers, 2010, p. 513.
  217. ^ a b Johnson, p. 420.
  218. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Chamlee, p. 556.
  219. ^ Trindal, p. 231.
  220. ^ "Isaac D. Surratt Dead" (PDF). The New York Times. November 4, 1907. Retrieved March 4, 2020.
  221. ^ Bucklee, p. 441.
  222. ^ "Mary E. Surratt Boarding House." National Register of Historic Places Registration Form. National Park Service. United States Department of the Interior. May 19, 2009. Accessed April 15, 2011.
  223. ^ Kuhn, p. 160.
  224. ^ Hornaday, Ann (April 14, 2011). "Robert Redford's 'The Conspirator' and the lost Union cause". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 16, 2018.

Sources

  • Boritt, G.S. and Forness, Norman O. The Historian's Lincoln: Pseudohistory, Psychohistory, and History. Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 1996.
  • Bryer, Jackson R. New Essays on F. Scott Fitzgerald's Neglected Stories. Columbia, Mo.: University of Missouri Press, 1996.
  • Buchanan, Paul D. The American Women's Rights Movement: A Chronology of Events and of Opportunities From 1600 to 2008. Boston: Branden Books, 2009.
  • Bucklee, Sally Mitchell. A Church and Its Village: St. Philip's Episcopal Church, Laurel, Maryland. Baltimore, Md.: Gateway Press, 2001.
  • Busch, Francis X. Enemies of the state: An Account of the Trials of the Mary Eugenia Surrat Case, the Teapot Dome Cases, the Alphonse Capone Case and the Rosenburg Case. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1954.
  • Cashin, Joan. The War Was You and Me: Civilians in the American Civil War. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press, 2002.
  • Chaconas, Joan L. "John H. Surratt, Jr." In The Trial: The Assassination of President Lincoln and the Trial of the Conspirators. Lexington, Ky.: University Press of Kentucky, 2003.
  • Chamlee, Jr., Roy Z. Lincoln's Assassins: A Complete Account of Their Capture, Trial, and Punishment. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co., 1989.
  • Commire, Anne and Klezmer, Deborah. Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia. Waterford, Conn.: Yorkin Publications, 2001.
  • DeWitt, David Miller. The Judicial Murder of Mary E. Surratt. J. Murphy & Co., 1894.
  • Eisenschiml, Otto. Why Was Lincoln Murdered? New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1937.
  • Evans, Eli N. Judah P. Benjamin, the Jewish Confederate. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1989.
  • Federal Writers' Project. Washington, D.C.: A Guide to the Nation's Capital. New York: Hastings House, 1942.
  • Fishel, Edwin C. Secret War for the Union. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1996.
  • Gamber, Wendy. The Boardinghouse in Nineteenth-Century America. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007.
  • Gillespie, L. Kay. Executed Women of the 20th and 21st Centuries. Lanham, Md.: University Press of America, 2009.
  • Goodrich, Thomas. The Darkest Dawn: Lincoln, Booth, and the Great American Tragedy. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press, 2005.
  • Griffin, John Chandler. Abraham Lincoln's Execution. Gretna, La.: Pelican Publishing Co., 2006.
  • Harris, Thomas Mealey. Assassination of Lincoln: A History of the Great Conspiracy, Trial of the Conspirators by a Military Commission, and a Review of the Trial of John H. Surratt. Boston: American Citizen Company, 1892.
  • Hartranft, John F.; Steers, Edward; and Holzer, Harold. The Lincoln Assassination Conspirators: Their Confinement and Execution, As Recorded in the Letterbook of John Frederick Hartranft. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2009.
  • Heidler, David Stephen; Heidler, Jeanne T.; and Coles, David J. Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: A Political, Social, and Military History. New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 2000.
  • Isacsson, Alfred. The Travels, Arrest and Trial of John H. Surratt. Middletown, N.Y.: Vestigium Press, 2003.
  • James, Edward T. Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2004.
  • Jampoler, Andrew C.A. The Last Lincoln Conspirator: John Surratt's Flight From the Gallows. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 2008.
  • Johnson, Andrew. The Papers of Andrew Johnson: September 1868 – April 1869. Paul H. Bergeron, ed. Knoxville, Tenn.: University of Tennessee Press, 1999.
  • Johnson, Scott Patrick. Trials of the Century: An Encyclopedia of Popular Culture and the Law. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO, 2011.
  • Jones, John P. Dr. Mudd and the Lincoln Assassination: The Case Reopened. Conshohocken, Pa.: Combined Books, 1995.
  • Jordan, David M. Winfield Scott Hancock: A Soldier's Life. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press, 1988.
  • Katz, D. Mark. Witness to an Era: The Life and Photographs of Alexander Gardner: The Civil War, Lincoln, and the West. New York: Viking, 1991.
  • Kauffman, Michael W. American Brutus. New York: Random House, 2004. ISBN 0-375-50785-X
  • Klement, Frank. Lincoln's Critics: The Copperheads of the North. Shippensburg, W.Va.: White Mane Books, 1999.
  • Kuhn, Annette. Queen of the 'B's: Ida Lupino Behind the Camera. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1995.
  • Kunhardt, Philip B.; Kunhardt, Peter W. (2008). Looking for Lincoln: The Making of an American Icon. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 9780307267139.
  • Larson, Kate Clifford. The Assassin's Accomplice: Mary Surratt and the Plot to Kill Abraham Lincoln. Basic Books, 2008. ISBN 978-0-465-03815-2
  • Latimer, Christopher P. Civil Liberties and the State: A Documentary and Reference Guide. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Greenwood, 2011.
  • Leonard, Elizabeth D. Lincoln's Avengers: Justice, Revenge, and Reunion After the Civil War. New York: Norton, 2004.
  • MacHenry, Robert. Liberty's Women. Springfield, Mass.: G.C. Merriam Co., 1980.
  • Miller, Edward A. Lincoln's Abolitionist General: The Biography of David Hunter. Columbia, S.C.: University of South Carolina Press, 1997.
  • Morseberger, Robert E. and Morsberger, Katharine M. Lew Wallace, Militant Romantic. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1980.
  • Oldroyd, Osborn H. The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln: Flight, Pursuit, Capture, and Punishment of the Conspirators. Washington, D.C.: O.H. Oldroyd, 1901.
  • Ownsbey, Betty J. Alias 'Paine': Lewis Thorthon Powell, the Mystery Man of the Lincoln Conspiracy. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, 2006.
  • Phelps, Shirelle. World of Criminal Justice, Vol. 2: N-Z. Detroit: Gale Group, 2001.
  • Phillips, Larissa. Women Civil War Spies of the Confederacy. New York: Rosen Publishing Group, 2004.
  • Pittman, Benn. The Assassination of President Lincoln and the Trial of the Conspirators. Cincinnati: Moore, Wilstach & Baldwin, 1865.
  • Rehnquist, William H. All the Laws But One: Civil Liberties in Wartime. New York: Vintage Books, 2000.
  • Roscoe, Theodore. The Web of Conspiracy: The Complete Story of the Men Who Murdered Abraham Lincoln. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1959.
  • Sachsman, David B.; Rushing, S. Kittrell; and Morris, Roy. Seeking A Voice: Images of Race and Gender in the 19th Century Press. West Lafayette, Ind.: Purdue University Press, 2009.
  • Schroeder-Lein, Glenna R. and Zuczek, Richard. Andrew Johnson: A Biographical Companion. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO, 2001.
  • Steers, Jr., Edward. Blood on the Moon. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2001.
  • Steers, Jr., Edward. "'Let the Stain of Innocent Blood Be Removed from the Land': The Military Trial of the Lincoln Conspirators." In The Lincoln Assassination: Crime and Punishment, Myth and Memory. Harold Holzer, Craig L. Symonds, and Frank J. Williams, eds. New York: Fordham University Press, 2010.
  • Steers, Jr., Edward. The Lincoln Assassination Encyclopedia. New York: Harper Perennial, 2010.
  • Steers, Jr., Edward. Lincoln Legends: Myths, Hoaxes, and Confabulations Associated With Our Greatest President. Lexington, Ky.: University Press of Kentucky, 2007.
  • Steers, Jr. Edward and Holzer, Harold. The Lincoln Assassination Conspirators: Their Confinement and Execution, as Recorded in the Letterbook of John Frederick Hartranft. Baton Rouge, La.: Louisiana State University Press, 2009.
  • Stern, Philip Van Doren. An End to Valor: The Last Days of the Civil War. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1958.
  • "Surratt, Mary." In The New Encyclopædia Britannica. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 1998.
  • "Surratt, Mary E. Jenkins (1823–1865)." In Women in the American Civil War. Lisa Tendrich Frank, ed. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO, 2008.
  • "Surratt, Mary Eugenia Jenkins (1817–1865)." In Historical Dictionary of Reconstruction. Hans Louis Trefousse, ed. New York: Greenwood Press, 1991.
