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Historical Dictionaries & Encyclopedias, Assassinations & Conspiracies, World History - General & Miscellaneous, 19th Century American History - Politics & Government - Presidents, 19th Century American History - Biography, Union - Civil War History
The Lincoln Assassination Encyclopedia by Edward Steers β€” book cover

The Lincoln Assassination Encyclopedia

by Edward Steers
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Overview

The definitive A to Z reference on the assassination of Abraham Lincoln

The first book of its kind, The Lincoln Assassination Encyclopedia is a truly indispensable guide to one of the most dramatic and fascinating events in our nation's history: the murder of the sixteenth president of the United States. Written by Edward Steers, Jr., acclaimed author of Blood on the Moon and one of the world's leading authorities on the subject, here is an exhaustive, highly readable resource that includes:

  • All the known persons, places, events, and conspiracies connected to the tragedy
  • More than 150 period photographs and maps, many never before published
  • The truth behind the hoaxes, myths, and legends surrounding the assassination
  • A comprehensive narrative and timeline of events . . . and more

With a foreword by James L. Swanson, bestselling author of Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln's Killer, The Lincoln Assassination Encyclopedia is the perfect addition to every Lincoln library.

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Editorials

Library Journal

You do not have to search far to find out the uniqueness of this scholarly volume on the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Files, not known or organized until the mid-1930s, demonstrate the importance of waiting until the evidence is in, or when it can be attributed. The files themselves are listed on pages 299–300. Prior, only hearsay evidence and eyewitnesses to the assassination of Lincoln were available. In 1965, the National Archives photocopied the entire evidence file, along with trial proceedings, onto 16 reels of microfilm named "Micro copy No. 599" (M-599). Among the eyewitnesses and judges whose files were copied were Thomas Harris (a trial commissioner), Thomas Jones (coconspirator who hid Booth), and William E. Doster (defense attorney). All told their stories without benefit of the information contained in the evidence file in the War Department archives. The evidence file compiled by Special Advocate Henry L. Burnett along with the trial proceedings are located in the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) as part of Record Group 153, Records of the Office of the Judge Advocate General (Army). "It can safely be said that out of the hundred-plus books written on Lincoln's assassination only a handful have utilized the evidence file of M-599, and then sparingly," writes Steers. Of the 16 reels, number seven contains the evidence; eight through 15 hold the proceedings, including the closing arguments and exhibits. Reel 16 contains issues of the Washington, DC, newspaper Daily National Intelligencer, which published each day's verbatim trial transcript. Many of the 98 exhibits were turned over to the National Park Service and are now on display at Ford's Theatre. BOTTOM LINE This scholarly study of the assassination would have been even more beneficial with an index of subjects and of personages and events of this momentous episode in American history. Nonetheless, this discriminating study is for all students of the event and especially academics on the subject.β€”Al Vara, Temple Univ. Lib., Philadelphia

Book Details

Published
May 11, 2010
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Pages
594
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780061787751

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