Hi Brad and Stan,
Yeah, Stan, we can finally - apparently - use the dimimutive for "Richard". That's a plus.
The Federal Government (actually the lunatic fringe of the Radical Republicans - trying to tie Vice President turned President Andrew Johnson to a Confederate plot) attempted to link Johnson and Booth to Davis and
other Confederate leaders. But several things worked against this. First, public opinion regarding Davis changed when it was thought that he was undergoing too rough a time as a prisoner in Fortress Monroe (his jailer was Northern General Nelson Miles, whose propensity to get bad publicity began here). Reports circulated (somewhat exaggerated) that Miles put Davis (who suffered from several illnesses, including neuralgia) in heavy chains. In the end he was released on bail that was paid by the prominent abolitionist editor of the New York Tribrune Horace Greeley. He was supposed to be tried for treason, but the trial never occurred.
Secondly, although an inept President, Johnson was courageous enough to fight back. Eventually he would be impeached for a violation of the Tenure of Office Act, a controversial law regarding requiring Congressional approval for the removal of cabinet officers who were appointed in the previous administration. This act would bother every President from Andrew Johnson through Grover Cleveland, before the Supreme Court decided it was illegal in 1887. Johnson tried to remove Secretary of War Edward M. Stanton, who had been spying on his cabinet meetings for the Radical Republicans. It was this that led to the impeachment. Johnson (like Bill Clinton) was impeached
(indicted) by the House of Representatives. But like Clinton he would be acquitted by the Senate (by one vote from Senator Edmund Ross of Kansas - see PROFILES IN COURAGE by John F. Kennedy).
Finally the Congressional investigation (the congressman who led it was so strange even the friends of the Radicals thought he was crazy), was tainted by shady professional witnesses like Sanford Connover - who would later testify and villify Dr. Tumblety.
The end result was that if there was evidence of a Southern conspiracy it got so tainted that it was buried as soon as it could be.
Jeff
Yeah, Stan, we can finally - apparently - use the dimimutive for "Richard". That's a plus.
The Federal Government (actually the lunatic fringe of the Radical Republicans - trying to tie Vice President turned President Andrew Johnson to a Confederate plot) attempted to link Johnson and Booth to Davis and
other Confederate leaders. But several things worked against this. First, public opinion regarding Davis changed when it was thought that he was undergoing too rough a time as a prisoner in Fortress Monroe (his jailer was Northern General Nelson Miles, whose propensity to get bad publicity began here). Reports circulated (somewhat exaggerated) that Miles put Davis (who suffered from several illnesses, including neuralgia) in heavy chains. In the end he was released on bail that was paid by the prominent abolitionist editor of the New York Tribrune Horace Greeley. He was supposed to be tried for treason, but the trial never occurred.
Secondly, although an inept President, Johnson was courageous enough to fight back. Eventually he would be impeached for a violation of the Tenure of Office Act, a controversial law regarding requiring Congressional approval for the removal of cabinet officers who were appointed in the previous administration. This act would bother every President from Andrew Johnson through Grover Cleveland, before the Supreme Court decided it was illegal in 1887. Johnson tried to remove Secretary of War Edward M. Stanton, who had been spying on his cabinet meetings for the Radical Republicans. It was this that led to the impeachment. Johnson (like Bill Clinton) was impeached
(indicted) by the House of Representatives. But like Clinton he would be acquitted by the Senate (by one vote from Senator Edmund Ross of Kansas - see PROFILES IN COURAGE by John F. Kennedy).
Finally the Congressional investigation (the congressman who led it was so strange even the friends of the Radicals thought he was crazy), was tainted by shady professional witnesses like Sanford Connover - who would later testify and villify Dr. Tumblety.
The end result was that if there was evidence of a Southern conspiracy it got so tainted that it was buried as soon as it could be.
Jeff
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