Hanged! Mary Surratt & the plot to assassinate Abraham Lincoln

Sarah Miller, 1979-

Book - 2022

"The thrilling story of Mary Surratt, the first woman to be executed by the US government for her alleged involvement in the plot to assassinate Abraham Lincoln"--

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Subjects
Genres
Juvenile works
True crime stories
Biographies
Published
New York : Random House Studio [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Sarah Miller, 1979- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
333 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Audience
Ages 12 and up
Grades 7-9
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 287-290) and index.
ISBN
9780593181560
9780593181577
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In this tour de force, Miller (The Borden Murders, 2016) leads readers through the web of conspiracy surrounding Lincoln's assassination to encounter the woman seemingly at its core: Mary Surratt, proprietor of the boardinghouse where John Wilkes Booth met with his allies. The intricate narrative proceeds chronologically from the night of the assassination into the chase, capture, questioning, and trials of each suspect, and it's enlivened by dramatic primary-source material as well as the author's own vivid turns of phrase. The courtroom is the riveting centerpiece, described in such sensory detail that readers feel every twist as they confront the implications of trial by military tribunal rather than in civil court. Not only were defendants prohibited from testifying, their lawyers were required to prove them innocent while being kept out of the discovery loop. Mary Surratt's case was dependent on intent: if she was unaware of the conspiracy swirling around the visitors to her boardinghouse, there was no crime. Unfortunately, public opinion, bias in the press, and ever-shifting testimonies played crucial roles. Surratt's last days were rich with pathos. Yet she remains a mystery, and the question of her guilt is unresolved. Miller both respects her subject and satisfies her audience's hunger for true crime, shares the quirks of interpreting source material, and uncovers the interplay of police corruption, politics, prisoners' rights, and sexism in Mary's fate.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 7 Up--The assassination of Abraham Lincoln is well-covered ground in youth literature, but information on one of the coconspirators, Mary Surratt, the first woman to be executed by the U.S. government, can be hard to find. Miller remedies this with her exhaustive look into Surratt's trial and execution. Surratt, a slave owner and resident of Maryland, a Union state, was the mother of John Surratt, a Confederate messenger. She also ran a boarding house that John Wilkes Booth was said to frequent. Shortly after Lincoln's death, she was arrested along with several other conspirators. Despite being a civilian, she was given a trial by a military tribunal as it was argued finding an impartial jury would be impossible. The tribunal did not give her any protections that a civilian court would afford the accused. In fact, her lawyers were denied rights as basic as evidence discovery, leaving them only minutes to think of questions for the prosecution's witnesses after hearing testimony for the first time. Examples like this abound throughout the narrative, which will leave readers shaking their heads. All along, Surratt maintained her innocence and was convicted despite a split among the tribunal members. Her son went into hiding for years, then was subsequently captured but was freed due to the statute of limitations. VERDICT Miller provides readers a compelling and detailed analysis of the courtroom proceedings against Surratt that will intrigue lovers of history and true crime stories. Recommended for middle and high school collections.--Karen T. Bilton

