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Contrary to Dominant Folklore, Evidence Indicates that, Like Oswald, John Wilkes Booth Was Part of Wider Conspiracy
In popular lore, John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of Abraham Lincoln, was the first lone deranged gunman—preceding Lee Harvey Oswald.
A stage actor from a famous theatrical family from Maryland and Confederate sympathizer who was as “handsome as a Greek God,”[1] Booth shot Lincoln in the back of the head while Lincoln and his wife, Mary Todd Lincoln, were watching the play “Our American Cousin” at Ford’s Theatre on April 14, 1865, a few nights after the surrender of Confederate General Robert E. Lee.
After shooting Lincoln, Booth jumped to the stage, breaking his leg, while proclaiming “sic semper tyrannis” (“thus always to tyrants”). He stabbed orchestra leader William Withers, Jr., before escaping the theater through a side door to a waiting carriage. Booth then escaped the city, eventually winding his way to a farmhouse in Northern Virginia where he was tracked down and supposedly killed 12 days later.
Booth, who was 26 at the time, allegedly conceived of his plot to kill Lincoln after he heard Lincoln give a speech expressing support for Black suffrage in the waning days of the Civil War. Allegedly, Booth said of Lincoln’s speech: “That means n*gger citizenship. Now, by God, I’ll put him through.”
This story told to schoolchildren for generations, like so many other fables about the American past, is simply not true.
Booth, like Oswald, was not a deranged lone assassin who conceived of the plot in reaction to a particular speech. Rather, Booth appears to have acted as part of a much wider conspiracy involving Lincoln’s Secretary of War, Edwin Stanton, eight other co-conspirators, and more than 70 government officials and businessmen, some of them connected to the Confederate secret service whom Booth was in contact with when he traveled before the assassination to Montreal, Canada.
On the night of the assassination, Stanton rebuffed Lincoln’s request to have the former’s chief aide, Thomas T. Eckert, work as his bodyguard at Ford’s Theatre. Instead, Lincoln was protected by John F. Parker of the Metropolitan Police, who had been reprimanded for drinking on the job and other misconduct, and was never punished for failing in his duties.[2]
When Booth’s diary was recovered by Stanton’s troops, it was delivered to Stanton, who ripped out 18 pages that were not made available to later investigators. These pages were allegedly later found in the attic of one of Stanton’s descendants, Joseph Lynch, though nobody has actually seen them.[3]
In a 1937 book, Otto Eisenschiml presents Stanton, a former lawyer from Steubenville, Ohio, as a man of “Machiavellian finesse,” who deliberately prolonged the Civil War and may have plotted Lincoln’s downfall to gain more personal power.
David Balsiger and Charles Sellier, Jr., wrote in The Lincoln Conspiracy that, “under the Radical Republicans Plan for Reconstruction that Stanton supported but Lincoln did not, the War Department and the Secretary of War would be vital in military occupation of the conquered states. Military governors and districts, all under Stanton [who was Secretary of War] would make him the most powerful man in the land. Finally, Stanton could advance his own plans for becoming President through the power and publicity he would receive as the nation’s most influential man.”[4]
After Andrew Johnson became President, Stanton tried to orchestrate Johnson’s impeachment, though the Senate rejected the impeachment by one vote—35 for and 18 against—thus, failing to gain the two-thirds majority required by Article 2 of the U.S. Constitution.[5] Stanton’s scheming consequently was for naught and he never became president.
Some writers suggest that Stanton and Booth were bankrolled by a cabal of international bankers led by the Rothschild’s who wanted Lincoln removed because of his opposition to a Central Bank.[6]
During the Civil War, Lincoln had refused to borrow money from international bankers—who had helped provoke the war by bankrolling white supremacist groups in the South—and instead found support from Russia and created “greenbacks” (named for their ink color) which were printed by the U.S. Treasury.