  • Swanson, James L. Manhunt: The Twelve Day Chase for Lincoln's Killer. New York: HarperCollins, 2007. ISBN 0-06-051850-2
  • Swanson, James L. and Weinberg, Daniel R. Lincoln's Assassins: Their Trial and Execution. New York: Harper Perennial, 2008.
  • Townsend, George Alfred. The Life, Crime and Capture of John Wilkes Booth. New York: Dick and Fitzgerald, Publishers, 1886.
  • Townsend, George Alfred. Washington, Outside and Inside: A Picture and a Narrative of the Origin, Growth, Excellencies, Abuses, Beauties, and Personages of Our Governing City. Hartford, Conn.: S.M. Betts & Co., 1874.
  • Trindal, Elizabeth Steger. Mary Surratt: An American Tragedy. Pelican Pub. Co., 1996. ISBN 1-56554-185-5
  • Turner, Thomas Reed. Beware the People Weeping: Public Opinion and the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1982.
  • Van Doren, Charles Lincoln and McHenry, Robert. Webster's American Biographies. Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1984.
  • Verge, Laurie. "Mary Elizabeth Surratt". In The Trial: The Assassination of President Lincoln and the Trial of the Conspirators. Lexington, Ky.: University Press of Kentucky, 2003.
  • Watts, R.A. "Trial and Execution of the Lincoln Conspirators." Michigan History Magazine. 6:1 (1922).
  • Weichmann, Louis J. and Richards, A.C. A True History of the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln and of the Conspiracy of 1865. New York: Knopf, 1975.
  • Zanca, Kenneth J.. The Catholics and Mrs. Mary Surratt: How They Responded to the Trial and Execution of the Lincoln Conspirator. University Press of America, 2008. ISBN 0-7618-4023-0

External links

  • Anna Surratt, daughter
  • Surratt Society and Museum
  • Read through the Lincoln Assassination Papers about evidence against Mary Surratt
  • Historic Marker at the Surratt Boarding House
  • Brief Mary Surratt Biography (written by a retired teacher especially for students and schools)
  • Blattman, Elissa (2013), The First Woman Executed by the U.S. Government, National Women's History Museum

mary, surratt, american, historian, sarotte, mary, elizabeth, jenkins, surratt, 1820, 1823, july, 1865, american, boarding, house, owner, washington, convicted, taking, part, conspiracy, which, assassination, president, abraham, lincoln, 1865, sentenced, death. For the American historian see M E Sarotte Mary Elizabeth Jenkins Surratt 1 2 3 1820 or May 1823 July 7 1865 was an American boarding house owner in Washington D C who was convicted of taking part in the conspiracy which led to the assassination of U S President Abraham Lincoln in 1865 Sentenced to death she was hanged and became the first woman executed by the U S federal government She maintained her innocence until her death and the case against her was and remains controversial Surratt was the mother of John Surratt who was later tried but due to statute of limitations was not convicted Mary SurrattSurratt in 1850BornMary Elizabeth Jenkins1820 or May 1823Waterloo Maryland U S Died 1865 07 07 July 7 1865 aged 42 or 45 Arsenal Penitentiary Washington D C U S Cause of deathExecution by hangingResting placeMount Olivet CemeteryNationalityAmericanOccupation s Boarding house and tavern ownerKnown forBeing convicted as a conspirator in the assassination of Abraham LincolnCriminal statusExecuted July 7 1865 157 years ago 1865 07 07 SpouseJohn Harrison Surratt m 1840 died 1862 wbr ChildrenIsaac b 1841 died 1907 Elizabeth Susanna Anna b 1843 died 1904 John Jr b 1844 died 1916 Conviction s Conspiracy to murderCriminal penaltyDeathPartner s John Wilkes Booth Lewis Powell George Atzerodt David Herold John SurrattDate apprehendedApril 17 1865Born in Maryland in the 1820s Surratt converted to Catholicism at a young age and remained a practicing Catholic for the rest of her life She wed John Harrison Surratt in 1840 and had three children with him An entrepreneur John became the owner of a tavern an inn and a hotel The Surratts were sympathetic to the Confederate States of America and often hosted fellow Confederate sympathizers at their tavern Upon her husband s death in 1862 Surratt had to manage his estate Tired of doing so without help Surratt moved to her townhouse in Washington D C which she then ran as a boardinghouse There she was introduced to John Wilkes Booth Booth visited the boardinghouse numerous times as did George Atzerodt and Lewis Powell Booth s co conspirators in the Lincoln assassination Shortly before killing Lincoln Booth spoke with Surratt and handed her a package containing binoculars for one of her tenants John M Lloyd After Lincoln was assassinated Surratt was arrested then tried by a military tribunal the following month along with the other conspirators She was convicted primarily due to the testimonies of Lloyd who said that she told him to have the shooting irons ready and Louis J Weichmann who testified about Surratt s relationships with John Five of the nine judges at her trial asked that Surratt be granted clemency by President Andrew Johnson because of her age and gender Johnson did not grant her clemency though accounts differ as to whether or not he received the clemency request Surratt was hanged on July 7 1865 and later buried in Mount Olivet Cemetery Contents 1 Early life 2 Married life 3 Civil War and widowhood 4 Conspiracy 5 Arrest and incarceration 6 Trial 7 Execution 8 Burial 9 Surviving family and home 10 Portrayals 11 References 12 Sources 13 External linksEarly life EditMary Elizabeth Jenkins baptismal name Maria Eugenia was born to Archibald and Elizabeth Anne nee Webster Jenkins 1 4 5 on a tobacco plantation near the southern Maryland town of Waterloo 6 7 now known as Clinton 1 Sources differ as to whether she was born in 1820 8 or 1823 2 6 7 9 10 11 There is uncertainty as to the month as well but most sources say May 6 7 12 8 She had two brothers John Jenkins born in 1822 and James Jenkins born in 1825 4 5 Her father died in the fall of 1825 when Mary was either two or five years old 1 4 5 and Mary s mother then inherited their property originally part of the His Lordship s Kindness estate 13 Although her father was a nondenominational Protestant and her mother Episcopalian 5 14 15 Surratt was enrolled in a private Roman Catholic girls boarding school the Academy for Young Ladies in Alexandria Virginia on November 25 1835 1 13 Mary s maternal aunt Sarah Latham Webster was a Catholic which may have influenced where she was sent to school 5 Within two years Mary converted to Roman Catholicism 5 14 and adopted the baptismal name of Maria Eugenia 1 16 She stayed at the Academy for Young Ladies for four years 1 15 leaving in 1839 when the school closed 5 16 She remained an observant Catholic for the rest of her life 1 15 Married life EditMary Jenkins met John Harrison Surratt in 1839 when she was 16 or 19 and he was 26 15 17 18 His family had settled in Maryland in the late 1600s 15 17 An orphan he was adopted by Richard and Sarah Neale of Washington D C a wealthy couple who owned a farm 18 19 The Neales divided their farm among their children and Surratt inherited a portion of it 18 19 His background has been described by historian Kate Clifford Larson as questionable 18 and he had fathered at least one child out of wedlock 15 17 18 They wed in August 1840 17 18 20 John converted to Roman Catholicism prior to the marriage 15 17 and the couple may have wed at a Catholic church in Washington D C 17 21 John purchased a mill in Oxon Hill Maryland and the couple moved there 18 The Surratts had three children over the next few years Isaac born June 2 1841 Elizabeth Susanna nicknamed Anna born January 1 1843 and John Jr born April 1844 22 23 24 In 1843 John Surratt purchased from his adoptive father 236 acres 96 ha of land straddling the DC Maryland border a parcel named Foxhall approximately the area between Wheeler Road and Owens Road today 25 Richard Neale died in September 1843 and a month later John purchased 119 acres 48 ha of land adjoining Foxhall 25 John and Mary Surratt and their children moved back to John s childhood home in the District of Columbia in 1845 to help John s mother run the Neale farm 18 But Sarah Neale fell ill and died in August 1845 26 having shortly before her death deeded the remainder of the Neale farm to John 27 Mary Surratt became involved in raising funds to build St Ignatius Church in Oxon Hill it was constructed in 1850 but John was increasingly unhappy with his wife s religious activities 28 His behavior deteriorated over the next few years John drank heavily often failed to pay his debts and his temper was increasingly volatile and violent 22 28 29 In 1851 the Neale farmhouse burned to the ground an escaped family slave was suspected of setting the blaze 30 John found work on the Orange and Alexandria Railroad Mary moved with her children into the home of her cousin Thomas Jenkins in nearby Clinton 31 32 Within a year John purchased 200 acres 81 ha of farmland near what is now Clinton and by 1853 he constructed a tavern and an inn there 33 Mary initially refused to move herself and the children into the new residence She took up residence on the old Neale farm but John sold both the Neale farm and Foxhall in May 1853 to pay debts and she was forced to move back in with him in December 34 With the money he earned from the tavern and sale of his other property on December 6 1853 John Surratt bought a townhouse at 541 H Street 35 in Washington D C and began renting it out to tenants 36 37 38 39 In 1854 John built a hotel as an addition to his tavern and called it Surratt s Hotel 40 A woodprint depicting Surrattsville and the Surratt home printed in 1867 in Harper s Weekly The area around the tavern was officially named