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Did John Wilkes Booth survive?
Chattanooga Free Press ^ | 2/19/07 | Dick Cook

Posted on 02/19/2007 8:23:24 AM PST by Borges

SEWANEE, Tenn. — A signature in the Franklin County Courthouse and a mummy last seen in 1975 convinced two Tennessee men that John Wilkes Booth, the killer of Abraham Lincoln, escaped capture, traveled South and lived into the 20th century.

Now one of those men is hoping to use DNA evidence to prove it.

The other man, Arthur Ben Chitty, a historiographer at the University of the South who died in 2002, spent 40 years amassing anecdotal evidence that Mr. Booth married a Sewanee woman and lived there for a time, said his daughter Em Turner Chitty.

And there was one piece of physical evidence: the signature of “Jno. W. Booth” and his bride, Louisa J. Payne, recorded Feb. 24, 1872, in the marriage license records office of the Franklin County Courthouse.

“What passes for history is good public relations — that’s my dad’s main thesis,” said Ms. Turner, an English teacher at Pellissippi State College in Knoxville. “The thing that got him most seriously interested (in Booth) was the signature.”

BLAME KEN BURNS

In Memphis, Ken Hawkes got hooked on the Booth mystery in the early 1990s, when everybody in his office was following Ken Burns’ documentary on the Civil War.

Mr. Hawkes was an autopsy technician for the Shelby County medical examiner’s office. He said that after the episode dealing with President Lincoln’s assassination, a coworker told him a mummy that was purported to be Mr. Booth was toted around the Midwest in carnivals during the 1930s.

“I thought it was nonsense,” Mr. Hawkes said last week. “Everybody knows Booth was killed in Virginia two weeks after the assassination.”

But then a doctor in the office showed him a story from a magazine about the Booth mummy.

The doctor said that using forensic medicine, “if we could find the remains, we could show one way or the other if it could be John Wilkes Booth,” he said.

Two weeks later, Mr. Hawkes said, he began to think maybe he ought to find the mummy and do DNA testing.

“I started looking for it and looked and looked and looked,” he said.

The history books state that Mr. Booth shot President Lincoln the day before Easter 1865 at Ford’s Theater. Mr. Booth and a group of conspirators escaped Washington, D.C., and were cornered in Richard Garrett’s barn in Bowling Green, Va., 12 days later.

The barn was set afire, and Mr. Booth was shot and died within hours. Several Union soldiers who were acquainted with him identified his body. He was buried in Green Mount Cemetery in Baltimore. SEWANEE CONNECTION

On the third floor in the back of the Jessie Ball duPont Library at the University of the South, archivist Annie Armour points to shelves filled with documents and books that Mr. Chitty, a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of the school, amassed related to Booth.

Opening a box of newspaper clippings, legal documents, letters and audio recordings of interviews, Ms. Armour said, “I don’t see anything that proves or disproves.”

But, she added, “There are a couple of people around here who swore that (Booth) lived here for a while.”

Ms. Chitty said that in 1956, her father met with a man named James. H. Rees. Mr. Rees told Mr. Chitty that when he was a boy he knew McCager Payne, the son of Louisa Payne and stepson of her husband, John St. Helen.

According to Mr. Chitty’s interviews with relatives, Louisa Payne learned after she married that “St. Helen” wasn’t her husband’s real name. Family lore says she insisted they remarry under his given name. That’s when the signature of “Jno. W. Booth” was made in Franklin County.

Mr. Chitty acquired Mr. Rees’ material on Mr. Booth in the 1980s. The trove included a 1926 interview with McCager Payne in the Clarksville Leaf-Chronicle, Ms. Chitty said.

Mr. Payne told the interviewer he had overheard his stepfather tell his mother about “knots on his left leg” and admit that he was Mr. Booth.

Mr. Payne said his stepfather saw the boy had overheard and said, “If you ever tell what you heard me say, I’ll rip your throat from ear to ear,” according to the Leaf-Chronicle.

Several months later the three went to Memphis where Mr. St. Helen/Booth left the boy and his mother and headed to Texas. He told them he would be back but never returned, Ms. Chitty said.

Ms. Chitty said her father’s archives show Louisa Payne and her son returned to Sewanee.

“The story goes that (Louisa) became pregnant only a few months after the marriage,” Ms. Chitty said. “She returned to Payne’s Cove and had the baby, (Laura) Ida Booth. Strangely enough, she became an actress.”

