Louis J. Weichmann

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Louis J. Weichmann (September 29, 1842June 5, 1902) was one of the chief witnesses for the prosecution in the conspiracy trial of the Abraham Lincoln assassination. Previously he was also a suspect.

[edit] Background and Early Life

Weichmann was born in Baltimore, Maryland, the son of German immigrants. The family surname was originally Wiechmann, but as in the case of many immigrants in the United States, the name underwent several phonetic spelling changes. His father Johann, was a Lutheran, and his mother Maria was a Catholic. Johann Weichmann was a tailor by trade, and he moved with his wife and their five children, first from the vicinity of Baltimore to Washington D.C. and later to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where Louis attended the city's Central High School. He wrote in his autobiographical work, " A True History of the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln and of the Conspiracy of 1865," that he desired to pursue a career as a pharmacist, but at the behest of his mother, he reluctantly agreed to study for the Roman Catholic priesthood. At the age of seventeen he entered the seminary at St. Charles College in Maryland. There he met and befriended a fellow seminarian, John Surratt. This friendship was to later have profound consequences for both of them.

In 1862, a year after the outbreak of the American Civil War, both Louis Weichmann and John Surratt left the seminary without either of them becoming priests. Weichmann went to Washington, D.C., where he taught school for two years, at St. Matthew's Institute for Boys. After leaving this position, in 1864, he became a clerk in the Department of War, then under Secretary Edwin Stanton. Surratt had in the meantime become a courier and agent for the Confederacy. As a result of his earlier friendship with John Surratt, Weichmann took lodgings in the boarding house of Surratt's mother, Mary Surratt, in Washington D.C. This happenstance brought him into contact with the major conspirators involved in Abraham Lincoln's assassination. According to his subsequent testimony at the trial of the conspirators, Weichmann stated that John Wilkes Booth, David Herold, Lewis Payne, George Atzerodt, John Surratt and others continually met at Mary Surratt's boarding house. Weichmann further testified that on the day Abraham Lincoln was shot, April 14, 1865, he accompanied Mary Surratt to her other property in Surrattsville, (now Clinton, Maryland), where she delivered items that Booth later retrieved after the assassination. He further testified that Mary Surratt met with John Wilkes Booth no less than three times on that fateful day. Dr. Samuel Mudd, who treated Booth's broken leg on the night Lincoln was killed, and claimed to have no knowledge of the conspiracy, was linked by Weichmann's testimony to the events for which he was tried and found guilty as well.

[edit] Later Life

In his later years Weichmann moved to Anderson, Indiana where he opened a business school. One of his brothers, a Catholic priest, and two of his sisters lived there. Because of some lingering doubt as to the truth and motives of his testimony, Weichmann became a controversial and somewhat ostracized figure by many people. The fact that Mary Surratt was the first woman tried and executed for a capital crime, by the federal government, caused a backlash against him. There were strong anti-Catholic elements that attempted to link Lincoln's death to a Catholic conspiracy. Partially because of this, he swore out an affidavit, shortly before his death, reaffirming that all of his testimony concerning Abraham Lincoln's assassination was totally and completely true. He died a few days later in Anderson, and is buried in the Catholic Cemetery there.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Weichmann, Louis J. A True History of the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln and of the Conspiracy of 1865 (1975)