Surrattsville that same year 41 Travelers could take Branch Road now Branch Avenue north into Washington D C Piscataway Road southwest to Piscataway or Woodyard Road northeast to Upper Marlboro 42 Although Surrattsville was a well known crossroads 43 44 the community did not amount to much just the tavern a post office inside the tavern a forge and a dozen or so houses some of them log cabins 42 45 46 John Surratt was the hamlet s first postmaster 15 32 47 48 He expanded his family s holdings by selling off land paying down debt and starting new businesses 41 Over the next few years Surratt acquired or built a carriage house corn crib general store forge granary gristmill stable tobacco curing house and wheelwright s shop 15 47 49 The family had enough money to send all three children to nearby Roman Catholic boarding schools 41 Isaac and John Jr attended the school at St Thomas Manor and Anna enrolled at the Academy for Young Ladies Mary s alma mater 50 The family s debts continued to mount however and John Sr s drinking worsened 17 51 John sold another 120 acres 49 ha of land in 1856 to pay debts 52 By 1857 Surratt had sold all but 600 acres 240 ha of the family s formerly extensive holdings 15 which represented about half the 1 200 acres 4 9 km2 he had originally owned 53 54 Most of the family s slaves were also sold to pay debts 50 Still his alcoholism worsened In 1858 Mary wrote a letter to her local priest telling him that Surratt was drunk every single day 48 In 1860 St Thomas Manor School closed and Isaac found work in Baltimore Maryland 50 The Surratts sold off another 100 acres 40 ha of land which enabled Anna to remain at the Academy for Young Ladies and for John Jr to enroll at St Charles College Maryland a Catholic seminary and boarding school in Ellicott s Mills 50 55 The couple also borrowed money that same year against their townhouse in Washington DC and at some point used the property as collateral for a 1 000 loan 36 Civil War and widowhood EditThe American Civil War began on April 12 1861 The border state of Maryland remained part of the United States the Union but the Surratts were Confederate sympathizers 32 43 55 56 and their tavern regularly hosted fellow sympathizers 43 55 57 The Surratt tavern was being used as a safe house for Confederate spies 43 58 and at least one author concludes that Mary had de facto knowledge of this 43 Confederate scout and spy Thomas Nelson Conrad visited Surratt s boarding house before and during the Civil War 59 On March 7 1861 three days after Abraham Lincoln s inauguration as President of the United States Isaac left Maryland and traveled to Texas where he enlisted in the Confederate States Army serving in the 33rd Cavalry or Duff s Partisan Rangers 14th Cavalry Battalion 46 48 60 John Jr quit his studies at St Charles College in July 1861 and became a courier for the Confederate Secret Service moving messages cash and contraband back and forth across enemy lines 61 The Confederate activities in and around Surrattsville drew the attention of the Union government In late 1861 Lafayette C Baker a detective with the Union Intelligence Service and 300 Union soldiers camped in Surrattsville and investigated the Surratts and others for Confederate activities 62 He quickly uncovered evidence of a large Confederate courier network operating in the area but despite some arrests and warnings the courier network remained intact 62 John H Surratt Jr in 1868 Mary Surratt s son was a Confederate courier John Surratt collapsed suddenly and died on either August 25 10 63 or August 26 64 65 in 1862 sources differ as to the date The cause of death was a stroke 46 63 66 The Surratt family affairs were in serious financial difficulties 64 John Jr and Anna both left school to help their mother run the family s remaining farmland and businesses 43 On September 10 1862 John Jr was appointed postmaster of the Surrattsville post office 67 68 69 Lafayette Baker swept through Surrattsville again in 1862 and several postmasters were dismissed for disloyalty 62 but John Jr was not one of them In August 1863 he sought a job in the paymaster s department in the United States Department of War but his application caused federal agents to be suspicious about his family s loyalties to the Union 69 On November 17 1863 he was dismissed as postmaster for disloyalty 70 68 71 The loss of John Jr s job as postmaster caused a financial crisis for the Surratt family 54 When John Sr s estate was probated in late November 1862 the family owned only two middle age male slaves 67 However by 1863 Louis J Weichmann a friend of John Jr from St Charles College observed that the family had six or more slaves working on the property 72 By 1864 Mary Surratt found that her husband s unpaid debts and bad business deals had left her with many creditors 55 Several of her slaves ran away 54 65 73 74 When he was not meeting with Confederate sympathizers in the city her son was selling vegetables to raise cash for the family 75 Mary was tired of running the farm tavern and other businesses without her son s help 76 In the fall of 1864 she began considering moving to her townhouse in the city 36 On October 1 1864 she took possession of the townhouse at 604 H Street NW in Washington D C 54 The gray brick house had four stories and stood on a lot 29 feet 8 8 m wide 100 feet 30 m deep 6 36 77 The first floor which was level with the street had two large rooms used as the kitchen and dining room 6 77 The second floor had a front and back parlor with the room in the rear used as Mary Surratt s bedroom 6 78 The third floor had three rooms two in the front and a larger one at the back 6 79 The fourth floor which was considered an attic had two large and one small room occupied by a servant 6 79 Surratt began moving her belongings into the townhouse that month 80 and on November 1 1864 Anna and John Jr took up residence there 81 Mary Surratt herself moved into the home on December 1 81 That same day she leased the tavern in Surrattsville to a former Washington D C policeman and Confederate sympathizer John M Lloyd for 500 a year 29 81 82 On November 30 December 8 and December 27 Mary Surratt advertised for lodgers in the Daily Evening Star newspaper 29 54 83 84 She had initially said that she wanted only lodgers who were known to her personally or were recommended by friends but in her advertisements she said rooms were available for 4 gentlemen 84 85 Some scholars have raised questions about Surratt s move into the city Historians Kate Larson and Roy Chamlee have noted that although there is no definite proof a case can be made that Surratt made the move into the city in furtherance of her and her son s espionage activities 36 77 For example Larson and Chamlee say that on September 21 1864 John Surratt wrote to Louis J Weichmann observing that the family s plans to move into the city were advancing rapidly on account of certain events having turned up 36 77 perhaps a cryptic reference to either his Confederate activities in general or the conspiracy to kidnap or kill Lincoln 36 Larson has observed that although the move made long term economic sense for Surratt it also in the short term would have meant moving expenses and furnishing up to 10 rooms in the townhouse money that she did not have 77 Chamlee too found little economic reason to move into the city and concluded that it would have been more profitable to rent the H Street boarding house entirely to lodgers 36 During her time in the city Surratt tried to keep her daughter away from what she felt were negative influences 36 Moreover Surratt still owed money on both the tavern and the townhouse and would take out yet another mortgage against the townhouse in January 1865 36 John Jr transferred all his title to the family property to his mother in January 1865 That act may have additional implications A traitor s property could be seized and John s spy knowledge was certainly his motivation for relinquishing his title to the houses and land Mary may have known of his motivation as well or at least suspected If she did she would have possessed at least de facto knowledge of the conspiracy 86 Conspiracy EditMain article Assassination of Abraham Lincoln Surratt s boarding house c 1890 little changed from how it looked during her occupancy Surratt s boarding house which now houses a restaurant is in the Chinatown neighborhood of Washington D C Louis J Weichmann moved into Surratt s boarding house on November 1 1864 87 On December 23 1864 Dr Samuel Mudd introduced John Surratt Jr to John Wilkes Booth 88 89 Booth recruited John Jr into his conspiracy to kidnap Lincoln 88 90 Confederate agents began frequenting the boarding house 88 91 Booth visited the boarding house many times over the next few months 88 92 93 sometimes at Mary s request 88 George Atzerodt and Lewis Powell boarded at the townhouse for short periods 88 Atzerodt a friend of both John Jr and Booth and a co conspirator in the plot 94 to kidnap Lincoln visited the boarding house several times in the first two months of 1865 95 He stayed at the Surratt boarding house in February 1865 for one night or several sources differ but he proved to be a heavy drinker and Surratt evicted him after just a few days 93 96 He continued to visit the townhouse frequently afterward however 97 Powell posed as a Baptist preacher and stayed at the boarding house for three days in March 1865 93 98 David Herold also called at the home several times 91 97 As part of the plot to kidnap Lincoln in March 1865 John Atzerodt and Herold hid two Spencer carbines ammunition and some other supplies at the Surratt tavern in Surrattsville 88 99 100 On April 11 Mary Surratt rented a carriage and drove to