The Life, Crime, and Capture of John Wilkes Booth

audiobook

The Life, Crime, and Capture of John Wilkes Booth

by George Alfred Townsend

EN·~4 hours·14 chapters

Chapters

14 total
1

THE LIFE, CRIME, AND CAPTURE - OF - JOHN WILKES BOOTH, - WITH A FULL SKETCH OF THE

0:07
2

AND THE - PURSUIT, TRIAL AND EXECUTION OF HIS ACCOMPLICES. - BY GEORGE ALFRED TOWNSEND, - A SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT.

0:15
3

EXPLANATORY.

1:38
4

PREFATORY.

0:46
5

G. A. T. - THE LIFE, CRIME, AND CAPTURE - OF - JOHN WILKES BOOTH. - LETTER I. - THE MURDER.

23:56
6

LETTER II. - THE OBSEQUIES IN WASHINGTON.

23:11
7

LETTER III. - THE MURDERER.

32:15
8

LETTER IV. - THE ASSASSIN'S DEATH.

33:07
9

LETTER V. - A SOLUTION OF THE CONSPIRACY.

36:05
10

LETTER VI. - THE DETECTIVES' STORIES.

22:28

Description

A correspondent who was in Washington during those turbulent weeks brings the drama to life with fresh letters, vivid sketches, and a reporter’s eye for detail. The narrative captures the feverish atmosphere that swept the capital after the shocking attack on President Lincoln, preserving the immediacy of eyewitness accounts. Readers are treated to the raw language of the era, as the writer records conversations, movements, and the public’s stunned reaction in real time.

The book follows the notorious actor‑turned‑assassin, John Wilkes Booth, as he maneuvers through the city on the day of the crime, from his casual strolls to the calculated steps that led him to Ford’s Theatre. It then details the frantic pursuit of Booth and his co‑conspirators, the frantic manhunt, and the early stages of the legal proceedings that followed. By staying close to the original dispatches, the work offers a compelling snapshot of a nation reeling from an unprecedented act of violence.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (242K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-10-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

George Alfred Townsend

George Alfred Townsend

1841–1914

A fast-moving Civil War correspondent who wrote under the pen name “Gath,” he helped shape how Americans read breaking news in the 19th century. He later turned that reporter’s eye to novels, poetry, and a memorial honoring journalists killed in war.

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