Ms. Chitty said she reviewed her father’s collection of Booth material in 1988.

“There was so much evidence that he gathered, eyewitness evidence, documentary evidence. This story, when you first heard it, was crazy,” Ms. Chitty said.

“But there was a lot of evidence,” she said.

THE MUMMY

Mr. Hawkes has been trying to find what he says may be Mr. Booth’s mummified remains.

In 1903, a dying, alcoholic house painter named David E. George told a minister in Enid, Okla., that he was John Wilkes Booth, Mr. Hawkes said.

Finis Bates, a Tennessee lawyer who decades before knew Mr. St. Helen/Booth, traveled to Oklahoma and determined that the body was that of the man he had known. Mr. Bates acquired the body and had it preserved, Mr. Hawkes said.

At some point, Mr. Bates’ widow sold it to a carnival where the mummy became a major attraction in shows like Jay Gould’s Million Dollar Spectacle, he said.

Mr. Hawkes said he contacted every carnival, sideshow and circus he could find searching for Mr. Booth’s mummy.

News accounts from a Life magazine article in 1931 show that six doctors in Chicago examined and X-rayed the mummy. They found it had a shorter left leg, a distorted right thumb and a scar on its neck, all consistent with physical characteristics of Booth.

Mr. Hawkes said the last documented sighting was in Philadelphia in the early 1960s. But he has a 1991 letter from a man who says he saw the mummy in Pennsylvania in 1975 at a carnival.

“The clincher for me was the man said X-rays were with the mummy that the doctors made in Chicago,” he said.

Mr. Hawkes said the Pennsylvania man told him that the carnival promoter was asking everyone who came in to look at the mummy if they wanted to buy it.

“I do believe the mummy still exists,” he said. “I think it’s in a private collection.”


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: abelincoln; abrahamlincoln; fordtheater; godsgravesglyph; godsgravesglyphs; greatestpresident; tinfoil
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To: Verginius Rufus; hellbender

That's the way I recalled.

Yes, I saw that broadcast also.

I liked Roger Mudd.


101 posted on 02/19/2007 2:36:16 PM PST by Vinnie (You're Nobody 'Til Somebody Jihads You)
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To: mass55th

"Booth's mother's name was Mary Ann Holmes. She was born in England and ran away with a then-very married Junius Brutus Booth. My great-grandfather's surname was Holmes. He was born in Canada and is buried there. I've often wondered if there was any connection between the Holmes on my mother's side of the family and Booth's mother's family. So far I haven't found anything, but that doesn't mean they weren't related."

That is really interesting! Keep up the research, and you may discover the elusive link to your great-grandfather. I wish you much success. Although I have no familial connection, the Booth family, what little I know of it, has always held a fascination for me.


102 posted on 02/19/2007 2:51:22 PM PST by Mila (i)
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To: Borges

Interesting post.
For people who are not aware, the assassination of Lincoln involved a massive conspiracy that rivals anything put forth about the Kennedy assassination. It's worth a trip to the book store.


103 posted on 02/19/2007 2:59:13 PM PST by Lancey Howard
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To: Borges
Eveything else aside, the "Booth survived" folks need to explain Davey Herold. Seems to me, if I were in Davey's shoes, I would have been doing a tapdance, "that's not Booth, that's not Booth!!!!"

Perhaps some think Davey went needlessly to the gallows to help cover Booth's tracks, but that's a real stretcher even for tinfoilers.

104 posted on 02/19/2007 3:11:07 PM PST by sphinx
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To: Young Werther
The atmosphere surrounding the assasination was such that a rush to judgement occurred.

It would be closer to the mark to say that the investigation and trials were a marvel of scrupulosity. The complicating factor is that the investigators had to distinguish among degrees of involvement. Booth was active throughout the war in the confederate underground. Most of the places he stopped during his flight, including Dr. Mudd's, were known safehouses. Then you have Booth's closer circle of associates and, within that, the participants in the aborted kidnapping plot. The assassination was a last minute, end-of-the-war improvisation, and the provable hard core assissinators were few in number.

Dr. Mudd was certainly active in the confederate underground and was probably in on the kidnapping plan. There was, however, no evidence to tie him to the assassination. He was treated correctly. Those who hung were guilty as sin.

105 posted on 02/19/2007 3:17:21 PM PST by sphinx
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To: Vinnie
Roger Mudd helped spare us from Teddy ever becoming President, when he asked him a softball question about why he wanted to be President and Teddy couldn't say anything coherent in reply.

