John Wilkes Booth
In February 1869 President Andrew Johnson released John Wilkes Booth’s remains to the Booth family. On February 15th the pine coffin was opened and the body identified. Booth’s head was found to be entirely detached from his body. The remains were sent to Baltimore, and there the detached head was passed around and looked upon by those present for the identification. Booth’s third, fourth, and fifth cervical vertebrae, which were removed during his autopsy, are housed along with several mementos from Abraham Lincoln’s autopsy (including the bullet that killed the president, the probe used to remove the bullet, fragments of the president’s skull, hair from the president, and the blood-stained cuffs of the lab coat worn by Dr. Edward Curtis at the autopsy) at the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Silver Spring, Md. Additional hair samples from Lincoln’s autopsy are in the Lincoln Room Museum in the Wills House in Gettysburg and the Weldon Petz Abraham Lincoln Collection, at the Plymouth Historical Society & Museum which is located in Plymouth, Michigan. Another fragment from Booth’s autopsy is in a bottle in the Mutter Medical Museum at the College of Physicians of Philadelphia. In October 1994 a petition was filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City to exhume Booth’s remains from Green Mount Cemetery. The petitioners were people who identified themselves as Booth’s relatives. The cemetery argued that its solemn duty was to protect the sanctity of those interred unless there was overwhelming evidence that the body buried there was not Booth’s. Judge Joseph H.H. Kaplan ruled that the evidence for exhumation was insufficient.
Cemetery Information:
Final Resting Place:
Green Mount Cemetery
1501 Greenmount Avenue
Baltimore, Maryland, 21202
USA
North America
Grave Location:
Dogwood, Section 10, Booth Family PlotGrave Location Description
Once entering the Green Mount Cemetery turn right and head southeast along Cemetery Avenue past two intersections for 0.02 miles. You can park your car along the road. Then walk along the path between the two white crypts on the right heading northeast along the walkway and the tall white Booth family obelisk will be visible from the road on your right. The small, unmarked headstone to the left of the obelisk on the path is where John Wilkes Booth is buried.
It is somewhat humorous tradition to leave Lincoln pennies atop the headstone.
Grave Location GPS
39.30708030156541, -76.60595404968547Visiting The Grave:
Photos:
Read More About John Wilkes Booth:
- Wikipedia Entry
- The Night Abraham Lincoln Was Assassinated
- The Final Days of John Wilkes Booth
- How Did John Wilkes Booth Die?
- John Wilkes Booth’s Other Victim
- John Wilkes Booth – Actor to Assassin
- John Wilkes Booth's Abduction Plot Gone Wrong
- The Forgotten Story of John Wilkes Booth’s Family
- The Closest Source We Have to Really Knowing John Wilkes Booth Is His Sister
- Unsolved Mysteries - John Wilkes Booth
- About John Wilkes Booth
- The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln: The Co-Conspirators
- Wikipedia - Assassination of Abraham Lincoln
- Did John Wilkes Booth get away with murdering President Abraham Lincoln?
- Inside the Conspiracy Theories Behind John Wilkes Booth