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  2. Samuel Mudd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Mudd

    Roger Mudd (1928–2021), an Emmy Award-winning journalist, television host and former CBS, NBC, and PBS news anchor, was related to Samuel Mudd, but he was not a descendant, as has mistakenly been reported. [36] Samuel Mudd's life was the subject of an episode of the TV western Laramie, "Time of the Traitor" which aired in 1962.

  3. Reportedly haunted locations in Washington, D.C. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reportedly_haunted...

    During the trials, accused conspirators Dr. Samuel Mudd (who treated John Wilkes Booth's broken leg) and Mary Surratt (at whose downtown boarding house the conspirators met) were held at the Old Capitol Prison opposite the U.S. Capitol (the modern day United States Supreme Court Building stands on the site today).

  4. Edmund Spangler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Spangler

    After years of petitions from Dr. Mudd's wife, Spangler's former boss John T. Ford and attorney Thomas Ewing Jr., President Andrew Johnson pardoned Spangler, Dr. Mudd and Samuel Arnold on March 1, 1869. The group traveled back to Baltimore on a steamer, arriving on April 6.

  5. Lewis Powell (conspirator) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewis_Powell_(conspirator)

    Powell biographer Betty Ownsbey suggests a third sequence of events. She argues Powell was interred at Graceland Cemetery, but that his remains were disinterred some time between 1870 and 1884, and moved to Holmead's Burying Ground. Powell's remains were disinterred in 1884, and buried in a mass grave in Section K, Lot 23, at Rock Creek Cemetery.

  6. How the 'Manhunt' cast prepared to depict Lincoln's ...

    www.aol.com/news/manhunt-cast-prepared-depict...

    Matt Walsh, best known for a very different political series in “Veep,” plays Dr. Samuel Mudd, who fixed Booth’s broken leg after the shooting. (It’s largely forgotten that Mudd, who had ...

  7. David Herold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Herold

    David E. Herold was born in Maryland, the sixth of eleven children of Adam George Herold (1803–1864) [1] [2] and Mary Ann Porter (1810–1883). [3] [4] Adam and Mary were married on November 9, 1828, in Washington, D.C. David was their only son to survive to adulthood.

  8. Mary Surratt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Surratt

    On December 23, 1864, Samuel Mudd introduced John Surratt Jr. to John Wilkes Booth. [87] [88] Booth recruited John Jr. into his conspiracy to kidnap Lincoln. [87] [89] Confederate agents began frequenting the boarding house. [87] [90] Booth visited the boarding house many times over the next few months, [87] [91] [92] sometimes at Mary's ...

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