the Surratt tavern 101 She said that she made the trip to collect a debt owed her by a former neighbor 101 However according to her tenant John Lloyd Surratt told him to get the shooting irons ready to be picked up 88 102 On April 14 Surratt said that she would once again visit the family tavern in Surrattsville to collect a debt 88 103 Shortly before she left the city Booth visited the boarding house and spoke privately with her 88 104 105 He gave her a package later found to contain binoculars for Lloyd to pick up later that evening 88 104 105 Surratt did so and according to Lloyd again told Lloyd to have the shooting irons ready for pickup and handed him a wrapped package from Booth 88 99 106 107 Booth s plan was to assassinate Lincoln and have Atzerodt kill Vice President Andrew Johnson and Powell kill Secretary of State William H Seward Booth killed Lincoln Atzerodt never attempted to kill Johnson and Powell stabbed Seward repeatedly but failed to murder him 108 As they fled the city after Lincoln s assassination Booth and Herold picked up the rifles and binoculars from Surratt s tavern 88 Lloyd repaired a broken spring on Surratt s wagon before they left 106 109 110 Arrest and incarceration EditAround 2 a m on April 15 1865 members of the District of Columbia police visited the Surratt boarding house seeking John Wilkes Booth and John Surratt 88 111 112 Why the police came to the house is not entirely clear Most historians conclude that Weichmann s friend Department of War employee Daniel Gleason had alerted federal authorities to Confederate activity centered on the Surratt house but that does not explain why police rather than federal agents appeared there 111 Historian Roy Chamlee however says that there is evidence that Gleason did not tell police about his suspicions of Weichmann for several days 113 Within 45 minutes of the attack on Lincoln John Surratt s name had become associated with the attack on Secretary of State William H Seward 114 The police as well as the Provost Marshal s office both had files on John Surratt Jr and knew he was a close friend of Booth 114 It is possible that either James L Maddox property supervisor at Ford s Theatre and a friend of Booth s or actor John Matthews both of whom may have known about the plot to attack government officials mentioned Surratt s name 114 Historian Otto Eisenschiml has argued that David Herold s attempt to steal a horse from John Fletcher may have led them to the Surratt boarding house 115 but at least one other scholar has called the link uncertain 111 Other sources claim that eyewitnesses had identified Booth as Lincoln s attacker and the detectives had information a tip from an unnamed actor and a bartender linking John Jr to Booth 88 116 Mary lied to the detectives that her son had been in Canada for two weeks 88 117 She also did not reveal that she had delivered a package to the tavern on Booth s behalf only hours earlier 118 Lewis Powell was the co conspirator whose untimely arrival at the Surratt boarding house on April 17 convinced many of Mary Surratt s guilt On April 17 a Surratt neighbor told U S military authorities that he overheard one of the Surratt s servants saying that three men had come to the house on the night of Lincoln s assassination and that one of the men had mentioned Booth in a theater 119 120 121 The servant was mistaken about the date as John Surratt Jr had indeed been in Elmira New York on a mission for a Confederate general 122 Other pieces of information also mentioned the boarding house as a key meeting place of the possible conspirators 118 Either Colonel Henry H Wells Provost Marshal head of the military police of the District of Columbia or General Christopher C Augur told Colonel Henry Steel Olcott to arrest everyone in the house 118 119 Federal soldiers visited the Surratt boarding house again late on the evening of April 17 118 123 124 John Jr could not be found but after a search of the house the agents found in Mary s room a picture of Booth hidden behind another photograph pictures of Confederate leaders including Jefferson Davis a pistol a mold for making bullets and percussion caps 120 123 125 As Mary was being arrested for conspiracy to assassinate Lincoln Powell appeared at her door in disguise 126 127 128 Although Surratt denied knowing him 92 127 129 Powell claimed that he was a laborer hired by Surratt to dig a ditch the next morning The discrepancy and Powell s remarkably well dressed and groomed appearance quite unlike a ditch digger prompted his arrest 92 127 129 He was later identified as the man who had attempted to assassinate Secretary of State William Seward 126 After her arrest she was held at an annex to the Old Capitol Prison before being transferred to the Washington Arsenal on April 30 126 130 Two armed guards stood before the door to her cell from the beginning of her imprisonment until her death 131 Her cell while airy and larger than the others 132 was sparsely furnished with a straw mattress table wash basin chair and a bucket 133 134 135 Food was served four times a day always of bread salt pork beef or beef soup and coffee or water 136 The other arrested conspirators had their heads enclosed in a padded canvas bag to prevent a suicide attempt 137 Sources disagree as to whether Surratt was also forced to wear it 132 137 Although the others wore iron manacles on their feet and ankles she was not manacled 132 Rumors to the contrary were raised by reporters at the trial who could not see her or heard the clank of chains about her feet The rumors were repeatedly investigated and denied 138 She began to suffer menstrual bleeding and became weak during her detention 133 134 139 She was given a rocking chair and allowed visits from her daughter Anna 140 141 She and Powell received the most attention from the press 142 The Northern press was also highly critical of her claiming that she had a criminal face due to her small mouth and dark eyes 143 John Surratt Jr was in Elmira at the time of the assassination delivering messages on behalf of a Confederate general 122 After learning of Lincoln s death he fled to Montreal Quebec Canada 144 Trial EditThe trial for the alleged conspirators began on May 9 64 A military tribunal rather than a civilian court was chosen as the venue because government officials thought that its more lenient rules of evidence would enable the court to get to the bottom of what was then perceived by the public as a vast conspiracy 145 All eight alleged conspirators were tried simultaneously 127 Historians have conflicting views regarding Surratt s innocence Historian Laurie Verge commented Only in the case of Dr Samuel Alexander Mudd is there as much controversy as to the guilt or innocence of one of the defendants 146 Lincoln assassination scholar Thomas Reed Turner says that of the eight people accused of plotting to kill Lincoln the case against Surratt remains the most controversial at that time and since 99 A room on the northeast corner of the third floor of the Arsenal was made into a courtroom and the prisoners were brought into the room through a side door which prevented them from passing by or being harassed by spectators 133 147 Surratt was given special considerations during the trial because of her illness and gender In the courtroom she sat apart from the other prisoners 133 148 Sources differ as to whether an armed guard sat on either side of her as was done for other prisoners during the trial 148 149 While the others wore wrist and ankle manacles in the courtroom she did not 132 138 150 She was also permitted a bonnet fan and veil to hide her face from spectators 150 As her illness worsened during the trial she was moved to a larger and more comfortable prison cell 150 Surratt was charged with abetting aiding concealing counseling and harboring her co defendants 151 The federal government initially attempted to find legal counsel for her and the others but almost no attorneys were willing to take the job for fear they would be accused of disloyalty to the Union 152 Surratt retained Reverdy Johnson as her legal counsel 126 153 A member of the military commission trying the conspirators challenged Johnson s right to defend Surratt as he had objected to requiring loyalty oaths from voters in the 1864 presidential election 126 154 After much discussion this objection was withdrawn but damage had been done to his influence and he did not attend most of the court sessions 126 155 Most of Surratt s legal defense was presented by two other lawyers Frederick Aiken and John Wesley Clampitt 126 152 Louis J Weichmann whose testimony proved critical in convicting Mary Surratt The prosecution s strategy was to tie Surratt to the conspiracy Powell s arrival at her boarding house three days after the president s murder was critical evidence against her the government argued 126 The prosecution presented nine witnesses but most of their case rested on the testimony of just two men John M Lloyd and Louis J Weichmann 126 127 Lloyd testified on May 13 and 15 1865 156 on the hiding of the carbines and other supplies at the tavern in March and the two conversations he had with her in which she told him to get the shooting irons ready 99 126 157 Weichmann s testimony was important as it established an intimate relationship between her and the other conspirators 99 127 Weichmann testified May 16 to 19 156 and said that he had resided at the boarding house since November 1864 He had seen or overheard John Jr meeting and talking with Atzerodt Booth and Powell many times over the past four and a half months 129 Weichmann had driven Surratt to the tavern on April 11 and 14 confirmed that she and Lloyd had spent much time in