A quick message for our regular listeners.
HostMy apologies on coming out late with our episode this week.
HostThe month of October is incredibly, incredibly busy for my regular day job, and it's been difficult for us to keep up with production.
HostWe're going to do our best for the rest of this month, but I wanted to bring you a special episode of something that I had tried recording.
HostSo, it's a short story about the last days of John Wilkes Booth.
HostI hope you enjoyed.
NarratorHey, you want to see this painting in the back of my truck?
NarratorJen and I looked at each other.
NarratorThese older gentlemen seemed harmless enough.
NarratorIt was a cool day, and their sons of the Confederacy jacket package were small, huh?
NarratorWe'd come to Oak Grove Cemetery in search of someone who had witnessed the last days of John Wilkes Booth.
NarratorIf you are familiar with the manhunt for the infamous assassin, you may know that Union soldiers finally caught up to Booth at the Garrett farm.
NarratorBooth and David Herold hadn't done a great job at escaping.
NarratorThey got lost multiple times and were determined to make their way to Richmond, thinking that would be their best shot at finding passage further away from the relentless search for them.
NarratorThe Lincoln assassins.
NarratorThe Virginia sun beat down mercilessly, sweat stinging my eyes as I shifted my weight.
Narrator14 days on the run had left my leg, a throbbing agony, a constant reminder of my folly.
NarratorThe Garrett farm, a haven at first, now felt like a gilded cage.
NarratorThe warm smiles of the family, the innocent faces of the children were a constant reminder of the life I'd taken.
NarratorLittle Richard, his eyes wide with childish wonder, had pestered me about my compass earlier.
NarratorI, the man who'd plunged a nation into mourning, smiled as he stared in wonder at the mysterious force moving the needle.
NarratorA hollow laugh escaped my lips, swallowed by this cicada chorus outside.
NarratorBeing an actor had its benefits, and my years of practice paid off.
NarratorThe first night at the farm, dinner was almost jovial for the garrets, yet still every creak of the floorboards, every sigh of the wind sounded like approaching Calvary.
NarratorHarold, ever the simpleton, ate with gusto, oblivious to the storm brewing within me.
NarratorJohn Garrett, the elder son.
NarratorHe watched me intently, a spark of suspicion flickering in his gaze.
NarratorWhere did I put my pistol again?
NarratorMisses Garrett's kindness was genuine, but a constant ache to me.
NarratorHer gentle words, her concern for my injury felt like a branding iron on my conscience.
NarratorI, a monster basking in the warmth of their hospitality.
NarratorLater that night, Harold Snores offered a little comfort.
NarratorEscape.
NarratorIt was the only thought that kept me, the creeping despair at bay.
NarratorI had slept in the house the night before, but John had raised his father's suspicions, and they only offered me the barn tonight.
NarratorNo matter.
NarratorI'm just.
NarratorI'm so tired.
NarratorDid I hear something at the barn door?
NarratorA latch?
NarratorNo, that wouldn't make any sense.
NarratorI'm just tired.
NarratorSuddenly, shouts and the clatter of horses shattered the peace.
NarratorUnion soldiers, their faces grim, surrounded the farm.
NarratorPanic twisted in my gut.
NarratorI was trapped.
NarratorOne of the daughters, her face is pale, rushed to the barn.
NarratorThey're looking for you, she gasped.
NarratorThey'll burn the bar down if you don't come out.
NarratorI had always had a way with women.
NarratorNever seemed to have trouble getting them to believe me.
NarratorShe still didnt know who I really was.
NarratorI wasnt jw Boyd, thats for sure.
NarratorThere was a flicker of humanity in her eyes, a plea I wanted to confess, to beg forgiveness.
NarratorBut pride, that old serpent held me captive.
NarratorLet Harold go, I rasped, the words scraping my throat.
NarratorHe had nothing to do with it.
NarratorShe hesitated and nodded curtly.
NarratorHarold stumbled out, bewildered.
NarratorEscape.
NarratorA bitter pill to swallow.
NarratorWith my legs still on the men, there was no chance of running.
NarratorI grabbed my pistol.
NarratorFlames erupted at the barn entrance, the heat licking at my skin.
NarratorTrapped, I stumbled back, my breath catching in my throat.
NarratorA voice boomed, demanding my surrender.
NarratorMy defiant reply died in my throat as a searing pain ripped through my neck.
NarratorThe world spun, then dissolved into darkness.
NarratorThe next sensation was a crushing weight on my chest.
NarratorA voice, distant and muffled, spoke of justice.
NarratorI tried to scream, to plead for mercy, but my body wouldn't obey.
NarratorParalysis, cold and absolute, had claimed me.
NarratorI, Zhang Moks booth, the actor who had craved the spotlight, was reduced to a voiceless puppet in the grand drama of my demise.
NarratorThe flames danced a macabre jig.
NarratorThe only audience to my silent scream, Jen and I walked over to the older gentleman's suv, and he opened the back.
NarratorThere was only a single large painting back there, wrapped in a large blanket.
NarratorPhew.
NarratorAs he unwrapped the painting, he was telling us how he got this from an estate sale not far away, his two friends echoing how good they thought it was.
NarratorIt looked pretty old.
NarratorIt was a painting of a civil war soldier dressed in confederate gray.
NarratorIt wasn't an amazing condition, but it actually looked pretty good.
NarratorSomeone's family had had this for a long time.
NarratorI guessed it was real.
NarratorJen was skeptical, her museum curator training coming out.
NarratorThese men we met in Oak Grove Cemetery were there for a good reason.
NarratorThey had actually revived the cemetery from some disrepair over many years, erected monuments to those buried there who had fought in the battle of the ironclads.
NarratorThey'd mapped victims of the yellow fever epidemic of 1855.
NarratorThese are good men keeping history alive.
NarratorIt was nice to meet him.
NarratorBut a bad man, John Wilkes Booth, died the morning of April 26, 1865.
NarratorAs Booth came charging out of the burning barn, he was shot in the neck by a young soldier named Boston Corbett.
NarratorYou may have heard that name in the last moments of his life.
NarratorBooth asked one of the soldiers to hold up his hands.
NarratorHe had been paralyzed, having been shot in the neck.
NarratorLooking at his old hands, Booth had actually muttered, useless.
NarratorUseless.
NarratorAnd then, at 715 am, he passed.
NarratorThe grave Jen and I had come searching for was the son of Richard Garrett, who owned the farm Booth had escaped to.
NarratorThe son had written a book recounting his memory of Booth.
NarratorThat's how we knew about the details about the compass.
NarratorI had mentioned earlier that little boy was Richard Garrett Junior, who's buried here in Oak Grove Cemetery in Portsmouth, Virginia.
NarratorThis has been a walk with history production.
NarratorTalk with History is created and hosted by me, Scott Benny.
NarratorEpisode researched by Jennifer Benny.
NarratorCheck out the show notes for links and references mentioned in this episode.
NarratorTalk with history is supported by our fans at thehistory roadtrip.com.
Narratorour eternal thanks to those providing funding to help keep us going.
NarratorThank you to Doug McLiberty, Larry Myers, and Patrick Benny.
NarratorMake sure you hit that follow button in your podcast player and we'll talk to you next time.