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  1. Charles Julius Guiteau ( / ɡɪˈtoʊ / ghih-TOH; September 8, 1841 – June 30, 1882) was an American man who assassinated James A. Garfield, president of the United States, in 1881. Guiteau falsely believed he had played a major role in Garfield's election victory, for which he should have been rewarded with a consulship.

  2. On June 30, 1882, Charles Julius Guiteau was led to the gallows and executed for murder. Guiteau was no ordinary killer, though: his victim was James A. Garfield, the twentieth President of the United States.

  3. Mar 13, 2022 · On July 2, 1881, Charles Guiteau shot President James A. Garfield twice at a railroad station in Washington, D.C. — but it took him two months to die of his wounds. The president simply didn’t notice the man with the gun.

  4. Jan 17, 2012 · Charles J. Guiteau, a mentally unstable 41-year-old lawyer, had stalked Garfield for months before shooting him at the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad station in Washington on July 2, 1881.

  5. In James A. Garfield: Assassination. , by Charles J. Guiteau, a disappointed office seeker with messianic visions. The first shot only grazed Garfield’s arm, but the second bullet pierced his back and lodged behind his pancreas. (In a letter dated November 1880, Garfield had written, “Assassination can be no more guarded against….

  6. Charles Guiteau. Shortly after President Garfields death, Guiteau was formally charged with murdering the President. Over the following months, Guiteau's lawyers attempted to plead his case on the defense of insanity, to little avail.

  7. Charles J. Guiteau was convicted of Garfield's murder and executed by hanging one year after the shooting.

  8. Charles Julius Guiteau (September 8, 1841 – June 30, 1882) was an American lawyer with a history of mental illness who assassinated President James Garfield on July 2, 1881 (Garfield died of complications following the shooting, on September 19).

  9. Charles Julius Guiteau employed the unusual medium of poetry to plead his innocence while on trial for assassinating President James Garfield. Guiteau’s odd behavior in court made him a media sensation, and the Gilded Age press eagerly published much of his irrational verse.

  10. Mar 31, 2021 · His trial in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia began on November 14. Despite his insanity defense and his increasingly bizarre behavior, Guiteau was found guilty on January 25, 1882, and sentenced to death.

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