The Doctor's Slaves: Samuel Mudd, Slavery, and The Lincoln Assassination. Robert K. Summers

The Doctor's Slaves: Samuel Mudd, Slavery, and The Lincoln Assassination


The-Doctor-s-Slaves-Samuel.pdf
ISBN: 9780578487489 | 90 pages | 3 Mb

Download PDF




  • The Doctor's Slaves: Samuel Mudd, Slavery, and The Lincoln Assassination
  • Robert K. Summers
  • Page: 90
  • Format: pdf, ePub, fb2, mobi
  • ISBN: 9780578487489
  • Publisher: Robert K. Summers
Download The Doctor's Slaves: Samuel Mudd, Slavery, and The Lincoln Assassination


Google free ebooks download The Doctor's Slaves: Samuel Mudd, Slavery, and The Lincoln Assassination English version by Robert K. Summers 9780578487489 RTF ePub

All of the historical accounts of Dr. Samuel A. Mudd's life focus on his conviction as one of the eight persons tried for conspiracy in the 1865 assassination of president Abraham Lincoln. But Dr. Mudd was also a farmer who relied on slave labor to plant and harvest his tobacco crops. This book is the story of the lives of those men and women. Dr. and Mrs. Mudd acquired at least nine slaves between 1859 and 1864. Their first five slaves were documented in the 1860 Federal Slave Census. They were a 26-year-old man, a 19-year-old girl, a 10-year-old boy, an 8-year-old girl, and a 6-year-old girl. The 26-year-old man was Elzee Eglent. The 19-year-old woman was his sister, Mary Simms. The 14-year-old boy was their brother, Milo Simms. The two little girls were called sisters, but their different last names suggest they were not. We do know they were orphans. The 8-year-old girl was Lettie Hall. The 6-year-old girl was Louisa Cristie. Four additional slaves were acquired between 1860 and 1864. They were Rachel Spencer, Richard Washington, Melvina Washington, and Frank Washington. Rachel Spencer probably came from the plantation of Henry Lowe Mudd where her mother Lucy Spencer, her sister Maria Spencer, and her brothers Baptist Spencer and Joseph Spencer were slaves. Maria Spencer was married to William Hurbert, a slave on Susanna Mudd’s plantation in nearby Prince George’s County. Richard Washington, Melvina Washington, and Frank Washington came from the Dyer plantation. After the Civil War started, some of Dr. Mudd's slaves ran away to Washington, D.C. where slavery was abolished in 1862., or joined the Union Army which began enlisting former slaves in 1863. Others left the farm after the State of Maryland abolished slavery in November 1864. Three of Dr. Mudd's slaves remained on the farm after emancipation and were still there at the time of the 1870 Federal census. Not much is known about the slaves' lives before Dr. Mudd became involved in the Lincoln assassination. Slave owners didn't normally keep records of slaves' births, marriages, deaths, or other events in their lives. Most of what we know about Dr. Mudd's slaves comes from testimony by and about them at the Lincoln conspiracy trial, as reported in this book. After the trial, the lives of most of Dr. Mudd's former slaves faded once again from public view. However, research for this book uncovered interesting information about some of their post-slavery lives, and is reported in this book. This includes former slave Lettie Hall Dade's account of John Wilkes visit to the Mudd farm immediately following the assassination.

Dr. Samuel Mudd - Lincoln Discussion Symposium
This page covers the life of Dr. Samuel Mudd who was convicted of complicity in Abraham Lincoln's assassination. Testimony against the doctor at the trial included his harsh treatment of some of his slaves. He shot one male slave (who survived). in the escape of John Wilkes Booth after the Lincoln assassination. Dr.Mudd – Dr. Samuel A. Mudd House Museum
According to his testimony, he went to work in the fields before the doctor or Herold came out to In the post-war years, Caroline Wade claimed to have been a slave on the Mudd farm. [10] Lincoln Assassination File, reel 4: frames 245-254. Samuel Mudd - Spartacus Educational
Biography of Samuel Mudd. After graduation in 1856 Mudd returned to Charles County where he worked as a doctor before marrying Mudd, an advocate of slavery, was a supporter of the Confederacy during the American Civil War. After John Wilkes Booth shot Abraham Lincoln on 14th April, 1865 he and David  Watch The Prisoner Of Shark Island | Prime Video - Amazon.com
Warner Baxter plays Dr. Samuel Mudd, American history's most famous victim of Wilkes Booth, and Mudd is accused of conspiring to murder President Lincoln. Great movie based on historical fact about the doctor who set the leg of John and the character of Buck, the loyal former slave who contrives to stay with his  The Doctor's Slaves: Samuel Mudd, Slavery, and The Lincoln
The Doctor's Slaves: Samuel Mudd, Slavery, and The Lincoln Assassination (Paperback). The Doctor's Slaves: Samuel Mudd, Slavery, and The  Dr. Mudd and the" Colored" Witnesses
Among those sentenced to life in prison was Samuel Alexander Mudd, the he has come to be seen as a simple country doctor caught in the hysteria of the time, who They presented the dark side of the slave-owning [End Page 324] aristocracy of Several major works devoted to Mudd and the assassination of Lincoln  Trial Project Bibliography - BoothieBarn
Arnold, Samuel Bland. The Lincoln Assassination – The Court Transcripts. K. The Doctor's Slaves: Samuel Mudd, Slavery, and the Lincoln Assassination. The Doctor's Slaves: Samuel Mudd, Slavery, and The Lincoln
The Doctor's Slaves: Samuel Mudd, Slavery, and The Lincoln Assassination | Summers, Robert K | ISBN: 9780578487489 | Kostenloser Versand für alle Bücher  Page 2 – This is the - Dr. Samuel A. Mudd House Museum
Dr. Mudd was the southern Maryland doctor who set the leg of John Wilkes Booth the morning after the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. In the post-war years, Caroline Wade claimed to have been a slave on the Mudd farm. She stated that  Lincoln Conspirator or Rural Country Doctor - Civil War Bummer
Lincoln Conspirator, Samuel A. Mudd, was not only a respected and wealthy Rural Country Doctor, but a slave owner, tobacco farmer and to kidnap Lincoln or in the assassination conspiracy remains a mystery to this day. Browse Books | Skylight Books
Slave Religion: The "invisible Institution" in the Antebellum South (Paperback) The Doctor's Slaves: Samuel Mudd, Slavery, and The Lincoln Assassination 



Other ebooks:
GERENCIA Y ADMINISTRACION ESTRATEGICA DE LA ATENCION MEDICA leer el libro