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Ghost of Mary Surratt Linked to Lincoln's DeathHaunter Has Been Sighted in Several Places in DC and Maryland
Surratt was executed for her alleged part in a conspiracy to assassinate The Great Emancipator. Some believe her spirit is earthbound because she was innocent.
Mary and John Surratt owned a tavern in Clinton Maryland. When John died, he left Mary in debt. She moved into their house in Washington DC, near Ford’s Theater and turned it into a boarding house, but this would ultimately lead to her downfall. Surratt’s Boarding House – Conspiracy Meeting PlaceBoarders included Mary Surratt's son, John, a Confederate courier, and people who supported the Rebels’ cause. John Wilkes Booth visited the house frequently to conspire with them to plan Lincoln’s assassination. The boarding house was to be where Mary Surratt was arrested. It was almost midnight when she was roused from her bed and taken to the jail at the Old Brick Capitol to await her trial. Events Leading to Surratt’s ArrestThe boarding house and former tavern, leased by John Lloyd, were searched after the assassination. On the day of the crime, Booth asked Surratt and Louis Weichmann to deliver a package containing firearms to her former tavern. At the time, she didn’t know the contents of the package. On her way home, Surratt ran into Lloyd, a former Washington police officer, on her way back home. When Lloyd was initially asked about the encounter, he denied that Booth had frequented his tavern. When questioned later, he claimed that Surratt told him to have whiskey and weapons ready for Booth who would stop by that night. Surratt’s Verdict and SentenceA military court convicted Surratt for her part in the conspiracy to assassinate Lincoln and condemned to death by hanging. She appealed the sentence until the day she was executed, proclaiming innocence. Many people expected President Andrew Johnson to pardon Surratt. The federal government had never executed a woman. Her execution was delayed until the afternoon. Soldiers were stationed on every block between the White House and the execution’s site to relay the expected pardon. The order never came. On July 7, 1865, she and her three co-conspirators were hanged. Surratt was the first woman executed by the Federal government. Sightings of Surratt’s GhostAs Lincoln’s ghost has been sighted in several places, so has Surratt’s. The White House is haunted by other ghosts. Some of the places where Surratt’s ghost has been sighted have other haunters. Sites of her hauntings are:
Was Surratt Guilty of Conspiracy?Questions remain about her guilt in Lincoln's assassination. Weichmann was released after he testified against her. Later, he claimed the government forced him to testify. His conscience bothered him until the day he died. Lewis Powell, a conspirator who was hanged with Surratt, publicly stated she was innocent minutes before his execution. Some believe the case against her was circumstantial and involvement in the conspiracy was merely her association with the assassinations. The truth probably never be known. Could it be that her ghost cannot leave the earthly plane because her innocence hasn’t been established? Articles Related to Mary Surratt’s Ghost People who found this article interesting might want to read: Abraham Lincoln and the Paranormal discusses Lincoln’s interest in Spiritualism, having séance’s in the White House and his premonitions of his own death. Ghosts_of_the_White_House provides names of White House haunters and who they were in life. Haunting Abraham Lincoln answers questions about who witnessed Lincoln’s ghost and the phantom train that took his body to Springfield, Illinois for burial. Source:
The copyright of the article Ghost of Mary Surratt Linked to Lincoln's Death in Ghosts & Hauntings is owned by Jill Stefko . Permission to republish Ghost of Mary Surratt Linked to Lincoln's Death in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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