The Baltimore Plot
The First Conspiracy to Assassinate Abraham Lincoln
فرمت کتاب
ebook
تاریخ انتشار
2013
نویسنده
Michael J. Klineناشر
Westholme Publishingشابک
9781594165566
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
January 15, 2009
Corporate lawyer Kline details an alleged plot to which most Lincoln books only allude. President-elect Lincoln journeyed by private railway from Springfield, IL, through Maryland to his 1861 inauguration and, in Baltimore, escaped from what was probably the first conspiracy to assassinate him. The alleged plotters were never brought to trial. Kline contextualizes Baltimore as the largest city of a pro-secessionist border state, where previous tumults had earned it the sobriquet "Mobtown." Foiling the plot burnished the reputation of private detective Allan Pinkerton, among others. Lincoln's protectors saved his life but not his reputation. The press ridiculed Lincoln for resorting to disguise when moving between stations in Baltimore in the midst of his otherwise highly publicized "Lincoln Special" to Washington. Lincoln thereafter vowed never to hide. Kline translates legal concepts into comprehensible language, making readable an at times exhaustive examination of a scheme tied together through the "circumstantial evidence of motive, means, and opportunity." Kline invites his readers to serve as judge and jury and to conjecture how history would have been different had such a conspiracy succeeded. Comparing favorably with Harold Holzer's "Lincoln President-Elect", this book demonstrates the use of archival sources beyond the usual standard and is recommended for libraries serving specialists and general readers.Frederick J. Augustyn Jr., Library of Congress
Copyright 2009 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
January 1, 2009
Was evidence of a plot to murder Abraham Lincoln as he traveled through Baltimore en route to his 1861 inauguration genuine, or was it a product of detective Allan Pinkertons imagination? Historians have been divided on the issue, but to author Kline, a lawyer by occupation, a conspiracy case based on circumstantial evidence can be made, and he makes it in exacting but fascinating detail. For dramatic support to his legal briefs, Kline recounts Lincolns train journey, climaxing in a scene in which Lincoln must decide whether to credit Pinkertons report of having infiltrated a conspiracy and to heed Pinkertons counsel to alter his travel schedule through Baltimore, then a secessionist hotbed with a reputation for mob violence. It was a second, independent source of intelligence that convinced Lincoln to accede to Pinkerton, which also buttresses Klines conviction that the plot was real. Gathering inculpatory information, arguing its probative value, and re-creating the tension of the secession crisis, Kline will absorb Lincoln readers with his thorough presentation of Lincolns surreptitious arrival in Washington, which Lincoln himself subsequently regretted.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)
دیدگاه کاربران