In 1863, Treasury Secretary Salmon P. Chase pushed a bill through Congress creating a central bank. The National Bank Act created a federally chartered bank that had the power to issue U.S. Bank notes backed by debt that were loaned to the government at interest.
Lincoln fought against the central bank and, by 1865, was beginning to make inroads into its demise.[7]
Too Many Coincidences
During the trial of some of Booth’s alleged co-conspirators, Samuel Chester, a friend of Booth’s, said that Booth had told him “there were from fifty to one hundred persons engaged in the conspiracy.”[8]
Booth’s mission required information that could only have come from the highest sources in Washington. Lincoln’s attendance at Ford’s Theatre on the fateful night had not been publicly announced.
Without insider informants, Booth also could not have known that Lincoln had a substitute bodyguard that night, John F. Parker, who would not be at his post at the key moment.[9]
Commanding Union General Ulysses S. Grant, who was supposed to watch the play with Lincoln that night, was called away from Ford’s Theatre by Stanton so that the plot could be consummated.[10]
Booth and a co-conspirator, drug clerk David Herold, had been detained on the afternoon of the assassination on the road into Washington from the east, but were released on the order of General Christopher C. Augur who reported to Stanton.[11]
Stanton impeded the search for Booth after the assassination by releasing his name to the newspapers only at 1:30 a.m., even though he knew Booth’s identity many hours earlier.[12]
General Augur also did not pursue Booth on the road to Port Tobacco, Maryland, which it was almost certain that he was taking, and called back a Major (James R. O’Beirne) who was on his pursuit. Stanton further prevented any investigation into the interruption of all telegraphic communication between Washington and the outside world for two hours after Lincoln’s assassination when the telegraphic wires were cut.[13]
Soldiers searching for Booth after his escape said that they were harassed by private detectives who tried to throw them off the trail. Colonel Lafayette C. Baker, who ran the National Detective Bureau, said that he regarded Booth, Herold and others as “mere tools in the hands of more skilled conspirators.”[14]
While Booth was in the process of killing Lincoln, Lewis Powell (aka Lewis Paine), an Alabaman wounded at Gettysburg, broke into Secretary of State William Seward’s house and left him and four others bleeding from their wounds.
A plot to kill Vice President Andrew Johnson by George Atzerodt never went forward, breeding suspicion that Johnson, the main beneficiary of Lincoln’s assassination, was in on it.[15]
Before the assassination, Booth allegedly walked into the lobby of the Kirkwood House, the hotel where Johnson was staying, and asked for him, leaving him a note that said: “Don’t wish to disturb you. Are you at home?”[16]
Johnson behaved strangely after the assassination, visiting Lincoln on his deathbed only for a few minutes (whereas the other Cabinet members stayed for much longer) while being found in a drunken stupor just before his inauguration.[17]
During his last months as President, Johnson issued a pardon to Dr. Samuel Mudd, an ardent pro-Confederate who helped Booth hide out after Lincoln’s assassination, treating his broken leg and withholding information from Union soldiers trying to track down Booth.[18]
Mary Todd Lincoln, the slain president’s widow, was among those to suspect Johnson, writing in a letter: “…that miserable inebriate Johnson….He never wrote me a line of condolence and behaved in the most brutal way…As sure as you and I live, Johnson had some hand in all this.”[19]
Phony Death
Booth was allegedly killed by an overly zealous Union soldier named Boston Corbett on April 26 at a farm in Virginia, owned by Richard Garrett, where he was hiding out.[20]
David Balsiger and Charles E. Sellier, Jr., however, in their 1977 book The Lincoln Conspiracy, claimed that the person killed was not Booth but James William Boyd, a former Captain in the Tennessee Volunteers of the Confederate Army and Rebel Secret Service who had been released from prison by Stanton in February 1865.[21]
One reason people thought that Boyd was Booth was that he had Booth’s letters with him and a picture of Booth, which he had retrieved after Booth had left them by the roadside when he had to escape into the woods because he thought he would be imminently captured.[22]
Dr. John Frederick May, who had removed a fibroid tumor from Booth’s neck two years before the assassination and performed the autopsy, said in a statement that was kept secret for 70 years that there was no resemblance to the corpse alleged to be Booth with the real Booth. Among other anomalies was the fact that the dead man was freckled, when Booth was not.[23]
Basil Moxley, a pallbearer at Booth’s funeral, said years after Lincoln’s death that the body buried in Green Mount Cemetery, Baltimore, was not that of Booth; that man’s hair was lighter than Booth’s and his appearance was different.[24]
Senator Charles Sumner (D-MA) had said that the reward for Booth’s capture should not be paid out because there was not enough evidence to verify that it was Booth who had been killed. Whig Senator Garrett Davis of Kentucky complained that he had never seen any satisfactory evidence that Booth had been killed.
