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  1. Jun 12, 2006 · by Edward Steers, Jr. 6/12/2006. Share This Article. During his initial interview with investigating detectives on April 18, 1865, Dr. Samuel A. Mudd claimed, “I never saw either of the parties before, nor can I conceive who sent them to my house.

  2. Sep 14, 2017 · Quick Facts. Samuel Alexander Mudd I was a physician, small-scale tobacco farmer and slave owner who assisted in the escape of John Wilkes Booth in the aftermath of the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln.

  3. Biographic Sketch of Dr. Samuel Mudd. The conviction of Dr. Samuel Mudd proved to be--along with the death sentence for Mary Surratt--the most controversial action of the Military Commission that tried the Lincoln assassination conspirators.

  4. Aug 13, 2020 · Samuel Mudd, MD: Good Samaritan or conspirator? Kevin R. Loughlin. Boston, Massachusetts, United States. Figure 1 Samuel A. Mudd, MD. Wikimedia. As he rose in the Washington, D.C. courtroom on June 30, 1865, to hear his verdict, Dr. Samuel Mudd looked older than his thirty-one years (Figure 1).

  5. American physician. Learn about this topic in these articles: assassination of Abraham Lincoln. In assassination of Abraham Lincoln: Mourning, manhunt, and aftermath. Samuel Mudd, who would later be convicted of conspiracy, though his descendants waged a protracted battle to prove his innocence.

  6. Feb 14, 1993 · More than a century after his death, Dr. Samuel A. Mudd's appeal to clear his name as a conspirator in Abraham Lincoln's assassination was finally heard. He won, but it was only in a mock...

  7. Samuel Mudd . Library of Congress. Dr. Samuel Alexander Mudd 32 years old, Mudd was a graduate of St. John's College and Georgetown College (now University), and got his miedical degree from the Baltimore Medical College in 1856.

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