In my last entry, I told you that I am a Taphophile, or someone
who is fascinated by cemeteries. I also talked about some of my rather unpleasant
experiences when visiting cemeteries. ,
Without a doubt my most unpleasant and dangerous experience
occurred earlier this year in Baltimore, Maryland, I think I am kind when I
call it a disgusting city. Anyway, I don’t have anything good to say about
Downtown Baltimore, so I won’t say anything else.
The reason I was in Baltimore was I wanted to visit historic
Green Mount Cemetery. And although I failed
in my most recent attempt to visit, I did visit it back in 2001 and even then I
found that the cemetery wasn’t in the best part of town, but it was nothing
like what I found this time.
Back in 2001 it did manage to take a few photos of some of
the more notable people that are resting in this large cemetery. While there
are a number of notable people buried here, there were three that I really
wanted to find.
JOHN WILKES BOOTH
After he fatally shot President Lincoln, Booth manage to escape
and fled across the Anacostia River into Maryland. Several days later he
crossed the Potomac River near Port
Royal, Virginia where he and his companion David Herold shelter in a barn that
was owned by the Garrett Family.
Booth was originally buried buried at the Arsenal Penitentiary in Washington, D.C., But in 1869 the government released his body to his family who had his remains disinterred and moved to the Booth family plot in Baltimore’s Green Mount Cemetery.
His grave was initially unmarked and today is only marked by
a small, unmarked white stone in the corner of the family plot.
The second grave that I wanted to visit was that of Civil War General Joseph E. Johnston who attended the United States Military Academy at West Point, graduating in the same class as General Robert E. Lee.
After Virginia declared secession from the United States in 1861, General Johnston entered the Confederate States Army as one of its most senior officers during the War.Most people associate the end of the Civil War with the
surrender of General Robert E. Lee to General Ulysses S. Grant at
Appomattox. At Appomattox, General Lee
surrendered 28,000 troop attached to his Army of Northern Virginia.
Before and after General Lee’s surrender at Appomattox, General
Johnston, was still fighting with the Union Army in North Carolina. A little over two weeks after Appomattox
General Johnston surrendered more than 89,000 troops to Union General William
T. Sherman. that was being Led by General William T. Sherman. This was the
larges surrender of the entire war.
General Sherman’s funeral was held in New York City on a
cold and rainy day. As the funeral procession made it’s way through the streets
of the city, General Johnson’s walked the entire length of the procession bare
headed out of respect for his dear friend.
It is widely attributed that because he walked the entire length of the procession without a hat, he caught a terrible cold that turned into pneumonia which claimed his life a little over a month later on March 21, 1891. General Johnson also served as a pallbearer at the funeral of General Ulysses S. Grand in 1885.
JOHNS HOPKINS
He was also the President of the Merchant’s Bank as well as
a number of other investment that ended up making him a lot of money. When he
died on December 24, 1873, he left more than 7 million dollars which was used
to fund what would become Johns Hopkins University and Hospital.
SAMUEL ARNOLD
Come to find out, John Wilkes Booth is not the only Lincoln
Conspirator that is buried in this cemetery.
Samuel Arnold, was a confederate sympathizer that Joined the Confederate
Army during the Civil War. He was discharged in 1864 for health reasons.
After his discharge, Arnold returned to Baltimore and in the
late summer of 1864, he was recruited by Booth to be part of the kidnap plot.] Bored
and unemployed, Arnold accepted. On March 15, 1865, the conspirators met at
Gautier's Restaurant on Pennsylvania Avenue to discuss the plot to
kidnap President Lincoln.
They attempted to Kidnap President Lincoln twice but failed because Lincoln was not where they thought he would be. After the kidnapping failed, the plot moved from kidnapping Lincoln to actually Assassinating him. Arnold wanted not part of the murder plot and took a job at Old Point Comfort in Virginia
After Booth assassinated Lincoln on April 14, 1865, Arnold was arrested from his job in Virginia on suspicion of complicity. He admitted his part in the plot to kidnap Lincoln, and his co-workers supported his contention of being in Virginia at the time of the assassination.Arnold was found guilty of conspiracy by a military tribunal
and sentenced to life in prison at Fort Jefferson, along with Dr. Samuel
Mudd, Michael O'Laughlen, and Edmund Spangler. In 1869, Arnold, Mudd,
and Spangler were released after being pardoned by President Andrew
Johnson (O'Laughlen died in prison in 1867).
After being pardoned, Samuel Arnold returned home, he lived
quietly out of the public eye for more than thirty years. In 1898, he returned
to Fort Jefferson and took photographs of his old prison, but the photographs
have not survived.
In 1902, Arnold wrote a series of newspaper articles for
the Baltimore American describing his imprisonment at Fort
Jefferson. Samuel Arnold died at the age of 72, on September 21, 1906.
The only conspirator who survived him was John Surratt.
There are a number of other notable people buried in this cemetery. As much as I would like to some day return and visit them, I don't think endanger myself by returning to Baltimore.







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