Assassination of Abraham Lincoln and 60 others Counted




Assassination of Abraham Lincoln AND OTHERS in the Politic game

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Assassination of Abraham Lincoln
Part of the conclusion of the American Civil War
John Wilkes Booth assassinating Abraham Lincoln in Ford's Theatre. Drawing from glass-slide depiction c. 1865–75.
LocationFord's TheatreWashington, D.C., U.S.
DateApril 14, 1865; 159 years ago
10:15 PM
Target
Attack type
  • Political assassination
  • shooting
  • stabbing
Weapons
Deaths
  • Abraham Lincoln (died April 15, 1865, at 7:22 AM)
  • John Wilkes Booth (perpetrator, killed on April 26, 1865)
Injured
PerpetratorsJohn Wilkes Booth and co-conspirators
MotiveRevenge for the Confederate States

On April 14, 1865, Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president of the United States, was shot by John Wilkes Booth while attending the play Our American Cousin at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C. Shot in the head as he watched the play,[2] Lincoln died of his wounds the following day at 7:22 am in the Petersen House opposite the theater.[3] He was the first U.S. president to be assassinated.[4] His funeral and burial were marked by an extended period of national mourning.

Near the end of the American Civil War, Lincoln's assassination was part of a larger political conspiracy intended by Booth to revive the Confederate cause by eliminating the three most important officials of the federal government. Conspirators Lewis Powell and David Herold were assigned to kill Secretary of State William H. Seward, and George Atzerodt was tasked with killing Vice President Andrew Johnson.

Beyond Lincoln's death, the plot failed: Seward was only wounded, and Johnson's would-be attacker became drunk instead of killing the vice president. After a dramatic initial escape, Booth was killed at the end of a 12-day chase. Powell, Herold, Atzerodt, and Mary Surratt were later hanged for their roles in the conspiracy.

John Wilkes Booth (May 10, 1838 – April 26, 1865) was an American stage actor who assassinated United States President Abraham Lincoln at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C., on April 14, 1865. A member of the prominent 19th-century Booth theatrical family from Maryland,[1] he was a noted actor who was also a Confederate sympathizer; denouncing President Lincoln, he lamented the then-recent abolition of slavery in the United States.[2]

Originally, Booth and his small group of conspirators had plotted to kidnap Lincoln to aid the Confederate cause. They later decided to murder him, as well as Vice President Andrew Johnson and Secretary of State William H. Seward.[3] Although the Army of Northern Virginia, commanded by General Robert E. Lee, had surrendered to the Union Army four days earlier, Booth believed that the Civil War remained unresolved because the Army of Tennessee of General Joseph E. Johnston continued fighting.

Booth shot President Lincoln once in the back of the head. Lincoln's death the next morning completed Booth's piece of the plot. Seward, severely wounded, recovered, whereas Vice President Johnson was never attacked. Booth fled on horseback to Southern Maryland; twelve days later, at a farm in rural Northern Virginia, he was tracked down sheltered in a barn. Booth's companion David Herold surrendered, but Booth maintained a standoff. After the authorities set the barn ablaze, Union soldier Boston Corbett fatally shot him in the neck. Paralyzed, he died a few hours later. Of the eight conspirators later convicted, four were soon hanged.