private conversation testified that he saw Booth give her the package of binoculars and attested that she had turned the package over to Lloyd 129 158 Weichmann also testified at length about the Surratt family s ties to the Confederate spy and courier rings operating in the area and their relationships with Atzerodt and Powell 129 He also testified about the December 23 meeting with Booth and John which he also attended and their subsequent meeting with Booth at Booth s room at the National Hotel 129 Finally he told the military tribunal about the general excitement in the boarding house in March 1865 after the failed attempt to kidnap Lincoln 129 Other prosecution witnesses reinforced Weichmann s testimony Lodger Honora Fitzpatrick confirmed visits by Atzerodt Booth and Powell to the boarding house 129 Emma Offut Lloyd s sister in law testified that she saw but did not hear Surratt speaking for long periods of time with Lloyd on April 11 and 14 129 Government agents testified about their arrest of Surratt Powell s arrival and her denial that she knew Powell 129 The fact that Powell sought refuge in the boarding house after Lincoln s murder left a bad impression of her 99 Surratt s refusal or failure to recognize him also weighed against her 127 The agents also testified about their search of the house and the evidence the photographs the weapons etc discovered there 129 Lloyd s testimony was the most important for the prosecution s case 92 158 159 for it indicated that she had played an active role in the conspiracy in the days before Lincoln s death 109 The prosecution rested its case on May 22 129 The defense strategy was to impeach the testimony of the key prosecution witnesses Lloyd and Weichmann It also wished to show that she was loyal to the Union her trips to Surrattsville were of an innocent nature and she had not been aware of Booth s plans 109 There were 31 witnesses who testified for the defense 109 George H Calvert testified that he had pressed Surratt to pay a debt Bennett Gwynn said Surratt had sought payment from John Nothey to satisfy the Calvert debt and Nothey agreed that he had received a letter from Surratt for him to appear at the tavern on April 11 to pay what was owed 109 Several witnesses impugned Lloyd s character by testifying about his alcoholism 109 while others said he was too intoxicated on the day of Lincoln s assassination to remember that day clearly 109 160 Augustus Howell a Confederate agent testified Weichmann was an untrustworthy witness as he had sought to become a Confederate spy himself 160 161 The prosecution had attempted to show that Howell was a Confederate spy and should not be trusted 162 Anna Surratt testified that it was Weichmann who had brought Atzerodt into the boarding house that the photograph of Booth was hers and that she owned photographs of Union political and military leaders 162 163 Anna denied ever overhearing any discussions of disloyal activities or ideas in the boarding house and that Booth s visits to the house were always short 162 Anna explained her mother s failure to recognize Powell by asserting she could not see well 162 164 Augusta Howell a former servant and Honora Fitzpatrick a former slave testified to Mary s poor eyesight as well 160 161 162 164 163 The former servant and the former slave both said Surratt had given Union soldiers food 162 163 Numerous witnesses were called at the end of the defense s case to testify to her loyalty to the Union her deep Christian faith and her kindness 162 164 During the prosecution s rebuttal government lawyers called four witnesses to the stand who testified as to Weichmann s unimpeachable character 162 Johnson and Aiken presented the closing arguments for the defense Johnson attacked the jurisdiction of a military tribunal over civilians as had Mudd s attorney 162 Aiken also challenged the court s jurisdiction 165 He also reiterated that Lloyd and Weichmann were unreliable witnesses and that the evidence against her was all circumstantial 166 The only evidence linking Surratt to the conspiracy to kill Lincoln he said came from Lloyd and Weichmann and neither man was telling the truth 166 Dorothy Kunhardt has written that there is evidence the latter s perjured testimony was suborned by Secretary of War Edwin M Stanton 167 Judge Advocate John Bingham presented the closing argument for the prosecution 166 The military tribunal had jurisdiction he said not only because the court itself had ruled at the beginning of the trials that it did but because they were crimes committed in a military zone during a time of war and against high government officials in carrying out treasonous activities 166 Bingham pointed out that the Surratt boarding house was where the conspiracy was planned and Atzerodt Booth and Powell had all met with Surratt 166 Booth had paid for the rental of the carriage that took Surratt to Surrattsville each time and Bingham said that was evidence that Surratt s trips were critical to the conspiracy 166 Bingham also said that Lloyd s testimony had been corroborated by others and that his unwillingness to reveal the cache of weapons in the tavern was prompted by his subservient tenant relationship to Surratt 166 Bingham concluded by reiterating the government s key point Powell had returned to the Surratt house seeking Surratt and that alone was proof of her guilt 166 Bingham also pointed out for the tribunal that the charge a person was indicted for was irrelevant Under the law of conspiracy if one person carries out a crime all conspirators are guilty of the same crime 166 168 The trial ended on June 28 1865 64 169 Surratt was so ill the last four days of the trial that she was permitted to stay in her cell 169 In the opinion of historian Roy Z Chamlee both legal teams appeared to have flaws in their cases and except for Reverdy Johnson neither team employed highly skilled attorneys 169 The government s case was hindered by its failure to call as a witness the man who shared Lloyd s carriage when he talked with Surratt and could have verified Lloyd s version of the shooting irons story or Metropolitan Police Chief A C Richards whose investigation had had the most success in the early days of the investigation 169 The government did not fully investigate Booth s meetings with Surratt at noon or the evening of the murder and its questioning and cross examination of witnesses was poorly prepared and weak 169 What is most important according to historian Roy Z Chamber Jr is that the government had botched the attempt to apprehend John Jr 169 The defense s case too had a problem The defense never followed up on inconsistencies in Weichmann s chronology of Mary s last visit to the tavern which could have undermined Weichmann s entire credibility 169 A newspaper drawing of Surratt receiving comfort from one of the priests permitted to visit her in her prison cell The military tribunal considered guilt and sentencing on June 29 and 30 169 Surratt s guilt was the second last to be considered as her case had problems of evidence and witness reliability 169 The sentence was handed down on June 30 170 The military tribunal found her guilty on all charges but two 171 A death sentence required six of the nine votes of the judges 170 172 Surratt was sentenced to death the first woman executed by the federal government 6 24 The sentence was announced publicly on July 5 173 174 175 When Powell learned of his sentence he declared that she was completely innocent of all charges 176 The night before the execution Surratt s priests and Anna Surratt both visited Powell and elicited from him a strong statement declaring Mary innocent Although it was delivered to Captain Christian Rath who was overseeing the execution Powell s statement had no effect on anyone with authority to prevent Surratt s death 177 George Atzerodt bitterly condemned her implicating her even further in the conspiracy 176 Powell s was the only statement by any conspirator exonerating Surratt 177 Anna Surratt pleaded repeatedly for her mother s life with Judge Advocate General Joseph Holt but he refused to consider clemency 64 She also attempted to see President Andrew Johnson several times to beg for mercy but was not granted permission to see him 64 Five of the nine judges signed a letter asking President Johnson to give Surratt clemency and commute her sentence to life in prison because of her age and sex 170 178 Holt did not deliver the recommendation to Johnson until July 5 two days before Surratt and the others were to hang 170 Johnson signed the order for execution but did not sign the order for clemency 170 178 Johnson later said he never saw the clemency request Holt said he showed it to Johnson who refused to sign it 64 170 Johnson according to Holt said in signing the death warrant that she had kept the nest that hatched the egg 178 Execution EditConstruction of the gallows for the hanging of the conspirators condemned to death began immediately on July 5 after the execution order was signed 173 It was constructed in the south part of the Arsenal courtyard was 12 feet 3 7 m high and about 20 square feet 1 9 m2 in size 179 Rath who oversaw the preparations for the executions made the nooses 180 Tired of making nooses and thinking that the government would never hang a woman he made Surratt s noose the night before the execution with five loops rather than the regulation s seven 177 180 He tested the nooses that night by tying them to a tree limb and a bag of buckshot and then tossing the bag to the ground the ropes held 180 Civilian workers did not want to dig the graves out of superstitious fear so Rath asked for volunteers among the soldiers at the Arsenal and received more help