Originally published April 13, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified April 13, 2007 at 2:01 AM
Book review
"Stealing Lincoln's Body" | The odd reburials of Abraham Lincoln
Seven score and two years ago at 7:22 a.m. April 15, Abraham Lincoln died. After extensive ceremonies and public viewings, from Baltimore through New...
Special to The Seattle Times
"Stealing Lincoln's Body"
by Thomas J. Craughwell
Harvard University Press,
250 pp., $24.95
Seven score and two years ago at 7:22 a.m. April 15, Abraham Lincoln died. After extensive ceremonies and public viewings, from Baltimore through New York to Chicago, he was buried on May 4, 1865, at Oak Ridge Cemetery in Springfield, Ill. His elaborate marble tomb became a tourist destination where visitors paid respectful tribute to one of America's greatest presidents.
And then on Nov. 7, 1876 — election night — a gang of counterfeiters tried to steal Lincoln's embalmed body. Their plan was to hold it for ransom and force the release of Benjamin Boyd, a notorious engraver, but agents of the fledgling Secret Service had infiltrated the gang and thwarted their plans. The attempted body snatching so disturbed the cemetery's custodian that he removed Lincoln's coffin and buried it in the dirt under the tomb. Joined six years later by his wife's coffin, Lincoln's lay in the dirt until April 14, 1887, when the two were finally reburied in a new, concrete-fortified vault.
But Lincoln's body would not remain undisturbed, and in 1901 his coffin was moved again. It was also reopened. According to witnesses, one of whom didn't die until 1963, Lincoln was perfectly preserved. Finally, on Sept. 26, 1901, workers sealed Abraham Lincoln's coffin in a steel cage and 10 feet of concrete. No one has moved it since.
In "Stealing Lincoln's Body," Thomas J. Craughwell, author of "Saints Behaving Badly," vividly tells the story of Lincoln's post-death movements. Along the way we learn about counterfeiting, embalming and the birth of the Secret Service. Unfortunately, we learn too much about some of these subjects; for example, he spends 46 pages on counterfeiting before he finally ties the story back to Lincoln.
Despite its need for some editing, "Stealing Lincoln's Body" is a fascinating account of how even in death, Abraham Lincoln's story was larger than life.
NEW - 10:24 AM
Shelf Talk | Medical Lectures + medical info: at your public library!
Gordon, Egan among PEN/Faulkner award nominees
Comics: Flaws aside, animated 'All-Star Superman' still fun
Case closed: Dick Tracy artist retires
![]()

Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
(The Associated Press) Fuel rules get support A Consumer Federation of America survey conducted in April found that a large majority of Americans R...
Post a comment
- Seattle’s NBA hopes still high as league warms to expansion
- China’s wealthy paying cash for Eastside luxury homes
- Earthquake scenarios show potential for huge damage, loss of life
- Records give rare look at how feds probed one reporter
- Navy dolphins discover rare old torpedo off Calif. coast near Coronado
- Huge tornado hits Oklahoma City suburb, kills 51
- Poverty hits home in local suburbs like S. King County
- Kemper Freeman plans $1.2 billion expansion in Bellevue
- NBA player Terrence Williams arrested in Kent for gun threats
- An innocent slip of the (long, slinky) tongue by NBA honcho | The Wrap / Ron Judd
- IRS office was perplexed, inundated with tax-exempt applications
368 - Game thread: Hisashi Iwakuma tries to play 'stopper' for Mariners
278 - Mariners seeing what that crucial speed element looks like
196 - Mariners can't close Indians out, lose it 10-8 in 10th
138 - Poverty hits home in local suburbs, like S. King County
98 - Tornadoes slam Plains, Midwest; 1 dead in Okla.
76 - Carney: Senior White House staff knew of IRS probe
58 - More Obama aides knew of IRS audit; Obama not told
55 - Guest: Stop using the term ‘illegal immigrants’
52 - Kemper Freeman plans $1.2 billion expansion in Bellevue
38
- China’s wealthy paying cash for Eastside luxury homes
- Kemper Freeman plans $1.2 billion expansion in Bellevue
- Earthquake scenarios show potential for huge damage, loss of life
- Community Dinners church nourishes bodies, souls
- Poverty hits home in local suburbs like S. King County
- 129 concerts to see this summer
- Premiums under new health-care law remain about the same
- The stories behind Huntington’s disease | Nicole & Co.
- Fremont: Quirky, lively and very popular | NW Neighborhood
- Columbia Hills State Park is a Gorge wonder







