Posted on 04/15/2015 11:05:21 AM PDT by nickcarraway
John Wilkes Booth was the man who pulled the trigger, capping off a coordinated plot to murder President Abraham Lincoln.
But historian Terry Alford, an expert on all things Booth, says that there's much more to Booth's life. His new biography, Fortune's Fool: The Life of John Wilkes Booth, delves deep into his life before Booth went down in history as the man who assassinated a president.
Booth was born into a prominent family of actors. According to Alford, he had good looks and an exceptional acting range, playing both dark roles as bad guys and softer roles such as Romeo. By 1865, the 26-year-old was a headliner on the American stage. As Alford tells Morning Edition's Renee Montagne, Booth was the first actor known to have "had his clothes torn by fans."
"When he was coming out of a theater in Boston, the manager had to come back and tell people, 'Back up, let him out, just let him walk to his hotel.' "
Alford says it's interesting that, "over the years, as people felt free to talk about Booth, and while they shrank away from what he did, they didn't really shrink from him. They remembered things about him like courtesies and acts of heroism."
Like this example:
"One time onstage, he saved a young woman whose dress caught on fire," he says, "a young actress who had wandered too close to the gas footlights."
Booth was not a madman, according to Alford. In fact, he was politically motivated to assassinate Lincoln.
"John Wilkes Booth was one of those people who thought the best country in the history of the world was the United States as it existed before the Civil War," Alford says. "And then when Lincoln came along, he was changing that in fundamental ways."
"John Wilkes Booth was one of those people who thought the best country in the history of the world was the United States as it existed before the Civil War. And then when Lincoln came along, he was changing that in fundamental ways." - Terry Alford Those ideological differences include increasing the power of the federal government and emancipating the slaves, both things Booth was vehemently against. He was angered that the government instituted an income tax and the military draft, and that the government occasionally suspended habeas corpus, a legal protection against unlawful imprisonment. All these things, Alford says, agitated Booth.
"But Booth brought to that agitation an extremism, the passion almost of a fanatic," Alford says. "And it was very dangerous, as we find out."
Booth's opposition to Lincoln's policies persuaded him to fight with the Confederate army during the Civil War. But, according to Alford, his mother was a widow and had already lost four of her children. So she pleaded for him to stay clear of the war. Booth agreed.
"But he felt like a slacker," Alford says. "He even uses the word 'coward' to describe himself because, as an actor, he played a hero onstage but really wasn't one."
One of the people closest to Booth was his older sister, Asia Booth Clarke. After Lincoln's assassination in 1865, Asia and her family went into exile in England. There she wrote a secret memoir about her brother, but it wasn't published until 1938. Alford wrote the forward in the latest edition. In her memoir, Clarke recalls a time where a psychic predicted John Wilkes' Booth's untimely death.
Revisiting The Night Abraham Lincoln Was Shot 150 Years Ago "The old gypsy said [to him], 'You've got a bad hand; it's full of sorrow. Trouble plenty everywhere I look. I see you'll break hearts. You'll die young, and you will leave many to mourn you. You'll be rich, you'll be free but you're born under an unlucky star,' " Alford says. "And his sister said, 'Oh, don't let that worry you. These gypsies will just say anything for money.' And he laughed and said, 'That's right.' "
Alford adds that Booth would refer to the gypsy's predictions years later in conversations.
"The little fortune he wrote down grew tattered from folding and unfolding, as he would get it out and look at it and put it back," he says. "So thoughts like that preyed on his mind."
Alford says the assassination of President Lincoln one of the most heinous acts in American history - shattered the Booth family.
"The brothers were actors," he says. "In other words, you've got to get out in front of thousands of strangers and dozens of towns and be public again. And this was exceptionally hard, because a lot of people did feel you are your brother's keeper. 'Why didn't you do something about this? What did you know? Why didn't you take care of it?' And, so it was extremely hard to be a Booth for a long, long time."
Update at 12:00 p.m. ET: We have changed the headline of this post, which originally said "John Wilkes Booth Was Not A Deranged Longer, Historian Says," and clarified in the text that Booth was not a lone gunman, but rather, a part of a group of conspirators."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AATDhGrhyjU
An innocent victim of Abraham Lincoln and his time machine.
Ummmm... Was he... ...John Wilkes Booth?
Is this a trick question?
I've never heard anyone say he WAS a madman.
A very famous actor. I’ve spent a weekend at his childhood home in Maryland which the owners were trying to turn into a museum. They claimed it was very haunted - and it certainly had that atmosphere. Booth had carved his initials with a diamond in the window. It was still there in the 1990s.
The Diamond?
Oh, yes. He certainly had a mad streak. His father was mad. But he was a handsome devil and a fine actor and a friend to many people. I’ve also seen letters that he wrote - he couldn’t spell.
Booth was able to walk into the President’s Box because he was John Wilkes Booth! I wonder if he signed any autographs on the way up.
The younger brother of the man who saved Robert Todd Lincoln from being run over by a train in New Jersey.
An actor of some local renown. From all accounts his talents were average.
Sic semper tyrannis!
On two occasions the summary of this article appears to try and associate Booth to those who oppose Obama's own statement of fundamentally changing America. It notes Booth was a patriot who loved America but hated the way he saw Lincoln fundamentally changing it.
Yeah, I'm sure this clear attempt to draw parallels is mere coincidence.
Good old NPR saying “who” when “what” was meant.
Never mind taking the liberal tack and going the route of “humanizing”.
bttt
The author of a new book “April 1865” compared Booth to Robert Redford on a radio interview. There was a story about he traveled back North someone commented about he needing a passport, I guess a CSA one. He commented he did not need one as his face was his passport. Imagine an A list star assassinating the POTUS today.
I’ve always found it amazing that most Americans can only name two of the four Presidential assassins...and always the same two.
That incident is but one of many strange overlappings concerning Lincoln and other historic people. There are overlappings having to do with JFK as well, so I have heard.
Mister Booth’s son...
I'm not surprised. The names of the other two assassins are near impossible to spell or pronounce.
Czolgosz and Guiteau?
C'mon, there's no way those two are becoming household names.
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