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  1. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › David_HeroldDavid Herold - Wikipedia

    David Edgar Herold (June 16, 1842 – July 7, 1865) was an American pharmacist's assistant and accomplice of John Wilkes Booth in the assassination of Abraham Lincoln on April 14, 1865. After the shooting, Herold accompanied Booth to the home of Dr. Samuel Mudd, who set Booth's injured leg.

  2. Relatively few people today remember the man who helped Booth escape after the deadly deed. That man was David Herold. He was deeply involved in a wider conspiracy that had targeted not only the President, but the Vice President and other top government officials.

  3. Images of David Herold. Herold captured as Booth stands in burning barn. Herold visited in cell by sisters on day of his execution. Biographic Sketch of David Herold. David Herold was the sixth of eleven children born to the chief clerk at the Navy Store at the Washington Navy Yard.

  4. assassination of Abraham Lincoln. …with another of the conspirators, David Herold, Booth fled through Maryland, stopping to have his leg treated by Samuel A. Mudd, a Maryland doctor who would later be convicted of conspiracy. A massive manhunt ensued, fueled by a \$100,000 reward. Booth and Herold hid for days in a thicket of….

  5. David Herold, as in real life, surrenders himself to Union soldiers during Manhunt episode 6. Herold was sentenced to death due to his crimes, despite his lawyer's defense....

  6. David E. Herold 23 years old, Herold first met Booth in 1863 after a performance at Ford's Theatre. Herold was friends with George Atzerodt and John Surratt and had met Michael O'Laughlen through Atzerodt. His role in the assassination plot was to guide Powell to Secretary of State Seward’s home and then aid his escape out of the city.

  7. Apr 12, 2015 · After a day of fruitless searching, the volunteers received a tip from a fisherman and his wife that men fitting Booth’s and his accomplice David Herolds descriptions had crossed the Rappahannock River and were headed toward Bowling Green in Virginia’s Caroline County.

  8. Apr 8, 2015 · All was quiet, too, in the tobacco barn, where John Wilkes Booth and his co-conspirator David Herold were sleeping. The barking dogs and the clanking, rumbling sound finally woke Booth.

  9. www.rogerjnorton.com › Lincoln28David Herold

    Dec 29, 1996 · This page covers the life of David Herold who was convicted of complicity in Abraham Lincoln's assassination.

  10. David Herold. An impressionable and dull-witted pharmacy clerk, Herold led Booth on the escape route into Virginia. He surrendered at the Garrett farm, was tried and convicted,...

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