Swanson. Of course, Abraham Lincoln was the 16th president of the United States from 1861 until he was assassinated in 1865. He was murdered by John Wilkes Booth a production of Our American ...
On November 19, 1863, near the site of the bloodiest battle of the American Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln offered a ...
WARREN TWP. - Jonathan Knight is the author of the book, “The Lincoln-Kennedy Coincidences,” which explores the uncanny similarities between the assassinations of presidents Abraham Lincoln and John ...
were supposedly those used by Mary Todd Lincoln on the night of her husband Abraham Lincoln's assassination A pair of opera glasses reportedly used by former US president Abraham Lincoln's wife on ...
The new show on Apple TV+ adapts James Swanson’s nonfiction book on the aftermath of Abraham Lincoln’s assassination. By Nicholas Slayton Posted on Feb 12, 2024 Hours after President Abraham ...
Your institution has access to JSTOR’s AI-powered research tool in beta. Log in or create a JSTOR personal account to get started. Your Artstor image groups were copied to Workspace. The Artstor ...
"Good this night only" is printed on the front of the tickets, and the top right corners have been clipped off A pair of theatre tickets used on the night Abraham Lincoln was assassinated have ...
Images of Abraham Lincoln as he lay dying filled the popular press in the days following the assassination. The sudden and violent attack on the president came on Good Friday, the most somber day ...
Abraham Lincoln was shot in Ford's Theatre in Washington on the evening of April 14th, 1865, and he died the next day. Our coverage of the assassination appeared in the issue of April 29th ...
The southern widow's Maryland house was a crucial stop on the escape route for assassin John Wilkes Booth the night he shot the president. Read more about Abraham ...
Geri Roth, a substitute teacher from North Carolina, was unaware she’d been chowing down on egg rolls in the same place conspirators planned Abraham Lincoln’s assassination in 1865.