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  • 6
    Jun
    2012
    11:41am, EDT

    Doctor's report on Lincoln assassination discovered by researcher

    AP Photo/Library of Congress

    Dr. Charles A. Leale was the first doctor to treat President Abraham Lincoln after he was shot at a Washington theater on the night of April 14, 1865. Helena Iles Papaioannou, a researcher with the Papers of Abraham Lincoln Project has discovered an original copy of Dr. Leale's clinical 21-page report from the night Lincoln was shot.

    By Phil Rogers, NBCChicago.com

    Researchers at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library are marveling over the historical equivalent of buried treasure: an up-to-now undiscovered account of the night Lincoln was assassinated, written by the first doctor to treat him.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Dr. Charles Leale was a 23-year-old army surgeon who was in attendance at Ford's Theatre when John Wilkes Booth entered the presidential box and shot Lincoln days after the conclusion of the Civil War. 

    Abraham Lincoln researcher Helena Iles Papaioannou discovered Leale's account while searching the records of the surgeon general in the National Archives in Washington, DC. The 21-page report is Leale's own retelling of the tragedy, written just hours after the president died the following morning.


    Read the original report on NBCChicago.com

    "What is remarkable about this newly discovered report is it's immediacy and poignancy," said Daniel Stowell, director of the Papers of Abraham Lincoln project. "You can sense the helplessness Leale and the other doctors felt that night, but it does not have the sentimentality or added layers of later accounts."

    The young doctor was sitting just 25 feet away from the Lincoln box, giving him a front-row seat to the tragedy. He then became the first doctor to treat Lincoln, supervising his care until the president's own doctor arrived.

    The National Archives has re-discovered a long-forgotten note written by the doctor who first evaluated Abraham Lincoln after the 16th president was shot in Ford's Theater. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    "The theatre was well filled, and the play 'Our American Cousin' progressed very pleasantly until about half past ten," Leale wrote, "when the report of a pistol was distinctly heard."

    "About a minute after, a man of low stature with black hair and eyes was seen leaping to the stage beneath, holding in his hand a drawn dagger."

    Leale described how Booth had become entangled in the flag draping the front of Lincoln's box in his leap to the stage. Booth broke his leg in the fall.

    "I then heard cries that the 'President has been murdered,' Leale wrote, adding that calls of "kill the murderer" and "shoot him" began echoing through the theatre.

    AP Photo/Alexander Gardner

    Dr. Charles Leale rushed to the upstairs balcony where Abraham Lincoln had been seated after hearing the president had been shot. He was the first to administer aid
    immediately following the shooting.

    "I immediately ran to the President's box and as soon as the door was opened was admitted and introduced to Mrs. Lincoln, when she exclaimed several times, 'O doctor, do what you can for him, do what you can!'"

    Leale said that Lincoln's breathing was "intermittent" and that he could find no pulse. Using a finger, he removed a clot of blood from the bullet wound and said Lincoln's breathing became "more regular."

    The doctor described in great detail how he and others carried Lincoln from the box, down the stairs of the theatre and across the street to the Peterson house across the street.

    "We placed the President in bed in a diagonal position, as the bed was too short.  As soon as we placed him in bed we removed his clothes and covered him with blankets. While covering him I found his lower extremities very cold from his feet to a distance of several inches of above his knees. I then sent for bottles of hot water, and hot blankets, which were applied to his lower extremities and abdomen."

    Leale said Mary Todd Lincoln entered the room "three or four times" during the evening and that the president's son, Robert Todd Lincoln, remained at his bedside throughout the night. Unmentioned in the report, but well known to history, is the fact that the First Lady was eventually expelled and kept from the room, her grief was so intense.

    After hours of futile efforts to save the fallen president, Leale described Lincoln's final moments.

    "At 7:20 a.m. he breathed his last, and 'the spirit fled to God who gave it.'"

    Leale had received his medical license only six weeks earlier. At the time of the assassination, he was in charge of a wounded officers' ward at the United States Army hospital in Armory Square in Washington. He had been present on the lawn at the White House a few evenings earlier, when Lincoln delivered what would become his final speech to a crowd celebrating the surrender of Robert E. Lee and the Army of Northern Virginia.  Booth was present on the lawn that night as well, and many historians believe he solidified his decision to kill the President that evening.

    Researchers at the Lincoln Library say that in the ensuing years, Leale rarely discussed his role in the drama. Indeed, it was not until 1909, 44 years after the assassination, that he spoke publicly about the events at Ford's Theatre.

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    282 comments

    It's nice to read something historic and of value, rather than the rotten stories that MSNBC and other so called media outlets usually focus on.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: president, lincoln, civil-war, abraham-lincoln, john-wilkes-booth, fords-theatre, charles-leale
  • 15
    Mar
    2012
    5:37pm, EDT

    Bobblehead doll of John Wilkes Booth pulled from Lincoln museum

    Shane Dunlap / The Evening Sun

    A John Wilkes Booth bobblehead doll is shown for sale alongside an Abraham Lincoln bobblehead at the Gettysburg Museum & Visitor Center.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield, Ill., is no longer selling a bobblehead doll of Lincoln’s assassin at its gift shop, the Chicago Tribune reported.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The move follows news that the Gettysburg National Military Park in Pennsylvania pulled the John Wilkes Booth dolls from its stores earlier this week, Lincoln museum spokesman Dave Blanchette told the Tribune.

    Blanchette told the newspaper that the museum’s administrators has not received any complaints about the dolls, but that they agreed with the Gettysburg Park’s assessment that they were not appropriate for sale. “It seems to be in bad taste,” he said.


    "This was the first time that we really took a hard look at having these items for sale," Blanchette told the Tribune.

    The dolls of Booth with a handgun were removed from Gettysburg shelves on Saturday, a day after a reporter for Hanover's The Evening Sun newspaper asked about them, officials said.

    "On rare occasions, there's an item that might cause concern, and obviously the bobbleheads appeared to be doing that," Gettysburg Foundation spokeswoman Dru Anne Neil said Tuesday.

    The dolls were available for only about a week before the park superintendent, the foundation president and the bookstore manager decided they shouldn't be for sale, Neil said.

    The Booth dolls, which are about 7 inches tall and come in boxes that look like the inside of the theater where Lincoln was killed, sell online for about $20 each. They have proved to be popular, as more than 150 of the original run of 250 have been sold, and more are being made, Kansas City, Mo.-based manufacturer BobbleHead LLC said.

    "There's a market there," sales manager Matt Powers said. "We like to let the customer decide if it's a good item or not."

    The company sells dolls of many controversial figures, including Kim Jong-il, the recently deceased leader of North Korea, The Evening Sun reported. But Powers told the paper, "I don't think we'd do Hitler."

    Confederate sympathizer Booth shot Lincoln at Ford's Theatre in Washington in April 1865, as the Civil War was ending. He fled and was tracked into Virginia, where he was killed.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    30 comments

    sure, he was an assassin, but is a Lincoln bobblehead really that much better taste?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pennsylvania, illinois, museum, abraham-lincoln, john-wilkes-booth, gettysburg, bobblehead

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