PoliticianPortraitPartyYearOfficeStateSiteMethodAssassinSuspected motiveRef
Charles BentNonpartisan1847GovernorNew Mexico TerritoryTaosNew Mexico (at home)arrows and scalpingTomás RomeroPablo MontoyaTargeted during Taos Revolt, a popular uprising against newly asserted US authority over the region after the Mexican–American War.
Tommy BurksDemocratic1998State SenatorTennesseeCumberland CountyTennessee (at home)gunshotByron Looper (the incumbent Putnam County Assessor)Killed by political opponent in 1998 State Senate race[2]
Charles CaldwellRepublican1875State Senator and Militia Leader (Clinton Riot)MississippiClinton, MississippigunshotAssassinated by a white mob in Clinton, Mississippi[3]
Louis CardisDemocratic1877State RepresentativeTexasEl PasoTexasgunshotCharles HowardKilled as part of the San Elizario Salt War, a dispute over salt mining claims between white and Hispanic settlers[4]
Anton CermakDemocratic1933Mayor of ChicagoIllinoisMiamiFlorida (in motorcade)gunshot to lungGiuseppe ZangaraDisputed; suspected of striking Cermak instead of intended target President-elect Franklin Roosevelt[5]
José Francisco ChavesRepublican1904Superintendent of Public Instruction (former congressman and territory politician)New Mexico territoryPinoswells, New Mexicogunshots (through the window of his home)unknown assailantUnknown[6]
John M. ClaytonRepublican1889US Representative-electArkansasPlumerville, Arkansasgunshots (through the window of his home)unknown assailantUnknown, but killed in the context of a disputed election[7]
Linda CollinsRepublican2019State SenatorArkansasPocahontas, Arkansas (outside her home)stabbedRebecca Lynn O’DonnellKilled during an argument over money theft.[8]
Richard J. Daronco1988Judge, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New YorkNew YorkPelhamNew York (at home)gunshotCharles KosterAssailant was the father of a plaintiff whose harassment suit was dismissed by Daronco.[9]
James E. DavisDemocratic2003Councilman, New York CityNew YorkNew York City (at City Hall)gunshotsOthniel AskewKilled by prospective challenger for 2003 Council special election[10]
Henry DenhardtDemocratic1937Lieutenant Governor (former)KentuckyShelbyville, Kentucky (outside the Armstrong Hotel)gunshotsE.S. Garr; Roy GarrKilled by brothers of his late fiancée whom he was charged with murdering[11]
Louis F. EdwardsDemocratic1939Mayor, Long BeachNew YorkLong Beach, New York (outside his home)gunshotAlvin DooleyEdwards' political influence thwarted Dooley's re-election to post in a police union.[12]
John Milton ElliottDemocratic1879Judge, Court of AppealsKentuckyFrankfort, Kentucky (after conversation on a public street)gunshotsThomas Buford (Henry County District Judge)Assailant was brother of a plaintiff who lost a farm after Elliott dismissed motion for stay of foreclosure[13]
James A. GarfieldRepublican1881 (details)President of the United StatesWashington, D.C. (at railway station)gunshot to spine (died three months later)Charles J. GuiteauTargeted after assailant was rejected by Republican officials for a patronage appointment[14]
William GoebelDemocratic1900GovernorKentuckyFrankfort, Kentucky (outside Old State Capitol)gunshot to the chestUnknown political opponentsUncertain, but killed in the context of the disputed, fraudulent 1899 Kentucky gubernatorial election.[15]
Bill GwatneyDemocratic2008Chairman of the Democratic Party of ArkansasArkansasLittle Rock, Arkansas (at his office at party headquarters)gunshotsTim JohnsonUnknown; multiple theories proposed.[16]
Carter Harrison, Sr.Democratic1893Mayor of ChicagoIllinoisChicago, Illinois (at home)gunshotPatrick Eugene PrendergastAssailant was rejected for appointment to a patronage post as corporation counsel.[17]
Thomas HaugheyRepublican1869US RepresentativeAlabamaCourtland, Alabama (at a political rally)gunshotCollins (first name unknown)Assailant was a supporter of the target's rival for the Republican nomination for the Congressional race; both men exchanged verbal insults and engaged in fisticuffs before a weapon was brandished[18]
Thomas C. HindmanDemocratic1868US Representative (former)ArkansasHelena, Arkansas (at home)gunshots through windowUnknown assailantsUnknown; multiple theories proposed.[19]
James M. HindsRepublican1868US RepresentativeArkansasMonroe County, Arkansas (on horseback)gunshotGeorge ClarkKilled by a Ku Klux Klan member as intimidation of Republican carpetbaggers[20]
Edward Dexter HolbrookDemocratic1870Delegate to the US House of Representatives (former)Idaho TerritoryIdaho City, Idaho (outside the County Courthouse)gunshotCharles DouglasKilled by the brother-in-law of James Crutcher, as a result of a dispute between Holbrook and Crutcher for control of the Boise County Democratic Party[21]
Elisha G. JohnsonRepublican1875State senatorFloridaNear Lake City, Florida or Fernandina, FloridagunshotUnknownBreak 12–12 tie in Florida Senate.
Hale JohnsonProhibition1902Mayor of Newton, IllinoisPresidential candidateIllinoisBogotaIllinoisgunshotHarry HarrisKilled while attempting to collect a debt owed to him by Harris[22]
Leon JordanDemocratic1970State RepresentativeMissouriKansas City, Missouri (outside a restaurant)gunshotsUnknownUnknown, alleged to have been an organized crime contract killing[23]
John F. KennedyDemocratic1963 (details)President of the United StatesDallas, Texas (in motorcade)gunshots from sniperLee Harvey OswaldDisputed[24]
