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The
Legend of John Wilkes Booth:
Myth, Memory, and a Mummy
by C. Wyatt
Evans
A compelling
story that unravels the truth and fiction about John Wilkes
Booth and his legendary mummy
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THE
LEGEND OF JOHN WILKES BOOTH: Myth, Memory, and a Mummy
by C. Wyatt Evans began
life as the author's dissertation at Drew University, which shows in
the level of its scholarly research (almost 40 pages of detailed
notes accompany the text).
Readers unfamiliar with
the legend of Booth's mummy will find the story fascinating. The
official account is the one history books teach: Booth was shot in a
Virginia barn owned by a farmer named Garrett. He died a short time
later. His body was brought to the Washington naval yard for an
autopsy where three things happened. First, the body was identified as
that of John Wilkes Booth. Second, army doctors removed three
vertebrae from Booth's neck (the site of his mortal wound) for
preservation at the Army medical Museum. Finally, his body was
buried and reburied a number of times. The
historical account ends there, just as the legend begins. All that
reburial made some people uneasy; they feared that the government
might be hiding the truth from them. According
to the legend, Booth wasn't the man shot in the barn. Rather, he
escaped to Kentucky where he recuperated from his broken leg before
moving on to California, where he met up with his mother and his
wife. For the next 30 years, he lived the life of a fugitive, not
only in the United States, but possibly in Mexico, China, Ceylon, and the
South Seas. Finally,
when a man killed himself by swallowing poison in an Oklahoma hotel
room in 1903 and then confessed to being John Wilkes Booth in his
dying moments, the legend took on new currency. The dead man's body
was embalmed, because the local mortician figured that federal
authorities would want to claim it. When that didn't happen, the
mummified body became a local attraction. By the end of World War I,
the Booth mummy was rented out to carnival sideshows. For 20 years
or so, the body toured the West and Midwest. Henry Ford even
considered buying the mummy. By World War II, the mummy's
appearances stopped. It turned up once again, though, for a brief 1976
sideshow in New Hope, Pennsylvania. In
researching and writing the book, Evans hoped that "readers
will come away with a sense of the legend's playfulness, irony, and
pathos as well as an understanding of the ideological purposes it
has served." In well-organized chapters, Evans discusses how a
man named David George became the Booth mummy, traces the popular
display of the dead in American culture, outlines the conspiracy
theories surrounding Booth's death and/or disappearance, explains
the need for some people to believe in the legend of the Booth
mummy, and describes the sideshow of people who helped or hindered
the legend. Civil
War history buffs and serious mummy buffs will appreciate the depth
of detail found here. If the book has any fault, it is the style of
writing which occasionally strays into dense, overly academic
language and analyses (yes, a few parts do read like a dissertation in
need of some editing). In the end, though, that doesn't matter. The story and the
facts behind it carry the day. Anyone interested in the history of
mummies, especially sideshow mummies, will not be disappointed with
this book. Complete
with 15 illustrations and photographs. Recommended!
For more information about the reported
mummy of John Wilkes Booth, follow
this link. |