than he needed 180 At noon on July 6 Surratt was informed she would be hanged the next day She wept profusely 181 She was joined by two Catholic priests Jacob Walter and B F Wiget 140 182 and her daughter Anna 179 Father Jacob remained with her almost until her death 183 Her menstrual problems had worsened and she was in such pain and suffered from such severe cramps that the prison doctor gave her wine and medication 140 184 She repeatedly asserted her innocence 140 She spent the night on her mattress weeping and moaning in pain and grief ministered to by the priests 177 185 Anna left her mother s side at 8 A M on July 7 and went to the White House to beg for her mother s life one last time 185 Her entreaty rejected she returned to the prison and her mother s cell at about 11 A M 186 The soldiers began testing the gallows about 11 25 A M the sound of the tests unnerved all the prisoners 187 Shortly before noon Mary Surratt was taken from her cell and then allowed to sit in a chair near the entrance to the courtyard 187 The heat in the city that day was oppressive By noon it had already reached 92 3 F 33 5 C 188 The guards ordered all visitors to leave at 12 30 P M 186 When she was forced to part from her mother Anna s hysterical screams of grief could be heard throughout the prison 189 190 Clampitt and Aiken had not finished trying to save their client however On the morning of July 7 they asked a District of Columbia court for a writ of habeas corpus arguing that the military tribunal had no jurisdiction over their client 191 192 193 The court issued the writ at 3 A M and it was served on General Winfield Scott Hancock 191 192 194 Hancock was ordered to produce Surratt by 10 A M 194 General Hancock sent an aide to General John F Hartranft who commanded the Old Capitol Prison ordering him not to admit any US marshal as that would prevent the marshal from serving a similar writ on Hartranft 191 Johnson was informed that the court had issued the writ and promptly cancelled it at 11 30 A M under the authority granted to him by the Habeas Corpus Suspension Act of 1863 191 193 195 General Hancock and United States Attorney General James Speed personally appeared in court and informed the judge of the cancellation of the writ 194 Aftermath of the execution of Mary Surratt Lewis Powell David Herold and George Atzerodt on July 7 1865 On July 7 1865 at 1 15 P M 196 197 a procession led by General Hartranft escorted the four condemned prisoners through the courtyard and up the steps to the gallows 190 196 Each prisoner s ankles and wrists were bound by manacles 198 Surratt led the way 190 199 wearing a black bombazine dress black bonnet and black veil 200 201 More than 1 000 people including government officials members of the US armed forces friends and family of the accused official witnesses and reporters watched 202 General Hancock limited attendance to those who had a ticket and only those who had a good reason to be present were given a ticket 203 Most of those present were military officers and soldiers as fewer than 200 tickets had been printed 199 Alexander Gardner who had photographed the body of Booth and taken portraits of several of the male conspirators while they were imprisoned aboard naval ships photographed the execution for the government 203 Hartranft read the order for their execution 196 Surratt either weak from her illness or swooning in fear perhaps both had to be supported by two soldiers and her priests 190 199 The condemned were seated in chairs Surratt almost collapsing into hers 201 She was seated to the right of the others the traditional seat of honor in an execution 180 White cloth was used to bind their arms to their sides and their ankles and thighs together 197 198 The cloths around Surratt s legs were tied around her dress below the knees 197 Each person was ministered to by a member of the clergy From the scaffold Powell said Mrs Surratt is innocent She doesn t deserve to die with the rest of us 204 Fathers Jacob and Wiget prayed over her and held a crucifix to her lips 201 205 About 16 minutes elapsed from the time the prisoners entered the courtyard until they were ready for execution 201 A white bag was placed over the head of each prisoner after the noose was put in place 198 Surratt s bonnet was removed and the noose put around her neck by a U S Secret Service officer 197 201 206 She complained that the bindings about her arms hurt and the officer preparing said Well it won t hurt long 207 Finally the prisoners were asked to stand and move forward a few feet to the nooses 201 206 The chairs were removed 206 Her last words spoken to a guard as he moved her forward to the drop were Please don t let me fall 204 207 Surratt and the others stood on the drop for about 10 seconds 200 and then Captain Rath clapped his hands 180 197 206 Four soldiers of Company F of the 14th Veteran Reserves knocked out the supports holding the drops in place and the condemned fell 198 208 Surratt who had moved forward enough to barely step onto the drop lurched forward and slid partway down the drop her body snapping tight at the end of the rope swinging back and forth 180 She appeared to die relatively quickly with little struggle 209 Atzerodt s stomach heaved once and his legs quivered then he was still 210 211 Herold and Powell struggled for nearly five minutes strangling to death 180 210 211 Burial Edit Grave of Mary Surratt with modern headstone at Mount Olivet Cemetery Each body was inspected by a physician to ensure that death had occurred 198 202 210 The bodies of the executed were allowed to hang for about 30 minutes 202 206 212 and soldiers began to cut them down at 1 53 p m 198 A corporal raced to the top of the gallows and cut down Atzerodt s body which fell to the ground with a thud 198 He was reprimanded and the other bodies were cut down more gently 198 Herold s body was next followed by Powell s 198 Surratt s body was cut down at 1 58 p m 198 As Surratt s body was cut loose her head fell forward A soldier joked She makes a good bow and was rebuked by an officer for his poor use of humor 24 198 Upon examination the military surgeons determined that no one s neck had been broken by the fall 24 198 The manacles and cloth bindings were removed but not the white execution masks and the bodies were placed into the pine coffins 198 202 The name of each person was written on a piece of paper by acting Assistant Adjutant R A Watts 206 and inserted in a glass vial which was placed into the coffin 202 The coffins were buried against the prison wall in shallow graves just a few feet from the gallows 202 A white picket fence marked the burial site 213 The night that she died a mob attacked the Surratt boarding house and began stripping it of souvenirs until the police stopped them 207 Anna Surratt unsuccessfully asked for her mother s body for four years 214 In 1867 the War Department decided to tear down the portion of the Washington Arsenal where the bodies of Surratt and the other executed conspirators lay 215 On October 1 1867 the coffins were disinterred and reburied in Warehouse No 1 at the Arsenal with a wooden marker placed at the head of each burial vault 213 215 Booth s body lay alongside them 213 In February 1869 Edwin Booth asked Johnson for the body of his brother 215 Johnson agreed to turn the body over to the Booth family and on February 8 Surratt s body was turned over to the Surratt family 213 214 216 217 She was buried in Mount Olivet Cemetery in Washington D C on February 9 1869 216 217 Lloyd is buried 100 yards 91 m from her grave in the same cemetery 218 Surviving family and home Edit Like Mudds Surratts Want Name Cleared The Atlanta Journal Constitution Sunday September 2 1979 Anna Surratt moved from the townhouse on H Street and lived with friends for a few years ostracized from society 218 She married William Tonry a government clerk 218 They lived in poverty for a while after he was dismissed from his job but in time he became a professor of chemistry in Baltimore and the couple became better off 218 The strain of her mother s death left Anna mentally unbalanced and she suffered from periods of extreme fear that bordered on insanity 218 She died in 1904 216 219 After the dismissal of charges against him John Jr married and he and his family lived in Baltimore near his sister Anna 218 Isaac Surratt also returned to the United States and lived in Baltimore 218 He died unmarried in 1907 216 220 Isaac and Anna were buried on either side of their mother in Mount Olivet Cemetery 218 John Jr was buried in Baltimore in 1916 218 In 1968 a new headstone with a brass plaque replaced the old defaced headstone over Mary Surratt s grave 221 Mary Surratt s boarding house still stands and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2009 222 Those interested in Mary Surratt formed the Surratt Society 218 The Surrattsville tavern and house are historical sites run today by the Surratt Society as a historic house museum 180 The Washington Arsenal is now Fort Lesley J McNair 180 Portrayals EditSurratt was portrayed by actress Virginia Gregg in the 1956 episode The Mary Surratt Case telecast as part of the NBC anthology series The Joseph Cotten Show 223 She was portrayed by Robin Wright in the 2011 film The Conspirator which was directed by Robert Redford 224 References Edit a b c d e f g h Cashin p 287 a b Steers 2010 p 516 Larson p xi a b c Trindal p 13 a b c d e f g Larson p 11 a b c d e f g h i Griffin p 152 a b c Buchanan p 60 a b Surratt Mary in The New Encyclopaedia Britannica p 411 Johnson p 96 a b Heidler Heidler and Coles p 1909 Phelps p 709 Van Doren and McHenry p 1010 a b Trindal p 14 a b Surratt Mary E Jenkins 1823 1865 in Women