According to the Wikipedia entry for Roger Mudd, he is a distant relative but not a direct descendant of Dr. Samuel Mudd.

106 posted on 02/19/2007 3:38:06 PM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: Borges
A signature in the Franklin County Courthouse and a mummy last seen in 1975 convinced two Tennessee men that John Wilkes Booth, the killer of Abraham Lincoln, escaped capture, traveled South and lived into the 20th century.

He's dead Jim...

107 posted on 02/19/2007 3:46:23 PM PST by EGPWS (Trust in God, question everyone else)
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To: nmh

Well, if he did, I reckon it just don't matter anymore. Although he might go along with our Congress in enabling AlQaeda.


108 posted on 02/19/2007 3:49:19 PM PST by dforest (Liberals love crisis, create crisis and then dwell on them.)
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To: mass55th

I believe the “old log cabin” structure is the house this sits at the intersection of Prospect Mill Rd & Churchville Rd. I read an article in the Harford Liberal Rag (Aegis)that they believe the log cabin has been built around numerous times and now appears as a white, 2-story dwelling.


109 posted on 04/13/2007 9:59:10 AM PDT by theelephantway
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To: Borges

Well we know he’s dead now.


110 posted on 04/13/2007 9:59:51 AM PDT by dfwgator (The University of Florida - Still Championship U)
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111 posted on 06/23/2008 10:35:41 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/_________________________Profile updated Friday, May 30, 2008)
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To: Wallace T.

Oddly enough, there is also a “St. Helens” restaurant on the town square in Granbury, where John Wilkes Booth supposedly used to tend bar.


112 posted on 06/24/2008 9:11:59 AM PDT by djmv
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To: djmv
Didn't Granbury also have a man who claimed to be Jesse James, who died around 1950? If this were true, Jesse would have been over 100 years old at his death.
113 posted on 06/25/2008 3:16:27 PM PDT by Wallace T.
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To: Wallace T.

I grew up in St. Joseph, then moved to Ft. Worth. Parents moved to Granbury about 10 years ago...I think Jesse is stalking them ;-)

Actually read an interesting story about a woman in Arkansas who claims her father told her he was Frank James, just before he died. He not only told her that he was Frank, but that his brother Jesse was alive in TX. She wrote a book (titled “This was Frank James”) and was visited by a man from Granbury, TX, just before the book was published. He asked her not to publish the book, she refused, and the book publisher burnt down that night...with all of the books inside. Not sure if it is true, but an interesting story, and it tied in “Dalton” from Granbury.

Side note: Hico, TX, home of Brushy Billy Roberts (aka Billy the Kid) is about 20 miles outside of Granbury. Famous area for non-dead western outlaws.


114 posted on 06/26/2008 11:33:32 AM PDT by djmv
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To: djmv; Wallace T.
Side note: Hico, TX, home of Brushy Billy Roberts (aka Billy the Kid) is about 20 miles outside of Granbury. Famous area for non-dead western outlaws.

Belle Starr's hideout was just down the road, too, in a creek ravine just off 377 east of the Paluxy.

115 posted on 06/26/2008 11:41:26 AM PDT by okie01 (THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA: Ignorance on Parade)
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To: okie01

Wasn’t she supposed to be burried in the same grave with Jesse James (different coffin, burried on top of James’)? I remember mention of that when the body thought to be Dalton’s was exhumed a year or two ago.

Ended up not being Dalton’s body, so the mystery goes on...


116 posted on 06/26/2008 1:59:55 PM PDT by djmv
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To: Borges

bookmark


117 posted on 06/26/2008 2:17:15 PM PDT by southland (Matt. 24:6 , By their fruits ye will know them, Matt 7:16, 7:20 ,typical white guy)
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To: okie01
Belle Starr had long standing ties to North Texas. After the defeat of the South, many pro-Confederate Missourians migrated to the area, including Belle Starr's father and the James and Younger brothers, who settled in the Scyene community, which is now is in the city of Dallas. Belle Starr and her outlaw associates engaged in crime from Missouri and California. It wouldn't be surprising if she had a hideout in that area.
118 posted on 06/28/2008 5:10:19 PM PDT by Wallace T.
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To: MeanWestTexan

Very funny...


119 posted on 07/03/2011 7:18:11 AM PDT by Netz
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 GGG managers are SunkenCiv, StayAt HomeMother & Ernest_at_the_Beach
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120 posted on 10/19/2012 7:16:57 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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