The Unsuccessful Plot to Kill Abraham Lincoln
On the eve of his first inauguration, President Lincoln snuck into Washington in the middle of the night, evading the would-be assassins who waited for him in Baltimore
- By Daniel Stashower
- Illustration by Edward Kinsella III
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2013, Subscribe
As he awaited the outcome of the voting on election night, November 6, 1860, Abraham Lincoln sat expectantly in the Springfield, Illinois, telegraph office. The results came in around 2 a.m.: Lincoln had won. Even as jubilation erupted around him, he calmly kept watch until the results came in from Springfield, confirming that he had carried the town he had called home for a quarter century. Only then did he return home to wake Mary Todd Lincoln, exclaiming to his wife: “Mary, Mary, we are elected!”
At the new year, 1861, he was already beleaguered by the sheer volume of correspondence reaching his desk in Springfield. On one occasion he was spotted at the post office filling “a good sized market basket” with his latest batch of letters, and then struggling to keep his footing as he navigated the icy streets. Soon, Lincoln took on an extra pair of hands to assist with the burden, hiring John Nicolay, a bookish young Bavarian immigrant, as his private secretary.
Nicolay was immediately troubled by the growing number of threats that crossed Lincoln’s desk. “His mail was infested with brutal and vulgar menace, and warnings of all sorts came to him from zealous or nervous friends,” Nicolay wrote. “But he had himself so sane a mind, and a heart so kindly, even to his enemies, that it was hard for him to believe in political hatred so deadly as to lead to murder.” It was clear, however, that not all the warnings could be brushed aside.
In the coming weeks, the task of planning Lincoln’s railway journey to his inauguration in the nation’s capital on March 4 would present daunting logistical and security challenges. The task would prove all the more formidable because Lincoln insisted that he utterly disliked “ostentatious display and empty pageantry,” and would make his way to Washington without a military escort.
Far from Springfield, in Philadelphia, at least one railway executive—Samuel Morse Felton, president of the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad—believed that the president-elect had failed to grasp the seriousness of his position. Rumors had reached Felton—a stolid, bespectacled blueblood whose brother was president of Harvard at the time—that secessionists might be mounting a “deep-laid conspiracy to capture Washington, destroy all the avenues leading to it from the North, East, and West, and thus prevent the inauguration of Mr. Lincoln in the Capitol of the country.” For Felton, whose track formed a crucial link between Washington and the North, the threat against Lincoln and his government also constituted a danger to the railroad that had been his life’s great labor.
“I then determined,” Felton recalled later, “to investigate the matter in my own way.” What was needed, he realized, was an independent operative who had already proven his mettle in the service of the railroads. Snatching up his pen, Felton dashed off an urgent plea to “a celebrated detective, who resided in the west.”
By the end of January, with barely two weeks remaining before Lincoln was to depart Springfield, Allan Pinkerton was on the case.
A Scottish immigrant, Pinkerton had started out as a cooper making barrels in a village on the Illinois prairies. He had made a name for himself when he helped his neighbors snare a ring of counterfeiters, proving himself fearless and quick-witted. He had gone on to serve as the first official detective for the city of Chicago, admired as an incorruptible lawman. By the time Felton sought him out, the ambitious 41-year-old Pinkerton presided over the Pinkerton National Detective Agency. Among his clients was the Illinois Central Railroad.
Felton’s letter landed on Pinkerton’s desk in Chicago on January 19, a Saturday. The detective set off within moments, reaching Felton’s office in Philadelphia only two days later.
Now, as Pinkerton settled into a chair opposite Felton’s broad mahogany desk, the railroad president outlined his concerns. Shocked by what he was hearing, Pinkerton listened in silence. Felton’s plea for help, the detective said, “aroused me to a realization of the danger that threatened the country, and I determined to render whatever assistance was in my power.”
Much of Felton’s line was on Maryland soil. In recent days four more states—Mississippi, Florida, Alabama and Georgia—had followed the lead of South Carolina and seceded from the Union. Louisiana and Texas would soon follow. Maryland had been roiling with anti-Northern sentiment in the months leading up to Lincoln’s election, and at the very moment that Felton poured out his fears to Pinkerton, the Maryland legislature was debating whether to join the exodus. If war came, Felton’s PW&B would be a vital conduit of troops and ammunition.