in the American Civil War p 532 a b c d e f g h i j Leonard p 43 a b Trindal p 17 a b c d e f g Cashin p 288 a b c d e f g h Larson p 12 a b Trindal p 19 Trindal p 20 One source says it is not clear that they married in a Catholic church See Jampoler p 25 Another claims they were married in a private home on Good Hope Road in Prince George s County Maryland See Trindal p 20 a b Steers 2001 p 138 40 Trindal p 20 22 a b c d Gillespie p 68 a b Trindal p 22 Trindal p 25 Larson p 12 13 a b Larson p 13 a b c Kauffmann p 167 Larson p 14 Larson p 16 a b c Surratt Mary Eugenia Jenkins 1817 1865 in Historical Dictionary of Reconstruction p 217 Larson p 17 Larson p 18 With the imposition of the quadrant street naming system and other changes to the streets in the District of Columbia the current address of the townhouse is 604 H Street NW a b c d e f g h i j Chamlee p 165 Kauffmann p 412 Griffin p 153 At least one source says that the property was deeded to John as payment for debt and that he did not purchase it See Steers 2010 p 520 Phillips p 87 a b c Larson p 20 a b Oldroyd Osborn Hamiline May 21 2008 Oldroyd p 245 ISBN 9780722288351 Retrieved July 7 2011 a b c d e f Steers 2001 p 80 Griffin p 148 Harris p 193 Townsend 1886 p 42 a b c Townsend George Alfred December 6 2006 Townsend 1874 p 712 Retrieved July 7 2011 a b Busch p 17 a b c Steers 2010 p 517 Larson p 20 21 a b c d Larson p 21 Kauffmann p 436 Trindal p 43 Trindal p 43 Commire and Klezmer p 23 a b c d e James p 410 a b c d Cashin p 289 Gamber p 96 Morseberger and Morsberger p 167 Larson p 24 Kauffmann p 155 Conrad Thomas Nelson The Rebel Scout Washington DC The National Publishing Co 1904 p 153 154 Jampoler p 23 Griffin p 154 Cashin p 289 290 Chamlee p 531 Evans p 339 340 a b c Chamlee p 102 a b Larson p 25 a b c d e f g Schroeder Lein and Zuczek p 286 a b Zanca p 20 Trindal p 247 a b Trindal p 65 a b Oldroyd Osborn Hamiline October 9 2007 Oldroyd p 156 ISBN 9780722288351 Retrieved July 7 2011 a b Kauffmann p 433 Steers 2001 p 81 Surratt Mary E Jenkins 1823 1865 in Women in the American Civil War p 533 Larson p 37 38 Zanca p 26 Steers 2001 p 138 Maryland adopted a new constitution on November 1 1864 which emancipated all slaves in that state Chamlee p 101 Leonard p 88 Steers 2010 p 518 a b c d e Larson p 39 Larson p 39 40 a b Larson p 40 Steers 2001 p 139 a b c Oldroyd Osborn Hamiline October 9 2007 Oldroyd p 159 ISBN 9780722288351 Retrieved July 7 2011 Larson p 38 Trindal p 86 Larson p 42 a b Chamlee p 164 165 Stern p 42 Chaconas Joan L 2003 The Trial The Assassination of President Lincoln and the Trial of the Conspirators Lexington Kentucky University Press of Kentucky p 63 Trindal p 85 Weichmann and Richards p 28 Chamlee p xi a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Verge p 53 Trindal p 276 Griffin p 155 Jones p 239 Steers 2007 p 171 a b Evans p 288 a b c d Steers 2010 p 519 a b c Heidler and Heidler p 1910 Ownsbey p 55 Leonard p 46 Busch p 56 Griffin p 186 Gamber p 109 Ownsbey p 54 a b Rehnquist p 215 Ownsbey p 41 51 52 a b c d e f Turner p 155 Griffin p 212 Kauffmann p 187 188 a b Larson p 77 Steers 2010 p 349 Kauffmann p 208 Trindal p 161 Larson p 130 Larson p 83 a b Larson p 83 84 a b Swanson p 19 a b Swanson p 22 Trindal p 157 Wallenfeldt Jeff April 7 2018 Assassination of Abraham Lincoln Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved May 15 2018 a b c d e f g Verge p 56 Leonard p 97 Larson p 86 a b c Turner p 156 Steers 2010 p 173 Chamlee p 10 a b c Chamlee p 11 Eisenschiml p 272 273 Steers 2010 p 173 519 Chamlee p 19 Busch p 22 Pittman p 140 Trindal p 120 Larson p 93 a b c d Steers 2010 p 174 a b Turner p 157 a b Trindal p 267 Larson p 98 Steers 2010 p 301 a b Steers 2010 p 177 a b Verge p 52 53 Pittman p 122 Chamlee p 345 Swanson p 193 Pittman p 123 a b c d e f g h i j Verge p 54 a b c d e f g Cashin p 291 Ownsbey p 137 a b c d e f g h i j k l Verge p 55 Trindal p 130 Hartranft Steers and Holzer p 22 Steers 2001 p 209 Swanson and Weinberg p 15 Jampoler p 18 Watts p 87 Ownsbey p 108 a b c d Watts p 88 a b c d Trindal p 147 a b Weichmann and Richards p 318 Roscoe p 251 Ownsbey p 110 a b Klement p 35 Miller p 251 252 a b Turner p 158 159 Steers 2010 p 512 a b c d Goodrich p 274 Trindal p 192 Kunhardt and Kunhardt p 198 Larson p xii Surratt traveled to the United Kingdom in September 1865 and then Rome He joined the Papal Zouaves but in April 1866 he was recognized and arrested on November 7 1866 He escaped again and traveled to Alexandria Egypt Arrested again he was returned to the US and tried in June 1867 His first trial ended in a hung jury and he was indicted in the District of Columbia for treason Because the statute of limitations had run out on the charges the indictments were dismissed In December 1870 Surratt admitted publicly in a lecture in Rockville Maryland that he was part of Booth s plan to kidnap Lincoln which made him culpable for the assassination that occurred a month later See Chaconas p 62 64 Boritt and Forness p 351 Verge p 51 Watts p 89 90 Federal Writers Project p 326 a b Jampoler p 21 Watts p 91 a b c Chamlee p 440 Watts p 92 a b Boritt and Forness p 352 Heidler and Heidler p 1076 Larson p 144 Steers 2001 p 221 Larson p 146 Chamlee p 270 Trindal p 150 a b Leonard p 109 George Atzerodt made a statement to James McPhail the civilian Provost Marshal of Baltimore on May 1 1865 McPhail accompanied by Atzerodt s brother in law John L Smith interviewed Atzerodt who revealed that Mudd was much more intimately involved in the kidnap and murder plots against Lincoln than other evidence suggested Confirming some of Lloyd s testimony Atzerodt also said that Surratt had gone to the tavern on April 15 specifically to retrieve the weapons hidden there a month earlier by Atzerodt Herold and John Jr However McPhail turned the statement over to Atzerodt s attorney William E Doster rather than to John F Hartranft Doster perhaps realizing how damaging it was did nothing with it The testimony was only briefly and tangentially raised at the trial In 1977 historian Joan Chaconas contacted Doster s grandson who showed her papers containing Atzerodt s statement Had it been revealed it most likely would have sent Dr Samuel Mudd to the gallows For information on the statement its loss and its rediscovery see Steers and Holzer p 26 28 quote on p 27 For information on McPhail s role as provost marshal see Fishel p 335 a b Leonard p 108 Griffin p 349 a b c Leonard p 118 a b Verge p 56 57 a b c d e f g h i Verge p 57 a b c Leonard p 120 a b c Leonard p 119 Verge p 57 58 a b c d e f g h i Verge p 58 Kunhardt and Kunhardt p 201 Steers Let the Stain of Innocent Blood 2010 p 177 179 a b c d e f g h i Chamlee p 434 a b c d e f Steers Let the Stain of Innocent Blood 2010 p 189 Surratt was found not guilty of harboring and concealing assassination conspirators Samuel Arnold and Michael O Laughlen She was also found not guilty of conspiring with Edmund Spangler See Verge p 58 Watts p 99 100 a b Cashin p 299 Jordan p 177 It has been alleged by various sources that the federal government did not intend to execute her but to lure John Jr out of hiding to defend her Historian Joan Cashin pointed out that the scant two days between her sentencing and execution did not provide enough time to lure him out of hiding See Cashin p 299 Swanson p 365 a b Chamlee p 454 456 a b c d Chamlee p 462 a b c Kunhardt and Kunhardt p 204 a b Leonard p 131 a b c d e f g h i j Swanson and Weinberg p 31 Goodrich p 272 Leonard p 130 Steers 2010 p 567 Chamlee p 461 a b Goodrich p 276 a b Goodrich p 279 a b Chamlee p 469 Trindal p 200 Goodrich p 281 Trindal p 220 a b c d Chamlee p 470 a b c d Watts p 101 a b Trindal p 211 a b Steers 2010 p 4 a b c Jordan p 178 Article I Section 9 of the United States Constitution permits the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus during times of rebellion or whenever the public safety requires it On April 27 1861 President Lincoln issued an executive order suspending the writ of habeas corpus Although successfully challenged in the courts Ex parte Milligan 71 U S 2 1866 Congress passed the Habeas Corpus Suspension Act of 1863 affirming Lincoln s executive order This act gave Johnson the power to suspend the DC criminal court s writ See Latimer p 41 42 a b c Jordan p 179 a b c d e Leonard p 132 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Swanson and Weinberg p 29 a b c Swanson p 364 a b Pitman p 435 a b c d e f Chamlee p 471 a b c d e f Leonard p 134 a b Swanson and Weinberg p 24 a b Kunhardt and Kunhardt pp 210 211 Zanca p 55 a b c d e f Watts p 102 a b c Swanson p 365 Leonard p 133 134 END OF THE ASSASSINS Execution of Mrs Surratt Payne Herrold and Atzeroth Their Demeanor on Thursday Night and Friday Morning Attempt to Release Mrs Surratt on a Writ of Habeas Corpus Argument of Counsel Order of the President SCENES AT THE SCAFFOLD The Four Hang Together and Die Simultaneously Interesting Incidents Excitement in Washington Order and Quiet in the City THE HABEAS CORPUS SCENES AT THE OLD CAPITOL MRS SURRATT WORDING OF THE PETITION THE RETURN GEN HANCOCK APPEARED PRESIDENT S INDORSEMENT LEWIS PAYNE DAVID E HERROLD GEORGE A ATZEROTH THE MORNING OF THE DAY STATEMENTS OF PAYNE DEMEANOR OF THE CONDEMNED THE SCAFFOLD THE PROCESSION OF DEATH REMARKS AND PRAYERS OF THE ATTENDING CLERGY THE LAST PAINFUL SCENE The New York Times The New York Times September 17 2018 Archived from the original on September 17 2018 Retrieved January 28 2020 a b c Kauffmann p 374 a b Katz p 184 Kunhardt and Kunhardt p 214 a b c d Ownsbey p 152 a b Trindal p 230 a b c Steers 2001 p 257 a b c d Steers 2010 p 513 a b Johnson p 420 a b c d e f g h i j Chamlee p 556 Trindal p 231 Isaac D Surratt Dead PDF