Fugitive John Wilkes Booth rides into Maryland and reaches the farm of Dr. Samuel Mudd at four a.m.

John Wilkes Booth had rode away from Ford's Theatre, across the Navy Yard Bridge, and into Maryland, meeting up with his accomplice David Herold along the way.  They stopped after midnight at a tavern in Surrattsville and picked up a previously stored cache of weapons.  They then rode on to the house of Dr. Samuel Mudd near Bryantown, arriving at four a.m., where Mudd set Booth's broken left tibula and allowed the two to rest for a few hours.  This act would cost Mudd years in a federal prison. The two continued their flight across Maryland the same day. (By John Osborne) 
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Augustin Vérot, Bishop of Savannah, Georgia, circa 1865, detail

Notes
Sized, cropped, and adjusted by John Osborne, Dickinson College, April 9, 2015.
Image type
photograph
Use in Day View?
Yes
Courtesy of
Internet Archive
Permission to use?
Public
Original caption
Rt. Rev. Augustine Vérot, D.D., Third Bishop of Savannah
Source citation
Catholic Editing Company, The Catholic Church in the United States of America (New York: The Catholic Editing Company, 1914), 199.
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