493:
so securely fastened that it required considerable force to remove it. This wedge or bar was about four feet from the floor. Persons upon the outside were beating against the door for the purpose of entering. I removed the bar, and the door was opened. Several persons, who represented themselves as surgeons, were allowed to enter. I saw there
Colonel Crawford, and requested him to prevent other persons from entering the box. I then returned to the box, and found the surgeons examining the President's person. They had not yet discovered the wound. As soon as it was discovered, it was determined to remove him from the theater." As Lincoln was carried out, Rathbone escorted Mary Lincoln to the
143:
122:
485:, and attempted to stab Rathbone in the chest. Rathbone parried the blow by raising his arms and Booth slashed Rathbone's left arm from the elbow to his shoulder. Although wounded, Rathbone recovered and grabbed onto Booth's coat, as Booth prepared to jump from the box, causing Booth to lose balance as he leapt to the stage, possibly breaking his leg, though some historians have suggested that the injury did not occur until later. As Booth landed on the stage, Rathbone cried out, "Stop that man!" Audience member Joseph B. Stewart climbed over the
168:
469:
40:
505:, who had been attending Lincoln, finally examined Rathbone, it was realized that his wound was more serious than initially thought. Booth had cut him nearly to the bone and severed an artery. Rathbone was taken home while Harris remained with Mary Lincoln as the president lay in a comatose state over the next nine hours before he died on the morning of April 15.
318:. When Rathbone attempted to apprehend Booth, Booth stabbed and seriously wounded him. Rathbone may have played a part in Booth's leg injury. Although he recovered, Rathbone's mental state deteriorated afterwards, and in 1883, he killed his wife, Clara, in a fit of madness, later being declared insane by doctors and living the rest of his life in a
492:
Rathbone assessed the
President as unconscious and mortally wounded. He rushed to the door of the box for the purpose of calling medical aid. Rathbone testified that it was "barred by a heavy piece of plank, one end of which was secured in the wall, and the other resting against the door. It had been
480:
entered the presidential box and shot
President Lincoln in the back of the head with a pistol. Rathbone heard the shot and turned to see Booth standing in gunsmoke less than four feet behind Lincoln; Booth shouted something that Rathbone thought was "Freedom!" Rathbone immediately leapt from his seat
524:
Rathbone and his family relocated to
Germany, where his mental health continued to decline. On December 23, 1883, he attacked his children in a fit of madness. He fatally shot and stabbed his wife, who was attempting to protect the children. He stabbed himself five times in the chest in an attempted
516:
After his resignation from the military in 1870, Rathbone struggled to find and keep a job due to his mental instability. He became convinced that Harris was unfaithful and resented the attention she paid their children. He reportedly threatened her on several occasions after suspecting that she was
891:
while I was intently observing the proceedings upon the stage, with my back toward the door, I heard the discharge of a pistol behind me, and, looking round, saw through the smoke a man between the door and the
President. The distance from the door to where the President sat was about four feet. At
984:
I instantly sprang toward him and seized him. He wrested himself from my grasp, and made a violent thrust at my breast with a large knife. I parried the blow by striking it up, and received a wound several inches deep in my left arm .... The man rushed to the front of the box, and I endeavored to
1014:
Maj. Joseph B. Stewart, a lawyer, who was 6 feet 6 inches tall and probably the tallest man in
Washington, was sitting in the front seat of the orchestra, on the right-hand side. Startled by the shot, he looked up and saw Booth tumbling onto the stage. Rising instantly. Stewart climbed over the
397:, where he was known to miss many classes, and worked in a law partnership in Albany. In 1858, he entered the New York National Guard, where he worked as a judge advocate. Shortly after this, he was selected to be sent to Europe as an observer during the
1094:
I then turned to the
President; his position was not changed; his head was slightly bent forward and his eyes were closed. I saw that he was unconscious, and, supposing him mortally wounded, rushed to the door for the purpose of calling medical
497:
across the street, where the president was taken. Rathbone said that upon "reaching the head of the stairs, I requested Major Potter to aid me in assisting Mrs. Lincoln across the street to the house where the
President was being conveyed."
985:
seize him again, but only caught his clothes as he was leaping over the railing of the box. The clothes, as I believe, were torn in the attempt to hold him. As he went over upon the stage, I cried out, 'Stop that man.'
532:
Rathbone spent the rest of his life in the asylum. On August 31, 1910, it was reported that he was "near death". He died on August 14, 1911, and was buried next to his wife at the
Stadtfriedhof Engesohde cemetery in
525:
suicide. He was charged with murder, but was declared insane by doctors after he blamed the murder on an intruder. He was convicted and committed to an asylum for the criminally insane in
513:
Although
Rathbone's physical wounds healed, his mental state deteriorated in the years following Lincoln's death as he anguished over his perceived inability to thwart the assassination.
1385:
1015:
orchestra pit and footlights, and pursued Booth across the stage, shouting several times "Stop that man!" He stepped out the back door only to see Booth mount his horse and ride away.