Both Felton and Pinkerton appear to have been blind, at this early stage, to the possibility of violence against Lincoln. They understood that the secessionists sought to prevent the inauguration, but they had not yet grasped, as Felton would later write, that if all else failed, Lincoln’s life was to “fall a sacrifice to the attempt.”
If the plotters intended to disrupt Lincoln’s inauguration—now only six weeks away—it was evident that any attack would come soon, perhaps even within days.
The detective departed immediately for “the seat of danger”—Baltimore. Virtually any route that the president-elect chose between Springfield and Washington would pass through the city. A major port, Baltimore had a population of more than 200,000—nearly twice that of Pinkerton’s Chicago—making it the nation’s fourth-largest city, after New York, Philadelphia and Brooklyn, at the time a city in its own right.
Pinkerton brought with him a crew of top agents, among them a new recruit, Harry Davies, a fair-haired young man whose unassuming manner belied a razor-sharp mind. He had traveled widely, spoke many languages and had a gift for adapting himself to any situation. Best of all from Pinkerton’s perspective, Davies possessed “a thorough knowledge of the South, its localities, prejudices, customs and leading men, which had been derived from several years residence in New Orleans and other Southern cities.”
Pinkerton arrived in Baltimore during the first week of February, taking rooms at a boarding house near the Camden Street train station. He and his operatives fanned out across the city, mixing with crowds at saloons, hotels and restaurants to gather intelligence. “The opposition to Mr. Lincoln’s inauguration was most violent and bitter,” he wrote, “and a few days’ sojourn in this city convinced me that great danger was to be apprehended.”
Pinkerton decided to set up a cover identity as a newly arrived Southern stockbroker, John H. Hutchinson. It was a canny choice, as it gave him an excuse to make himself known to the city’s businessmen, whose interests in cotton and other Southern commodities often gave a fair index of their political leanings. In order to play the part convincingly, Pinkerton hired a suite of offices in a large building at 44 South Street.
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Comments (8)
With all due respect to Mr. Spielberg and his fine film, this is the Lincoln movie I really want to see.
Posted by Dave on March 12,2013 | 04:00 PM
I've enjoyed the Smithsonian present. Karen
Posted by meyerfamilyinva@verizon.net on February 9,2013 | 09:40 AM
Now, THIS is fascinatin. I'd never heard of this plot to kill Lincoln! It's certainly not in the history books that I read as a child in the sixties. In fact, I have to add, as a new subscriber, I appreciate that your magazine does not have ads throughout the articles. And the writing is wonderful!
Posted by Tamar Raine on February 8,2013 | 10:02 PM
If the plot had succeeded think how many lives would have been saved and fewer mutilations in that grisly war.
Posted by Herman King on February 7,2013 | 07:26 PM
Interesting!
Posted by Mike on February 7,2013 | 05:08 PM
Although I enjoyed this article, which further fleshed out a story that I've heard many times in brief form, I was disappointed that the article made no mention of Timothy Webster. The article gave the impression that Pinkerton did all of his undercover work in Baltimore alone. In fact, two Pinkerton agents, Timothy Webster and Hattie Lawton, were also gathering information in Baltimore. The information that they gathered served to confirm Pinkerton's assertion that there was indeed an assassination plot against Lincoln. Both agents were subsequently found out. Although Miss Lawton escaped with her life, Mr. Webster was hanged, and is said to be the first spy in the American Civil War to be executed. Mr. Webster is buried in the Onarga, IL Township Cemetary, under a black marble stone provided by the Pinkerton Agency. The stone includes a brief version of the story told in this article. I understand that they article's author may have wished to avoid complicating the story, but since Mr. Webster gave his life because of his pursuit of the facts of the Baltimore Plot, I feel he deserved at least a brief mention.
Posted by Jamie Kozma on February 4,2013 | 11:57 AM
Well done! This was a beautifully detailed and elegant written account of the Baltimore Plot. Readers can see this episode, and many others in the story of Lincoln and Lamon's unique friendship brought to life in the upcoming film, Saving Lincoln. Lamon saved the President's life more than once, introduced him at the Gettysburg Address and often soothed his troubled soul with his banjo and light-hearted songs. Learn more at SavingLincoln.com
Posted by Salvador Litvak on January 20,2013 | 08:46 AM
Great Leader.. My favorite quote,"“He has a right to criticize, who has a heart to help.”– Abraham Lincoln. Read more quotes http://thequotes.net/2012/05/abraham-lincoln-quotes/
Posted by Quotes on January 19,2013 | 06:45 AM