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

On April 14, 1865, just days after the conclusion of the Civil War, John Wilkes Booth shot (and killed) President Abraham Lincoln at Ford's Theater. Booth would die more than two weeks later during the attempt to apprehend him, and attention shifted onto his accomplices and co-conspirators. Caught up in the plot was the widow Mary Surratt, who ran a Washington, DC, boardinghouse that Booth and other conspirators (including Surratt's son) frequented. Surratt's guilt by association and the hearsay surrounding her role in the plot were enough to condemn her to the gallows after one of the most unusual trials in American history. Miller (The Borden Murders, rev. 1/16) finds the unlikeliest of protagonists in Surratt. Using court transcripts and contemporaneous secondary sources, Miller pieces together information surrounding Surratt, her family, and her boardinghouse guests during and after the assassination of the sixteenth president. Extensively researched, the narrative is carefully organized to give readers the bearings necessary to follow specifics of the many witnesses and their multiple versions of events. The story lays bare the shocking disregard for judicial normalcy as Surratt and her co-defendants were tried in a peacetime military court while simultaneously tried by the newspapers of the day. True-crime fans will be enthralled by this compelling nineteenth-century case and the woman at its emotional center. Appended with an author's note, list of sources, and an index (unseen). Eric Carpenter November/December 2022 p.108(c) Copyright 2022. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A meticulously researched account of Mary Surratt, whose still-disputed role in the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln led to her becoming the first woman executed by the United States government. No one disputed the fact that actor John Wilkes Booth fired the shot that killed Lincoln. A simultaneous, fortuitously nonfatal, attack on Secretary of State William H. Seward made it immediately clear that a conspiracy was involved. In the weeks following, with Booth dead, seven men were arrested for the crime--and one woman, Surratt. A widow, devout Catholic, and former enslaver, Surratt owned and ran a boardinghouse where Booth sometimes met with the other defendants. From the start, newspapers reviled her and, during the trial, wrote sexist, prejudicial accounts of her description and actions. The trial itself, run by a military tribunal, was biased in favor of the guilt of the accused. Surratt was sentenced to death, refused clemency by President Andrew Johnson, and hung the following day. The controversy surrounding her execution did not die, however; conflicting testimony by her former boarder Louis Weichmann, in particular, created doubts that persist to this day. Miller does an admirable job of sifting through the often conflicting source material and judicial obfuscation. Her author's note discusses which sources she most trusts and why. The full truth of this intriguing historical mystery will never be known. A bold, sympathetic, well-written account of a perplexing and complicated subject. (who's who, sources, notes) (Nonfiction. 12-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One Washington City, April 15, 1865 It was two or three o'clock in the morning when the bell of Mary Surratt's boardinghouse at 541 H Street rang "very violently." On the third floor, twenty-­two-­year-­old Louis Weichmann, a former college chum of Mary's younger son, roused himself from bed. After pulling on a pair of pants under his nightshirt, he ran barefooted down the stairs. Weichmann did not open the door immediately. Wary of middle-­of-­the-­night visitors, he tapped on the inside of the front door to let whoever had clanged the bell know that they should stop. "Who is there?" Weichmann asked. "Government officers, come to search the house for John Wilkes Booth and John Surratt," came the prompt reply. Louis Weichmann had seen John Wilkes Booth--­one of the most famous actors in America--­that very afternoon. Booth had stopped by to speak with Mrs. Surratt just before Weichmann had driven her into the countryside on an errand. However, Weichmann and Booth's mutual friend, Mary's son John Surratt Jr., had left for Canada over a week before. Through the closed door, Weichmann informed the officers that neither of the men they sought was inside. "Let us in anyhow," the voices outside demanded, "we want to search the house." But it was not his house. Weichmann was only a boarder, renting his bed and eating his meals in Mrs. Surratt's dining room. He could not let a group of unknown men into a lady's home in the middle of the night without her permission, and Weichmann told them so. The officers waited on the porch while Weichmann hurried down the hall and past the parlor to Mary Surratt's bedroom door. Another boarder, seventeen-­year-­old Honora Fitzpatrick, who shared a bed with Mrs. Surratt, had also been awakened by the clanging doorbell. Now she heard Weichmann's gentler knock and his voice calling softly through the door. "Mrs. Surratt, there are detectives who have come to search the house, and would like to search your room." Honora Fitzpatrick and Louis Weichmann would remember vastly different reactions from their landlady--­so contradictory in tone and manner, in fact, that it seemed they might have been in the presence of two different women. One of Mary Surratt's young boarders reported her reply thus: "Mr. Weichmann, ask them to wait a few minutes, and I will open the door for them." The other would insist for decades afterward that she had said, "For God's sake, let them come in; I expected the house to be searched." At that moment, this detail mattered little. Whatever Mary Surratt's response, the officers were admitted--­six or eight of them, as Louis Weichmann remembered it. There were men stationed in front of the house, and men in the alley behind it. Two detectives went directly to the attic, where Mary Surratt's daughter and teenage niece shared a room. Before Weichmann had time to dress, two more men went into his room and peered under the bed and into the closet before examining everything else in sight. "For God's sake, gentlemen, what means this search of the house so early in the morning?" Weichmann implored. The young man's confusion startled the officers. "Do you pretend to tell me, sir, that you do not know what has happened last night?" one of them asked. Louis Weichmann insisted that he was completely bewildered. "I will tell you," said one of them, Metropolitan Police detective John Clarvoe, and he drew a crimson-­stained piece of a cravat from his pocket. "Do you see that blood?" Clarvoe asked, brandishing the torn necktie. "That is Abraham Lincoln's blood; John Wilkes Booth has murdered Abraham Lincoln, and John Surratt has assassinated the Secretary of State." Stunned into momentary silence, Louis Weichmann followed the two detectives back downstairs, and arrived just as Mary Surratt was emerging from her room. "What do