1395:
373:
when the two were approximately ages 11 and 14. Despite being step-siblings, they formed a close friendship and later fell in love, becoming engaged shortly before the
338:, and Pauline Rathbone (née Penney). Upon his father's death in 1845, Rathbone inherited $ 200,000 (the equivalent of $ 6,300,000 in 2022). His widowed mother married
489:
and footlights and pursued Booth across the stage, repeating Rathbone's cry of "Stop that man!" several times. Booth escaped and remained at large for twelve days.
501:
Shortly thereafter, Rathbone passed out due to blood loss. Harris arrived soon after and held Rathbone's head in her lap while he lay semiconscious. When surgeon
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going to divorce him and take the children. During this time, he made multiple unsuccessful attempts to obtain a position as a United States
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and grabbed Booth. Rathbone was horrified at the anger on Booth's face, as Booth wrestled himself away, dropped the pistol and drew a
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334:, one of four children of Jared L. Rathbone, a merchant and wealthy businessman who later became the first elected
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421:. In 1863, he was pulled from frontline duty and given a desk job. By the war's end, he had attained the rank of
521:, before eventually being offered the appointment as Consul to Hanover, Germany by President Chester A. Arthur.
612:
His experience at the Lincoln assassination and the murder of Clara Harris are covered in the non-fiction book
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1193:
581:
292:
288:
457:. Rathbone and Harris had been friends with the president and his wife for some time and were invited after
1405:
562:
529:, Germany. The couple's children were sent to live with their uncle, William Harris, in the United States.
1360:
1177:
944:
Protecting President Lincoln: The Security Effort, the Thwarted Plots, and the Disaster at Ford's Theatre
720:
406:
657:
Sensitivity and Civil War, the Selected Diaries and Papers, 1858–1866, of Frances Adeline (Fanny) Seward
128:
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On April 14, 1865, Rathbone and Harris accepted an invitation from President Lincoln and
414:
385:; Gerald Lawrence (born August 26, 1871); and Clara Pauline (born September 15, 1872).
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614:
Worst Seat in the House: Henry Rathbone's Front Row View of the Lincoln Assassination
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1269:
https://baltimoresun.newspapers.com/article/star-gazette-henry-rathbone/134115937/
597:
425:. When he resigned from the military in 1870, Rathbone had risen to the rank of
365:. Harris was a widower with four children of his own, including a daughter named
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the same time I heard the man shout some word, which I thought was 'Freedom!'
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568:
502:
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285:
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620:(1994, published by Ticknor & Fields), a historical fiction novel by
462:
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402:
370:
362:
339:
263:
147:
91:
39:
821:
The Last Lincoln Conspirator: John Surratt's Flight from the Gallows
1197:
907:
The Last Lincolns: The Rise & Fall of a Great American Family
429:
174:
655:
Seward, Frances Adeline (1963). Johnson, Patricia Carley (ed.).
616:
by Caleb Stephens. Rathbone and Harris are also the subjects of
1054:
American Brutus: John Wilkes Booth and the Lincoln Conspiracies
482:
377:. The couple married on July 11, 1867, and had three children:
706:"On Exhibit: Artifacts, artwork tell stories of these women"
1386:
People associated with the assassination of Abraham Lincoln
361:
As a result of the marriage, Ira Harris became Rathbone's
851:
Blood on the Moon: The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln
769:
The Routledge Encyclopedia of Civil War Era Biographies
744:
Genealogical Notes of New York and New England Families
673:
A Genealogy Of the Descendants Of Nicholas Harris, M.D.
405:
at the start of the American Civil War and served as a
1026:
1396:
People of New York (state) in the American Civil War
1142:
Lincoln's Last Battleground: A Tragic Night Recalled
659:. Vol. 2. University of Rochester. p. 719.
1246:
Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase to Catch Lincoln's Killer
1108:
853:. University Press of Kentucky. pp. 104–105.
465:, and several others had declined the invitation.
1332:
19:For his son, the congressman from Illinois, see
381:(born February 12, 1870), who later became a
306:were sitting with Lincoln and Lincoln's wife
110:Stadtfriedhof Engesohde (disinterred in 1952)
388:
16:US military officer and diplomat (1837–1911)
1174:"The Conspirator: The Plot to Kill Lincoln"
644:. Essex Institute Press. 1891. p. 165.
291:officer and lawyer who was present at the
38:
998:"NPS Historical Handbook: Ford's Theatre"
342:in 1848. Harris would later be appointed
1391:Military personnel from Albany, New York
1302:
1051:
937:
935:
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931:
817:
472:Dagger used by Booth to attack Rathbone.
467:
435:
325:
1243:
910:. Sterling Publishing Company. p.
903:
897:
785:
741:
508:
284:(July 1, 1837 – August 14, 1911) was a
238: 1867; died 1883)
1381:People acquitted by reason of insanity
1333:
1221:The Lincoln Assassination Encyclopedia
1218:
1027:Jones, Mark; Johnstone, Peter (2011).