In the early 1900s, John Shumaker, General Counsel to the Department of the Army wrote “the evidence put forth by the government to support the conclusion that it was the body of John Wilkes Booth was so insubstantial that it would not stand up in a court of law.”
Nate Orlowek, a renowned Lincoln assassination expert, told historian Donald Jeffries: “I have devoted 42 years to researching the possible escape of John Wilkes Booth, and am convinced to a 90% degree of certainty that the man killed in the barn was not John Wilkes Booth. The findings of my team are so convincing that the Booth family has nearly unanimously come to the same conclusion.”[25]
Orlowek told Unsolved Mysteries that, had the government been confident that it was Booth who had been killed, it would have taken public photos; instead, Booth was secretly buried in the basement of the old Naval prison in Washington.
When David Herold came out of the Garrett barn after it was surrounded by police deputies, Herold had said that the man in the barn—who was subsequently killed—was not Booth, but that his name was Boyd. After he was taken into police custody, Herold changed his testimony and said it was Booth—though this testimony appears to have been coerced.
Lieutenant William C. Allen, a Secret Service agent, corroborated Herold’s original assessment when he pointed out that the man shot in the barn by Corbett could not have been Booth because he had red hair when Booth’s hair was jet black.
Two other Union soldiers who knew Booth from when they lived in New Orleans, Private Joseph Zisgen and Quartermaster Wilson D. Kenzie, said further that the dead man did not resemble Booth (the dead man had sandy hair, when Booth’s hair was very dark). In a sworn affidavit in 1922, Kenzie, then 77 years old, admitted that the officers had told him to keep what he knew secret.
The Escape of John Wilkes Booth
In 1907, a Texas attorney named Finis L. Bates published the book The Escape and Suicide of John Wilkes Booth, which suggested that Booth had escaped and lived another 38 years after Lincoln’s death before committing suicide in Enid, Oklahoma.[26]
Bates learned this story from a client, John St. Helen of Granbury, Texas, a bartender who had been arrested for selling tobacco and whiskey without a license. St. Helen confessed to Bates on his sickbed in 1872 that he was Booth and that he had killed Lincoln so that a Southerner, Andrew Johnson, could ascend to the presidency and protect the South from misrule and the confiscation of its landed estates.
While we do not know for sure if John St. Helen was telling the truth, a comparison of photographs revealed that Booth and John St. Helen had a a striking resemblance. When in 1931, six Chicago physicians examined John St. Helen’s mummified body, they noticed a scarred right eyebrow, a crushed right thumb and a disfigured left leg that had been broken, all of which John Wilkes Booth had.