you think, Mrs. Surratt?" Weichmann said. "President Lincoln has been murdered by John Wilkes Booth, and the Secretary of State has been assassinated!" Mary Surratt threw up her hands in astonishment. "Oh, my God, Mr. Weichmann, you don't tell me so!" she exclaimed. Chapter Two Four hours earlier, Abraham Lincoln had been seated in the president's box in Ford's Theatre, chuckling at a line of the comedy Our American Cousin, when a .44-­caliber lead ball fired from a single-­shot derringer pistol smashed into the left side of his skull and bored its way through the center of his brain. The revolver's abrupt report startled the actors, who knew there were no gunshots in this production. The audience, however, did not immediately react. The play had already been interrupted once, by President Lincoln's own arrival at the theater twenty minutes after the curtain had lifted. One of the actors on the stage had improvised a line to alert the theater to the president's entrance: "This reminds me of a story, as Mr. Lincoln says . . ." Understanding this impromptu cue, the orchestra launched into a rendition of "Hail to the Chief" as Abraham Lincoln; his wife, Mary; and their guests, Major Henry Rathbone and Miss Clara Harris, made their way to the box that had been specially furnished and decorated in the president's honor. The spectators treated Lincoln to a hero's welcome. After four years of war at a cost of over 650,000 American lives, Confederate general Robert E. Lee had finally surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia to General Ulysses S. Grant on April 9. Abraham Lincoln had preserved the Union, just as he had promised to do. President Lincoln acknowledged the standing ovation and "vociferous cheering" with a bow, then settled into a rocking chair in the corner of his flag-­draped box to indulge in a long-­overdue evening of diversion. "Mrs. Lincoln rested her hand on his knee much of the time," one theatergoer noticed, "and often called his attention to some humorous situation on the stage. She seemed to take great pleasure in witnessing his enjoyment." Now, seeing a flash and hearing a crack like fireworks, the audience waited to discover what additional surprises might be in store. Indeed, a special song had been composed in the president's honor and was scheduled to be performed by the entire company after the main production, as a kind of patriotic encore. Major Rathbone, seated at the far end of the box, was the first to realize what had happened. "I heard the discharge of a pistol behind me, and, looking round, saw, through the smoke, a man between the door and the President. At the same time, I heard him shout some word, which I thought was 'Freedom!' I instantly sprang towards him, and seized him." Wresting himself free, the shooter lunged at Rathbone's chest with a knife of considerable length. The major parried the blow, and the blade slid into the crook of Rathbone's left arm like a sword into a sheath, slicing through several inches of muscle between the elbow and shoulder. Rathbone managed only to snatch at the man's clothes as the shooter rushed toward the front of the box and vaulted over the rail. Below, the astonished--­perhaps even delighted--­spectators watched a pale, dark-­haired man make a catlike twelve-­foot leap from the president's box to the stage. A portion of an American flag, caught by his spur as he jumped, trailed like a banner behind him. Some witnesses heard the assassin shout "Sic semper tyrannis!" (Latin for "Thus always to tyrants") as he paused in the footlights with his knife held aloft before making his exit. Others reported the exclamation as "Revenge for the South!" It was not the first time that pale, dark-­haired man had been seen center stage. Several actors and spectators alike recognized him immediately as John Wilkes Booth, a member of one of America's most prominent families of actors. His presence now, in what seemed to be the most startling of cameo appearances, made no sense. Booth had timed his attack exquisitely. He knew the play--­knew that the audience would be laughing the moment he pulled the trigger, and that there would be but a single actor on the stage who might attempt to intercept him as he fled. His plan worked nearly to perfection. In that brief moment of triumph, Booth had no better accomplices than astonishment and confusion. "Stop that man!" Major Rathbone cried from above. Only one member of the audience had the presence of mind to bound over the orchestra pit and pursue Booth as he dashed across the stage and out a rear door to the alley, where his horse stood waiting. Up in the box, Rathbone peered through the gunpowder haze toward the president and understood at once that he was mortally wounded. Mary Lincoln's hand was on her husband's arm. Abraham Lincoln's eyes were closed; his chin drooped down to his chest. Mrs. Lincoln's scream finally pierced the confusion. v At almost the same moment that John Wilkes Booth fired his pistol, a unexpected knock sounded at the door of the Lafayette Square home of Secretary of State William H. Seward. A nineteen-­year-­old Black servant, William Bell, opened the door to find an imposing white man holding a small package in his left hand. His right hand was in his overcoat pocket. The fellow said he'd been sent by the secretary's physician, Dr. Verdi, with a delivery of medication. That was no cause for alarm, since Secretary Seward was in considerable pain from the broken jaw and arm he'd sustained in a carriage accident. But the courier's demeanor quickly put Bell on guard. The man insisted again and again that he could put the delivery into the hands of no one but Secretary Seward himself. William Bell was no fool. He knew better than to fall for any such thing. The secretary had been agitated and uncomfortable all day, and now that he was at last settled in bed, the entire household was keeping as quiet as possible so that he might sleep. Rest was vital to Secretary Seward, and no one would have known that better than Dr. Verdi. "I told him I would not let him up," Bell said later, "but, if he had any package of medicine for Mr. Seward, I would take it up, and tell him how to take it. But that would not do: he must see him." Young though he was, Bell did not allow himself to be cowed by the suspicious white man who towered over him. Adamantly, Bell refused to permit the courier to disturb the secretary, even blocking his path bodily as the larger man began to bulldoze his way up the steps toward the family's bedrooms. "I had spoken pretty rough to him," Bell admitted afterward--­no small risk for a Black man. Physically, though, William Bell was no match for the stranger. The best he could do was try to stall the fellow's ascent until another member of the household with more muscle or authority could come help. "When he went up, he walked pretty heavy," Bell remembered--­so heavily that Bell had to ask the man to tread more lightly. Excerpted from Hanged!: Mary Surratt and the Plot to Assassinate Abraham Lincoln by Sarah Miller All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.