Charles Sabin Taft
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Charles Sabin Taft was a bystander physician who was pressed into service during the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.
Lincoln's assassination
On April 14, 1865, Taft was in the audience watching the play, Our American Cousin, at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C., where President Lincoln was attending. Taft had a good view of the Lincolns in the box. He observed that Mrs. Lincoln, "often called his attention to some humorous stituation on the stage. She seemed to take great pleasure in witnessing his enjoyment".
When Lincoln was shot, Taft was either the second or third physician to get to the President after the shooting. Due to the assassin having barricaded the entrance to the President's box, he was boosted up from the main floor of the theatre.[1]
See also
- Anderson Ruffin Abbott
- Joseph K. Barnes
- Julia Taft Bayne
- Charles H. Crane
- Albert Freeman Africanus King
- Charles Augustus Leale
References
- ↑ Kunhardt. Twenty Days. Pg. 42
Sources
- Kunhardt, Dorothy Meserve, and Kunhardt Jr., Phillip B. Twenty Days: A Narrative in Text and Pictures of the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln and the Twenty Days and Nights That Followed. New York: Castle Books, 1965.