Booth (aka John St. Helen) had told Bates that, on the day before the assassination, he had met with Vice President Johnson, who wanted to strike a blow for the vanquished South. He called off a plan to kidnap Lincoln and asked Booth if he would “falter at the supreme moment,” or was “too faint hearted to kill Lincoln.” When Booth said that killing Lincoln would mean for him certain death, Johnson assured him that he would help arrange for his escape.[27]
After escaping from Ford’s Theatre, Booth said that he used a password, “T.B. Road,” to cross the Navy Yard Bridge on the East Potomac River that enabled him to leave Washington, D.C.[28] The guard at the bridge, Frederick A. Demond, later confirmed this story, writing to Bates in 1916 that he had been told to let a man through the roadblock if he used the password “T.B. Road.”[29]
Booth (aka St. John Helen) said that, after crossing the bridge, he met up with David Herold and they went to Dr. Mudd’s house where Mudd treated his broken leg.
When going through the open country in Virginia, Booth hid in an open wagon. When he feared that the police were on his trail, at one point, he fled into the woods, leaving behind his papers.
Later, after reaching the Garrett Farm, Booth sent James William Boyd to retrieve his papers. When the soldiers arrived and killed him, they assumed he was Booth because he had Booth’s papers on him. However, the real Booth (aka John St. Helen) said that he had been tipped off about the Union Army raid two hours before, and fled the Garrett Farm.
Subsequently, according to Bates’s account, he hid out in the forest and traveled by horse through the South, settling eventually in Granbury, Texas, after visiting with his brother and mother in California, living for a period in Indian Country among some Apaches.[30]
One of Booth’s girlfriends, Kate Scott signed a sworn affidavit that Booth was alive after the Garrett Farm shooting and that he visited her in Pennsylvania.[31]
Bates said that John St. Helen was a cultured man who, when he knew him, was trying to make money in a mining venture. He was easy to get along with, though kept inside him a dark secret which ought to have ate away at his soul.[32]
John St. Helen/aka David George after his death in Enid, Oklahoma, in 1903. [Source: dailyoddsandends.files.wordpress.com]
In 1866, St. Helen allegedly fathered a son with a half-Choctaw Indian woman whom he named John Wilkes Booth. His grandson, John Wilkes Booth III, told The Washington Post in 1985 that “my grandfather was born more than a year and a half after the Lincoln shooting, so, obviously, his father couldn’t have been shot in that burning barn. There were two people in there, and the soldiers just said that one was Booth.”[33]
Long Cover-Up
The War Department kept pertinent files on the Lincoln assassination marked “secret” until at least the 1930s. Secretary Stanton maintained that the suppressed material was “not in the public interest.”[34] Stanton’s War Department failed to prosecute some of the key people who had sheltered Booth and helped him in his flight afterwards.
Notable among these were Colonel Samuel Cox, on whose property Booth and Herold had hid for almost a week, and Thomas A. Jones, his half-brother, who had guided the assassins and furnished them a boat for their escape across the Potomac.[35]
The conspirators’ trial that took place was itself more of a show trial designed to ensure that the wider plot was never exposed.
The defendants (who included Lewis Powell, Mary Surratt, Dr. Samuel Mudd, George Atzerodt, Edman “Ned” ********, Michael O’Laughlen, and Samuel Arnold) were given inadequate time to prepare any defense and forced to sit in the court with their backs to the defending lawyers and were not permitted to turn their heads to them when under examination.[36]
The cover-up of Lincoln’s assassination has continued since that time, thanks to academic and popular historians who repeat the official story that Booth was the deranged lone assassin captured and killed at the Garrett Farm.
If the real truth were better known, it would more widely puncture the myth of American exceptionalism. Power-drives, coups, and political conspiracies are supposed to happen in foreign countries which the U.S. strives to help democratize. U.S. military and police authorities are supposed to always be efficient in capturing their targets.
But Booth was allegedly able to live 38 years after killing America’s most revered leader. His escape was orchestrated by the Secretary of War and Vice President who carried out a palace coup—just like another southern Vice President with the last name Johnson 98 years later.
https://covertactionmagazine.com/2023/11/26/contrary-to-dominant-folklore-evidence-indicates-that-like-oswald-john-wilkes-booth-was-part-of-wider-conspiracy/