John Wilkes Booth Escape
Map Marks 150th Anniversary of Lincoln Assassination
Today marks the 150th
anniversary of the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln at Ford’s Theatre
on April 14, 1865. The Ball State
University Libraries’ GIS Research and Map Collection (GRMC) includes many maps
depicting the events surrounding the Civil War, including a map of the assassin’s
escape route from the Capital.
The map, John Wilkes Booth: Escape of an Assassin, was
published by Communication Design in 2007 as part of the Maryland Civil War Trails series.
The map shows the route taken from Ford’s Theatre in Washington, D.C. to
the Garrett farm in Virginia with related present-day points of interest.
According to the map, “Booth
fled over the Navy Yard Bridge into Southern Maryland. With fellow conspirator
David Herold, he stopped about midnight at widow Mary E. Surratt’s tavern in
the village of Surrattsville.” Surratt
was later convicted as a conspirator in the plot against the President and
provided storage of rifles and other supplies for Booth.
The fugitives received
treatment at the house of Dr. Samuel A. Mudd (now a museum), who was also later
convicted in the conspiracy. The pair
traveled to the home of Samuel Cox in Rich Hill and hid in a nearby pine
thicket. Booth and Herold crossed the
Potomac River on April 21 and then the Rappahanock River in Virginia, where
they found shelter at the Richard Garrett farm.
Federal troops found the
fugitives hiding in the barn on April 26:
Herold surrendered, but Booth refused.
“…the barn was set on fire. The soldiers could see Booth through the
slats in the barn, and Sergeant Boston Corbett shot him in the back of the
neck.”
The map also includes sites
related to the Civil War near Chesapeake Bay.
Descriptions of specific sites, events, and biographies include Point
Lookout State Park, the contributions of African Americans, female spies and
smugglers, and the role federal troops kept Maryland in the Union.
Other maps in the GRMC from
the Maryland Civil War Trails series
include Baltimore: A House Divided;
Gettysburg: Invasion and Retreat; Lee Invades Maryland: 1862 Antietam Campaign;
and Virginia-Maryland Civil War
Trails.
Maps from the GRMC
circulate for two weeks or longer. For
more information, please contact the GRMC at 765-285-1097.
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