848:
766:
718:
654:
642:Essex Institute Historical Collections
1401:People convicted of murder by Germany
1279:
1188:
1186:
941:
928:
791:
663:
1315:from the original on January 3, 2014
1139:
1106:
719:Pappas, Theodore (August 21, 1994).
552:The Dramatic Life of Abraham Lincoln
1280:Smith, Gene (February–March 1994).
792:Ruane, Michael E. (April 5, 2009).
669:
476:During the play, noted stage actor
399:Second Italian War for Independence
13:
1431:American lawyers with disabilities
1183:
14:
1442:
1366:American people imprisoned abroad
1303:De Haven, Tom (August 19, 1994).
1078:"President Lincoln is Shot, 1865"
1056:. Random House LLC. p. 231.
968:"President Lincoln is Shot, 1865"
875:"President Lincoln is Shot, 1865"
824:. Naval Institute Press. p.
442:Assassination of Abraham Lincoln
166:
141:
120:
1426:19th-century American diplomats
1411:Union College (New York) alumni
1356:American expatriates in Germany
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818:Jampoler, Andrew C. A. (2008).
811:
746:. Heritage Books. p. 637.
723:. chicagotribune.com. p. 1
310:when the president was shot by
235:
1248:. HarperCollins. p. 372.
1223:. HarperCollins. p. 158.
1031:. Elsevier. pp. 274–275.
760:
742:Talcott, Sebastian V. (2001).
735:
721:"Henry And Clara's Cruel Fate"
712:
698:
684:
648:
634:
266:(stepfather and father-in-law)
1:
1416:Lawyers from Albany, New York
1376:Deaths in mental institutions
1111:A. Lincoln, His Last 24 Hours
1052:Kauffman, Michael W. (2007).
1004:. National Park Service. 2002
692:"New-York Historical Society"
627:
540:
1107:Reck, Waldo Emerson (1987).
670:Ham, Mrs. Thomas H. (1904).
563:The Prisoner of Shark Island
7:
1178:National Geographic Channel
1144:. AuthorHouse. p. 19.
1029:History of Criminal Justice
10:
1447:
1244:Swanson, James L. (2009).
1180:. Retrieved March 18, 2012
946:. McFarland. p. 161.
771:. Routledge. p. 491.
439:
302:; Rathbone and his fiancé
18:
1194:"Worst Seat in the House"
942:Hatch, Frederick (2011).
904:Lachman, Charles (2008).
389:Legal and military career
354:became Abraham Lincoln's
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259:
245:
217:
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162:
154:
135:
115:
105:
81:
61:
53:
37:
30:
1140:Bain, Robert T. (2005).
794:"A Tragedy's Second Act"
767:Wright, John D. (2012).
590:The Day Lincoln Was Shot
419:Battle of Fredericksburg
393:Rathbone studied law at
369:, who became Rathbone's
253:Gerald Lawrence Rathbone
205:Battle of Fredericksburg
1371:Burials in Lower Saxony
1219:Steers, Edward (2010).
849:Steers, Edward (2005).
1351:1883 murders in Europe
603:Joseph Carlson (2013)
582:The Lincoln Conspiracy
473:
411:12th Infantry Regiment
255:Clara Pauline Rathbone
48:photograph of Rathbone
1115:. McFarland. p.
1084:. Ibis Communications
974:. Ibis Communications
881:. Ibis Communications
471:
436:Lincoln assassination
330:Rathbone was born in
326:Early life and family
155:Years of service
1309:Entertainment Weekly
1164:Kauffman (2007) p.37
676:C.I.F. Ham. p.
587:Sean Baldwin (1998)
509:Later life and death
250:Henry Riggs Rathbone
210:Battle of the Crater
1406:Union Army officers
1282:"The Haunted Major"
1082:EyeWitnesstoHistory
972:EyeWitnesstoHistory
879:EyeWitnesstoHistory
798:The Washington Post
595:Andy Martin (2010)
579:John Cooler (1977)
282:Henry Reed Rathbone
57:Henry Reed Rathbone
1361:American murderers
1200:on August 19, 2014
474:
415:Battle of Antietam
375:American Civil War
356:Secretary of State
200:Battle of Antietam
195:American Civil War
185:12th U.S. Infantry
1286:American Heritage
1255:978-0-061-80397-0
1230:978-0-061-98705-2
1063:978-0-307-43061-8
1038:978-1-437-73497-3
953:978-0-786-46362-6
921:978-1-402-75890-4
835:978-1-591-14407-6
778:978-1-136-33150-3
708:. March 12, 2020.
574:Prince of Players
478:John Wilkes Booth
453:to see a play at
451:Mary Todd Lincoln
401:. He entered the
352:William H. Seward
312:John Wilkes Booth
308:Mary Todd Lincoln
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448:First Lady
403:Union Army
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363:stepfather
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