
The Last Days of Abraham
Lincoln
On the evening of April 14, 1865, President
Abraham Lincoln was shot while watching the play Our
American Cousin at Ford's Theatre in Washington,
D.C. The incident occurred at 10:15 p.m., during a moment
when the audience was laughing as actor Harry Hawk
performed on stage. Actor John Wilkes Booth entered the
rear of the Presidential Box (shown in the photo to the
right) and shot Lincoln from behind before leaping out of
the box and down to the stage. In all the confusion,
Booth was able to flee from the theatre without being accosted or arrested.
When the theatre-goers realized what had happened to the
President, doctors from the audience immediately rushed
to his aid. Lincoln was taken across the street to the
home of William Petersen (known today as the Petersen House, shown to the
left). Here he remained for the rest of the solemn night,
until his death on the morning of April 15 at 7:22 a.m.
Though the assassin had momentarily escaped and
was on the run, he was found and killed in less than two
weeks after the murderous act was committed. The
surviving conspirators who had plotted with Booth to
murder the President were arrested, and a trial was held
from May 10 through June 29. During the trial, a testimony by William T. Kent on May 16, 1865
stated the following about the murder weapon:
|
About three minutes after the President was
shot, I went into his box. There were two other persons
there then, and a surgeon, apparently, asked me for a
knife to cut open the President's clothes. I handed him
mine, and with it he cut the President's clothes open. I
then went out of the theatre and went down to call my
roommate. I missed my night key, and thinking that I had
dropped my night key in pulling out my knife, I hurried
back to the theatre. When I went into the box and was
searching around for it on the floor, I knocked my foot
against the pistol, and stooping down, I picked it up. I
held it up, and cried out, "I have found the
pistol!"
|
|
 |
Photos of Ford's Theatre building and Ford's Theatre
Museum by CNO, photos of the Presidential Box and the
Petersen House by DLO.
Pictured immediately above: Ford's Theatre museum, with a display of artifacts from the scene of the assassination: a
.44-caliber single-shot percussion pistol manufactured by
Henry Deringer of Philadelphia; the door which served as
a stretcher to bear the body of the President from the
theatre to William Petersen's house across the street;
and the coat Lincoln wore on that fateful evening.

 |
|
Even in
death, Abraham Lincoln would live on as a noble leader
and hero to thousands of American citizens, and was the
subject of poems by notable poets of the age such as Walt
Whitman who mourned him in passing as he proclaimed:
"This dust was once the man, / Gentle, plain, just
and resolute...". His most famous poems about
Lincoln's death include "When lilacs last in the
dooryard bloom'd" and "O Captain! my
Captain!" which reveal the shock and dismay he felt
upon learning of the assassination.
In the following poem, Whitman contemplates the meaning
of victory for the soldiers who had fought to preserve
the Union, and the irony of the President's death after
attaining this glory.
|
Image of Lincoln care of
Leib Image Archives.
|
|
|
HUSH'D BE THE CAMPS TODAY
(May 4, 1865)
Hush'd be the camps today,
And soldiers let us drape our war-worn weapons,
And each with musing soul retire to celebrate,
Our dear commander's death.
No more for him life's stormy conflicts,
Nor victory, nor defeat—no more time's dark events,
Charging like ceaseless clouds across the sky.
But sing poet in our name,
Sing of the love we bore him—because
you—dweller in camps, know it truly.
As they invault the coffin there,
Sing—as they close the doors of
earth upon him—one verse,
For the heavy hearts of soldiers.
- Walt Whitman

Journal Index | Previous
Page | Next
Page
Back | Home
Copyright
© 2001 1st Dragoon's Civil War Site. All rights reserved.
|