The leading alternative to the theory that John Wilkes Booth and a few
others conspired to murder Abraham Lincoln, Andrew Johnson and William
Seward is a Confederate conspiracy. The details, motivation and evidence
for such a conspiracy are presented along with the evidence that
challenges the theory.
The Lincoln Conspiracy, a book published
in 1977, contended there was a government plot to conceal Booth's
escape, reviving interest in the story and prompting the display of St.
Helen's mummified body in Chicago that year. The book sold more than one
million copies and was made into a feature film called The Lincoln
Conspiracy, which was theatrically released in 1977. A 1998 book, The
Curse of Cain: The Untold Story of John Wilkes Booth, contended that
Booth had escaped, sought refuge in Japan and eventually returned to the
United States. In 1994 two historians, together with several
descendants, sought a court order for the exhumation of Booth's body at
Green Mount Cemetery, which was, according to their lawyer, "intended to
prove or disprove longstanding theories on Booth's escape" by
conducting a photo-superimposition analysis. The application was
blocked, however, by Baltimore Circuit Court Judge Joseph H. H. Kaplan,
who cited, among other things, "the unreliability of petitioners'
less-than-convincing escape/cover-up theory" as a major factor in his
decision. The Maryland Court of Special Appeals upheld the ruling. No
gravestone marks the precise location where Booth is buried in the
family's gravesite. Author Francis Wilson, 11 years old at the time of
Lincoln's assassination, wrote an epitaph of Booth in his 1929 book John
Wilkes Booth: "In the terrible deed he committed, he was actuated by no
thought of monetary gain, but by a self-sacrificing, albeit wholly
fanatical devotion to a cause he thought supreme."
In December
2010, descendants of Edwin Booth reported that they obtained permission
to exhume the Shakespearean actor's body to obtain DNA samples. However,
Bree Harvey, a spokesperson from the Mount Auburn Cemetery in
Cambridge, Massachusetts, where Edwin Booth is buried, refuted reports
that the family had contacted them and requested to exhume Edwin's body.
The family hopes to obtain DNA samples from artifacts belonging to John
Wilkes, or from remains such as vertebrae stored at the National Museum
of Health and Medicine in Maryland.
On March 30, 2013, museum
spokesperson Carol Johnson announced the family's request to exhume DNA
from the vertebrae had been rejected.
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