Ford's Theater National Historic Site
511 Tenth St NW; closest Metro stop is Metro Center. Daily
9am-5pm; theater is closed during rehearsals or matinees, but
Lincoln Museum and House Where Lincoln Died remain open. Admission
free. tel 202/426-6924,
Ford's Theater National Historic Site is a beautiful
restoration of the nineteenth-century playhouse, which continues to
stage regular productions of contemporary and period drama.
However, because of its role in one of the greatest national
tragedies, it lives a double life as a tourist attraction in its
own right. It was here, on April 14, 1865, a mere five days after
the end of the Civil War, that Abraham Lincoln was shot by
the actor and Southern sympathizer John Wilkes Booth during a
performance of Our American Cousin .
Entertaining talks (hourly 9.15am-4.15pm; free) set the scene
in the theater itself, after which you can file up to the circle
for a view of the presidential box where it all happened, and
finally go down to the basement Lincoln Museum . Macabre
relics here include the clothes that Lincoln was wearing, Booth's
.44 single-shot Derringer pistol and the assassin's diary, in which
he wrote: "I hoped for no gain. I knew no private wrong. I struck
for my country and that alone." The mortally wounded president was
carried across the street to The House Where Lincoln Died ,
the Petersen House, where he died the next morning. That, too, is
open to the public, who troop through its gloomy parlor rooms to
see a replica of the bed on which Lincoln breathed his last.
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