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Assassination of President Lincoln

American History Museum

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Object Details

depicted

Lincoln, Abraham
Booth, John Wilkes
Lincoln, Mary Todd
Harris, Clara
Rathbone, Henry Reed

maker

Baker, Joseph E.

Description

After Lincoln’s assassination, Northern families often displayed in their homes lithographic prints of the man they believed to be the savior of their nation. This colored print from shortly after Lincoln’s death depicts an interior scene of his assassination at Ford’s Theater on April 14, 1865. John Wilkes Booth wields a blood stained knife and jumps from the box where Lincoln sits slumped in his chair. Mary Todd Lincoln attends to her husband while the surrounding spectators exhibit hysteria and alarm. The Lincolns’ box, depicted as extremely small and overcrowded, contains their guests, Major Henry R. Rathbone and his fiancée, Clara Harris, although another unidentified female onlooker also occupies the box. Lincoln's guard had earlier left his post, so he is not depicted. On the top of the box railing rest a pair of opera glasses and a program, inscribed, “Ford's Theat../ American Cousin,” which is the name of the play being performed that night. Oddly, the audience on the first floor of Ford's Theater appears to be viewing the events from the same level as the box, which makes Booth's leap one story down to the stage seem like a short hop over the box parapet to the floor. Prints of the assassination were in such demand immediately after the event that printmakers paid little attention to the accuracy of the depictions.
The artist of this work, James E Baker (1837-1914), began as an apprentice at J. H. Bufford & Co. in 1857. He eventually became John Bufford’s principal draftsman and illustrator of sheet music. He worked in NYC in 1860-1867 and specialized in portrait prints. During the Civil War he produced, for Bufford, political cartoons and lithographs relating the national drama. He later worked for Armstrong & Company, remaining active until 1888.

Location

Currently not on view

Credit Line

Harry T. Peters "America on Stone" Lithography Collection

Date made

ca. 1865
ca 1865

ID Number

DL.60.2547

catalog number

60.2547

accession number

228146

Object Name

Lithograph

Object Type

Lithograph

Physical Description

ink (overall material)
paper (overall material)

Measurements

image: 9 1/2 in x 14 in; 24.13 cm x 35.56 cm

place made

United States: Massachusetts, Boston

depicted

United States: District of Columbia, Ford's Theater

See more items in

Home and Community Life: Domestic Life
American Civil War Prints
Art
Domestic Furnishings

Data Source

National Museum of American History

Subject

U.S. National Government, executive branch
Murder
Theater

referenced

Civil War

Subject

Assassination

related event

Assassination of Abraham Lincoln
Civil War

Metadata Usage

CC0

Link to Original Record

https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a1-29d3-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

Record ID

nmah_324855

Discover More

Abraham Lincoln profile painting

The Many Faces of Abraham Lincoln: Art and Artifacts

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