Robert F. KennedyDemocratic1968 (details)US Senator and a leading 1968 Democratic presidential candidateNew YorkLos Angeles, California (at the Ambassador Hotel)gunshotSirhan SirhanTargeted as supporter of Israel in the Arab–Israeli conflict.[25]
Ed King1986Mayor of Mount PleasantIowaMount Pleasant, IowagunshotRalph DavisUpset by sewage backup on his property.[26]
George LeBreton1844 (details)Secretary of StateOregonOregon City, Oregon (in his office)gunshotsCockstockKilled by a native as part of Native American resistance to white settlement in the area[27]
Abraham LincolnRepublican1865 (details)President of the United StatesWashington, DC. (Ford's Theatre)gunshotJohn Wilkes Booth, a renowned stage actorAssailant was a Confederate sympathizer who believed the war was still ongoing[28]
Russell G. Lloyd, Sr.Republican1980Mayor of Evansville (former)IndianaEvansvilleIndianagunshotJulia van OrdenAssailant was mentally ill and believed she was being harassed by the city; she believed Lloyd was incumbent mayor[29]
Huey LongDemocratic1935 (details)US Senator and a potential 1936 U.S. presidential candidateLouisianaBaton Rouge, Louisiana (inside the State Capitol)gunshotsCarl WeissUncertain, but Weiss was affiliated with a political family that opposed Long's machine[30]
Allard K. LowensteinDemocratic1980US RepresentativeNew YorkNew York City (in his office)gunshotsDennis SweeneyAssailant had a history of mental illness and believed that Lowenstein had been plotting against him since their acquaintance at Stanford University[31]
Edwin Stanton McCookRepublican1873GovernorDakota TerritoryYanktonDakota Territory (at a saloon used for a public meeting)gunshotPeter WintermuteAssailant had lost a fistfight with McCook over financing the Dakota Southern Railroad; he returned with a pistol, publicly humiliated by his loss[32]
William McKinleyRepublican1901 (details)President of the United StatesBuffalo, New York (at Pan-American Exposition)gunshotLeon CzolgoszAssailant was aligned with anarchist movement and killed President as symbol of American inequality[33]
Mike McLellandRepublican2013District Attorney for Kaufman CountyTexasForney, Texas (at home)gunshotEric WilliamsKilled by former justice of the peace who was convicted of burglary while in office[34]
Harvey MilkDemocratic1978 (details)City Supervisor (Councilman) San FranciscoCaliforniaSan Francisco, California (in his City Hall office)gunshotsDan White, outgoing San Francisco City SupervisorAssailant had recently resigned from office due to financial setbacks; he changed his mind and sought reappointment; Moscone denied this request upon the advice of Milk[35]
George MosconeDemocratic1978 (details)Mayor of San FranciscoCaliforniaSan Francisco, California (in his City Hall office)gunshots[35]
Albert PattersonDemocratic1954Attorney General-electAlabamaPhenix City, Alabama (walking to his vehicle)gunshotsUnknownTarget was elected on promise to crack down on organized crime in the state, which was rooted in Phenix City[36]
John Patterson (diplomat)1974United States Vice ConsulMexicoHermosillo, Mexicoblows to the headBobby Joe KeeseeRansom of $500,000[37][38]
Clementa C. PinckneyDemocratic2015 (details)State SenatorSouth CarolinaEmanuel African Methodist Episcopal ChurchCharlestonSouth CarolinagunshotDylann RoofWhite supremacy[39][40][41]
John M. PinckneyDemocratic1905US RepresentativeTexasHempstead, TexasgunshotsUnknownKilled during riot instigated by opponents of alcohol prohibition[42]
David Ramsay1815State Senator and former Continental RepresentativeSouth CarolinaCharleston, South CarolinagunshotsWilliam LinnenAssailant retaliated after target had deemed him insane during criminal court inquiry[43]
George Lincoln RockwellAmerican Nazi1967Gubernatorial candidateVirginiaArlington, VirginiagunshotsJohn PatlerAssailant was angered by Rockwell expelling him from the American Nazi Party[44]
John RollRepublican2011 (details)Judge, U.S. District Court, District of ArizonaArizonaCasas AdobesArizonagunshotsJared Lee LoughnerCaught in crossfire as mentally ill assailant targeted Congresswoman Gabby Giffords[45]
Tomás Romero (Mexican)1848Mayor of Taos PuebloNew Mexico provisional governmentTaos, New Mexico (while imprisoned)gunshotsJohn FitzgeraldKilled following capture for inciting Taos Revolt; assailant retaliating for his brother's death in this uprising[46]
Leo RyanDemocratic1978 (details)US RepresentativeCaliforniaPort KaitumaGuyana (on airport tarmac)gunshotsUnknown members of the People's TempleAmbushed while investigating allegations of human rights abuses at the Jonestown compound[47]
John P. SloughDemocratic1867Chief Justice of the New Mexico Supreme CourtNew Mexico TerritorySanta Fe, New Mexico (at his office)gunshotWilliam Ryerson (an incumbent Territorial Legislator)Killed after a public dispute in which each accused the other of corruption[48]
Solomon P. SharpDemocratic-Republican1825 (details)Attorney GeneralState Senator-electKentuckyHome in Frankfort, Kentuckystabbed (at home)Jereboam O. BeauchampKilled over long-standing dispute based on political differences, and on Sharp fathering a child with the woman whom Beauchamp later married[49]
Joseph SmithReform1844 (details)Mayor of Nauvoo, presidential candidateIllinoisCarthage, Illinois (while in jail)gunshotsThe Carthage GreysFounder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (the Mormons) targeted by an anti-Mormon mob for his growing political power[50]

