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The Real History Behind Apple TV+'s 'Manhunt' and the Search for Abraham Lincoln's Killer
A new series dramatizes Edwin Stanton's hunt for John Wilkes Booth and his co-conspirators in the aftermath of the president’s 1865 assassination.
by
Vanessa Armstrong
via
Smithsonian
on
March 14, 2024
The Hunt for John Wilkes Booth Goes On
A new television miniseries depicts the pursuit of Lincoln’s killer. But the public appetite for tales about the chase began even as it was happening.
by
Jill Lepore
via
The New Yorker
on
March 11, 2024
Throngs of Unseen People
A new history of spiritualism during the Civil War era suggests an unexpected link between the Lincoln family and that of John Wilkes Booth.
by
David S. Reynolds
via
New York Review of Books
on
September 15, 2022
We Lionize Abraham Lincoln – But John Wilkes Booth Still Embodies a Part of America’s Soul
How the insurrection on January 6th brought a legendary assassin back to life.
by
Bennett Parten
via
Public Seminar
on
March 18, 2021
The Insane Story of the Guy Who Killed the Guy Who Killed Lincoln
Meet Boston Corbett, the self-castrated hatmaker who was John Wilkes Booth's Jack Ruby.
by
Bill Jensen
via
Washingtonian
on
April 13, 2015
Why Are Presidential Assassins Such Sad Sacks?
What would-be killers of the US commander in chief have in common is that they aren’t fervent ideologues; they’re outcasts.
by
Zack Budryk
via
The Nation
on
July 22, 2024
What We’ve Learned: Pondering Usable History
We must be cautious of the inclination to find a “usable history” that proves those points we want to prove, that reinforces the lessons we want reinforced.
by
Chris Mackowski
via
Emerging Civil War
on
January 4, 2021
partner
Knight Club
Were the Knights of the Golden Circle responsible for Lincoln’s assassination? No one knows, but far-right secret societies always draw power from speculation.
by
Devin Thomas O’Shea
via
HNN
on
January 14, 2025
City on Fire
The night violent anti-government conspirators sowed chaos in the heart of Manhattan.
by
Betsy Golden Kellem
via
The Atavist
on
September 24, 2024
The Hunt for Judah P. Benjamin, the Spy Chief of the Confederacy
Suspected of orchestrating the Lincoln assassination, the South’s most prominent Jew escaped to London to start a new life as a high-powered lawyer.
by
Jay Soliman
,
Jane Singer
via
Tablet
on
June 22, 2023
A Fire Started in Waco. Thirty Years Later, It’s Still Burning.
Behind the Oklahoma City bombing and even the January 6th attack was a military-style assault in Texas that galvanized the far right.
by
Daniel Immerwahr
via
The New Yorker
on
May 1, 2023
The Failure of Reconstruction Is to Blame for the Weakness of American Democracy
A new book argues that the American right emerged out of a backlash to multiracial democracy following the Civil War.
by
Matthew E. Stanley
via
Jacobin
on
December 8, 2022
partner
Activists Have Always Been Frustrated at Allies’ Insistence on Gradual Change
Why abolitionist Lydia Maria Child raged at President Lincoln’s political calculations.
by
Lydia Moland
via
Made By History
on
March 28, 2022
Biographical Fallacy
The life of Judah Benjamin, a Southern Jew who served in the Confederate government, can tell us only so much about the American Jewish encounter with slavery.
by
Richard Kreitner
via
Jewish Currents
on
February 3, 2022
This Man Was the Only Eyewitness to the Deaths of Both Lincoln and Garfield
Almon F. Rockwell's newly resurfaced journals, excerpted exclusively here, offer an incisive account of the assassinated presidents' final moments.
by
Jason Emerson
via
Smithsonian
on
January 7, 2022
How Historians Say Abraham Lincoln Is Quoted and Misquoted
As Presidents' Day approaches, historians look back at the most notable recent uses and misuses of "the Great Emancipator's" words.
by
Olivia B. Waxman
via
TIME
on
February 11, 2021
This Guilty Land: Every Possible Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln is widely revered, while many Americans consider John Brown mad. Yet it was Brown’s strategy that brought slavery to an end.
by
Eric Foner
via
London Review of Books
on
December 17, 2020
Shakespeare’s Contentious Conversation With America
James Shapiro’s recent book looks at why Shakespeare has been a mainstay of the cultural and political conflicts of the country since its founding.
by
Alisa Solomon
via
The Nation
on
December 17, 2020
Why We Keep Reinventing Abraham Lincoln
Revisionist biographers have given us countless perspectives, from Honest Abe to Killer Lincoln. Is there a version that’s true to his time and attuned to ours?
by
Adam Gopnik
via
The New Yorker
on
September 21, 2020
For the First Time, America May Have an Anti-Racist Majority
Not since Reconstruction has there been such an opportunity for the advancement of racial justice.
by
Adam Serwer
via
The Atlantic
on
September 8, 2020
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