The New York Times November 4 1907 Retrieved March 4 2020 Bucklee p 441 Mary E Surratt Boarding House National Register of Historic Places Registration Form National Park Service United States Department of the Interior May 19 2009 Accessed April 15 2011 Kuhn p 160 Hornaday Ann April 14 2011 Robert Redford s The Conspirator and the lost Union cause The Washington Post Retrieved May 16 2018 Sources Edit American Civil War portalBoritt G S and Forness Norman O The Historian s Lincoln Pseudohistory Psychohistory and History Urbana Ill University of Illinois Press 1996 Bryer Jackson R New Essays on F Scott Fitzgerald s Neglected Stories Columbia Mo University of Missouri Press 1996 Buchanan Paul D The American Women s Rights Movement A Chronology of Events and of Opportunities From 1600 to 2008 Boston Branden Books 2009 Bucklee Sally Mitchell A Church and Its Village St Philip s Episcopal Church Laurel Maryland Baltimore Md Gateway Press 2001 Busch Francis X Enemies of the state An Account of the Trials of the Mary Eugenia Surrat Case the Teapot Dome Cases the Alphonse Capone Case and the Rosenburg Case Indianapolis Bobbs Merrill 1954 Cashin Joan The War Was You and Me Civilians in the American Civil War Princeton N J Princeton Univ Press 2002 Chaconas Joan L John H Surratt Jr In The Trial The Assassination of President Lincoln and the Trial of the Conspirators Lexington Ky University Press of Kentucky 2003 Chamlee Jr Roy Z Lincoln s Assassins A Complete Account of Their Capture Trial and Punishment Jefferson N C McFarland amp Co 1989 Commire Anne and Klezmer Deborah Women in World History A Biographical Encyclopedia Waterford Conn Yorkin Publications 2001 DeWitt David Miller The Judicial Murder of Mary E Surratt J Murphy amp Co 1894 Eisenschiml Otto Why Was Lincoln Murdered New York Grosset amp Dunlap 1937 Evans Eli N Judah P Benjamin the Jewish Confederate New York Simon and Schuster 1989 Federal Writers Project Washington D C A Guide to the Nation s Capital New York Hastings House 1942 Fishel Edwin C Secret War for the Union New York Houghton Mifflin 1996 Gamber Wendy The Boardinghouse in Nineteenth Century America Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 2007 Gillespie L Kay Executed Women of the 20th and 21st Centuries Lanham Md University Press of America 2009 Goodrich Thomas The Darkest Dawn Lincoln Booth and the Great American Tragedy Bloomington Ind Indiana University Press 2005 Griffin John Chandler Abraham Lincoln s Execution Gretna La Pelican Publishing Co 2006 Harris Thomas Mealey Assassination of Lincoln A History of the Great Conspiracy Trial of the Conspirators by a Military Commission and a Review of the Trial of John H Surratt Boston American Citizen Company 1892 Hartranft John F Steers Edward and Holzer Harold The Lincoln Assassination Conspirators Their Confinement and Execution As Recorded in the Letterbook of John Frederick Hartranft Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 2009 Heidler David Stephen Heidler Jeanne T and Coles David J Encyclopedia of the American Civil War A Political Social and Military History New York W W Norton amp Co 2000 Isacsson Alfred The Travels Arrest and Trial of John H Surratt Middletown N Y Vestigium Press 2003 James Edward T Notable American Women A Biographical Dictionary Cambridge Mass Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 2004 Jampoler Andrew C A The Last Lincoln Conspirator John Surratt s Flight From the Gallows Annapolis Md Naval Institute Press 2008 Johnson Andrew The Papers of Andrew Johnson September 1868 April 1869 Paul H Bergeron ed Knoxville Tenn University of Tennessee Press 1999 Johnson Scott Patrick Trials of the Century An Encyclopedia of Popular Culture and the Law Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO 2011 Jones John P Dr Mudd and the Lincoln Assassination The Case Reopened Conshohocken Pa Combined Books 1995 Jordan David M Winfield Scott Hancock A Soldier s Life Bloomington Ind Indiana University Press 1988 Katz D Mark Witness to an Era The Life and Photographs of Alexander Gardner The Civil War Lincoln and the West New York Viking 1991 Kauffman Michael W American Brutus New York Random House 2004 ISBN 0 375 50785 X Klement Frank Lincoln s Critics The Copperheads of the North Shippensburg W Va White Mane Books 1999 Kuhn Annette Queen of the B s Ida Lupino Behind the Camera Westport Conn Greenwood Press 1995 Kunhardt Philip B Kunhardt Peter W 2008 Looking for Lincoln The Making of an American Icon New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 9780307267139 Larson Kate Clifford The Assassin s Accomplice Mary Surratt and the Plot to Kill Abraham Lincoln Basic Books 2008 ISBN 978 0 465 03815 2 Latimer Christopher P Civil Liberties and the State A Documentary and Reference Guide Santa Barbara Calif Greenwood 2011 Leonard Elizabeth D Lincoln s Avengers Justice Revenge and Reunion After the Civil War New York Norton 2004 MacHenry Robert Liberty s Women Springfield Mass G C Merriam Co 1980 Miller Edward A Lincoln s Abolitionist General The Biography of David Hunter Columbia S C University of South Carolina Press 1997 Morseberger Robert E and Morsberger Katharine M Lew Wallace Militant Romantic New York McGraw Hill 1980 Oldroyd Osborn H The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln Flight Pursuit Capture and Punishment of the Conspirators Washington D C O H Oldroyd 1901 Ownsbey Betty J Alias Paine Lewis Thorthon Powell the Mystery Man of the Lincoln Conspiracy Jefferson N C McFarland amp Company 2006 Phelps Shirelle World of Criminal Justice Vol 2 N Z Detroit Gale Group 2001 Phillips Larissa Women Civil War Spies of the Confederacy New York Rosen Publishing Group 2004 Pittman Benn The Assassination of President Lincoln and the Trial of the Conspirators Cincinnati Moore Wilstach amp Baldwin 1865 Rehnquist William H All the Laws But One Civil Liberties in Wartime New York Vintage Books 2000 Roscoe Theodore The Web of Conspiracy The Complete Story of the Men Who Murdered Abraham Lincoln Englewood Cliffs N J Prentice Hall 1959 Sachsman David B Rushing S Kittrell and Morris Roy Seeking A Voice Images of Race and Gender in the 19th Century Press West Lafayette Ind Purdue University Press 2009 Schroeder Lein Glenna R and Zuczek Richard Andrew Johnson A Biographical Companion Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO 2001 Steers Jr Edward Blood on the Moon Lexington University Press of Kentucky 2001 Steers Jr Edward Let the Stain of Innocent Blood Be Removed from the Land The Military Trial of the Lincoln Conspirators In The Lincoln Assassination Crime and Punishment Myth and Memory Harold Holzer Craig L Symonds and Frank J Williams eds New York Fordham University Press 2010 Steers Jr Edward The Lincoln Assassination Encyclopedia New York Harper Perennial 2010 Steers Jr Edward Lincoln Legends Myths Hoaxes and Confabulations Associated With Our Greatest President Lexington Ky University Press of Kentucky 2007 Steers Jr Edward and Holzer Harold The Lincoln Assassination Conspirators Their Confinement and Execution as Recorded in the Letterbook of John Frederick Hartranft Baton Rouge La Louisiana State University Press 2009 Stern Philip Van Doren An End to Valor The Last Days of the Civil War Boston Houghton Mifflin 1958 Surratt Mary In The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Chicago Encyclopaedia Britannica 1998 Surratt Mary E Jenkins 1823 1865 In Women in the American Civil War Lisa Tendrich Frank ed Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO 2008 Surratt Mary Eugenia Jenkins 1817 1865 In Historical Dictionary of Reconstruction Hans Louis Trefousse ed New York Greenwood Press 1991 Swanson James L Manhunt The Twelve Day Chase for Lincoln s Killer New York HarperCollins 2007 ISBN 0 06 051850 2 Swanson James L and Weinberg Daniel R Lincoln s Assassins Their Trial and Execution New York Harper Perennial 2008 Townsend George Alfred The Life Crime and Capture of John Wilkes Booth New York Dick and Fitzgerald Publishers 1886 Townsend George Alfred Washington Outside and Inside A Picture and a Narrative of the Origin Growth Excellencies Abuses Beauties and Personages of Our Governing City Hartford Conn S M Betts amp Co 1874 Trindal Elizabeth Steger Mary Surratt An American Tragedy Pelican Pub Co 1996 ISBN 1 56554 185 5 Turner Thomas Reed Beware the People Weeping Public Opinion and the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1982 Van Doren Charles Lincoln and McHenry Robert Webster s American Biographies Springfield Mass Merriam Webster 1984 Verge Laurie Mary Elizabeth Surratt In The Trial The Assassination of President Lincoln and the Trial of the Conspirators Lexington Ky University Press of Kentucky 2003 Watts R A Trial and Execution of the Lincoln Conspirators Michigan History Magazine 6 1 1922 Weichmann Louis J and Richards A C A True History of the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln and of the Conspiracy of 1865 New York Knopf 1975 Zanca Kenneth J The Catholics and Mrs Mary Surratt How They Responded to the Trial and Execution of the Lincoln Conspirator University Press of America 2008 ISBN 0 7618 4023 0External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mary Surratt Anna Surratt daughter Surratt Society and Museum Read through the Lincoln Assassination Papers about evidence against Mary Surratt Historic Marker at the Surratt Boarding House Brief Mary Surratt Biography written by a retired teacher especially for students and schools Blattman Elissa 2013 The First Woman Executed by the U S Government National Women s History Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mary Surratt amp oldid 1141050196, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.