[51]

J. Christopher StevensDemocratic2012 (details)Ambassador to LibyaBenghaziLibyaarsonmembers of Ansar al-Sharia and Al-Qaeda in the Islamic MaghrebUnknown[52][53]
John W. StephensRepublican1870State SenatorNorth CarolinaYanceyvilleNorth Carolina (in the County Courthouse)gunshotsUnknown, mobbed by estimated 8 to 12 menKilled by Ku Klux Klan member as part of intimidation of Republicans[54]
Frank SteunenbergDemocratic1905Governor (former)IdahoCaldwell, Idaho (outside his home)bomb (set at his front gate)Harry Orchard; possibly othersKilled by a mine owners' association informant in an attempt to cast blame on the Western Federation of Miners[55]
James StrangDemocratic1856State RepresentativeMichiganBeaver IslandMichigan (at a steamship terminal)gunshotThomas BedfordKilled by a disgruntled former member of a Mormon sect led by Strang[56]
Mike Swoboda2008 (details)Mayor of KirkwoodMissouriKirkwood, Missouri (during a city council meeting)gunshot (died seven months later)

[57]

Charles Lee "Cookie" ThorntonAssailant retaliated for fines levied by municipality for code violations[58]
W. H. H. TisonDemocratic1882Speaker of the Mississippi House of RepresentativesMississippiBaldwyn, Mississippi (while walking)gunshotsJ. Edward SandersKilled in retaliation for an alleged assault by his brother S. H. Tison[59]
Robert Smith VanceDemocratic1989Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, Fifth CircuitMountain Brook, Alabama (at home)mail bombWalter MoodyKilled after court refused to expunge a previous conviction for explosives possession from assailant's record[60]
Samuel Newitt WoodRepublican1891State Senator and territorial legislatorKansasHugotonKansas (outside County Courthouse)gunshotsJames BrennanKilled during armed conflict between the two largest towns of Stevens County, Kansas fighting for county seat[61]
John H. Wood, Jr.1979Judge, U.S. District Court, Western District of TexasSan Antonio, Texas (outside his home)gunshotCharles HarrelsonContract killing ordered by Jamiel Chagra due to target's harsh convictions of Latin American drug kingpins[62]
Major RidgeCherokee nation1839Leader of the Cherokee nationWhite Rock CreekgunshotsBird DoubleheadKilled as retaliation for alleged responsibility in the deaths of 4,000 Cherokee on the trail of tears
Larry Kuriyama1970State senatorHawaiiHonolulugunshotUnknownOrganized crime[63]

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