Holy Cow! History: The assassin, automaker and academy award-winning actress (2024)

Admittedly, it sounds like the start of a joke: “So a presidential assassin, a pioneering automaker, and an Academy Award-winning actress walk into a bar …”

But it’s not.

The (very) real story begins with John Wilkes Booth leaping out of the presidential box at Ford’s Theatre in Washington and into American history on the night of Good Friday 1865. Captured and killed at the end of a 12-day manhunt, he was quickly interred without the public glimpsing his remains. That was just fine with most Americans, who wanted to put the ugliness of Abraham Lincoln’s murder behind them.

But burying Booth secretly gave life to conspiracy theories that quickly spread across a still-divided nation. Whispers of, “You know, that wasn’t really Booth who was shot in that tobacco barn,” circulated for the next 50 years.

The paranoia peaked in 1907 with the publication of “The Escape and Suicide of John Wilkes Booth.”

Its author, Finis L. Bates, was born and raised on an antebellum plantation in Mississippi. Too young for the War Between the States, his family moved to Texas, where he became a lawyer. It was in the Lone Star State that Bates first heard a strange story.

As he explained in his 309-page book, Bates met a town character in Granbury, Texas, known for reciting long passages of Shakespeare from memory. (The Bard was Booth’s acting forte.) He went by the name John St. Helen, among others.

While ailing in the late 1870s, St. Helen supposedly told Bates, “My name is John Wilkes Booth, and I am the assassin of President Lincoln … notify my brother (the famous actor) Edwin Booth, of New York City.” St. Helen recovered and later skipped town, never to be seen in Granbury again.

Bates initially thought the story was a bunch of malarkey. But the more he pondered it, the more intrigued he became. In 1900, he wrote to the War Department, claiming the $100,000 reward offered in 1865 for Booth’s capture. (He didn’t get it.)

Then, in 1903, Bates was reading the newspaper when a photo caught his eye. Though he was now practicing law in Memphis, Tenn., the crazy story he’d heard 25 years earlier still fascinated him. Bates read that a man named David E. George had committed suicide in an Enid, Okla., hotel room and how, following a previous botched suicide attempt nine months earlier, had said, “I am the one who killed the best man who ever lived. I am J. Wilkes Booth.” The report was accompanied by a photo of George’s embalmed body.

Perhaps Bates recognized the face as John St. Helen. Some accounts claim the dying George had summoned Bates. Either way, the lawyer immediately hopped on a train and headed for Oklahoma.

As bizarre as things were up until then, they quickly turned surreal.

When nobody claimed the amply arsenic-embalmed body, the funeral director sat it in a chair in a window, eyes opened and holding a newspaper, as an attention-getter. Over eight years, 10,000 people gawked at the corpse. When the novelty wore off, and with nobody wanting it, the body wound up in the garage at Bates’ Memphis house.

This is where Henry Ford rolled into the story. The early auto giant stumbled into the quicksand of controversy when he was quoted in a 1916 Chicago newspaper article saying, “History is more or less bunk. It’s tradition. We don’t want tradition. We want to live in today, and the only history that’s worth a tinker’s damn is the history we make today.”

As a result, the man whose assembly lines were cranking out streams of Model T’s was forced into mass-producing damage control.

In 1919, Ford learned of Bates’ book and realized that verifying its claim that Booth had escaped would vindicate his “history is bunk” statement. So he set researchers looking into it. He even invited Bates to visit him in Michigan, whereupon Bates offered to sell him George’s corpse. When Ford’s fact-finders failed to substantiate most of the book’s allegations, Ford passed on the mummy.

Bates eventually rented it to a showman, who, in turn, rented it to touring carnivals as a freak show exhibit. At one point, outraged aging Union Civil War veterans threatened to hang the corpse. It bounced around from one increasingly seedy carnival to another and was last seen in the late 1970s.

Bates believed the Booth-St. Helen-George story until the day he died in 1923 at age 75.

He never met his granddaughter, who was born 25 years later. Meaning he also never saw the night in March 1991 when Kathy Bates won the Best Actress Academy Award for her role as the creepy nurse in the hit movie “Misery.”

Though at last word, no one has questioned her Oscar’s authenticity.

Holy Cow! History is written by novelist, former TV journalist and diehard history buff J. Mark Powell. Have a historic mystery that needs solving? A forgotten moment worth remembering? Please send it to [emailprotected].

Holy Cow! History: The assassin, automaker and academy award-winning actress (2024)

FAQs

Who is the only actress in Academy History to have won four awards for acting? ›

As of 2024, 45 actors and actresses have received two or more Academy Awards in acting categories. Katharine Hepburn holds the record with four Oscars (all Best Actress).

Which American Academy Award winning actress was made an honorary dame? ›

In addition to receiving a Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award among other honors, Jolie was made an honorary Dame Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George.

Who was the first non white Best Actress to win an Oscar? ›

Halle Berry became the first black woman to win the best actress Oscar, after Hattie McDaniel and Whoopi Goldberg had been saluted in the supporting race.

Who was the first African American actress to win an Academy Award for Best Actress? ›

On March 24, 2002, Halle Berry becomes the first Black woman to win the Best Actress Oscar for her portrayal of a struggling widow who falls in love with her husband's death row executioner in Monster's Ball.

Who is the only woman to have won an Academy Award for Best Director? ›

In 2009, Kathryn Bigelow made cinematic history with her intense war drama “The Hurt Locker,” becoming the first woman to win the Academy Award for Best Director.

Which American singer and actress won the Academy Award? ›

Barbra Streisand

In 1969, Streisand tied — an extremely rare occurrence at the Oscars — with the late Katharine Hepburn for Best Actress for her role in Funny Girl (1968). Streisand won her second Academy Award in 1977 for Best Original Song for "Evergreen," the love theme from A Star Is Born (1976).

Who is the only actress with 4 Best Drama actress Awards? ›

The winning actress is given a gold-plated statuette known as an Oscar. Katharine Hepburn has won the most Academy Awards for best actress (four), and Frances McDormand has received three.

What female actress has the most Academy Awards? ›

The record for most wins is four, held by Katharine Hepburn. Frances McDormand has won three times, and thirteen other actresses have won the award twice. Meryl Streep has received the most nominations in the category—seventeen—and has won twice.

Who was the first actor actress to win four Academy Awards? ›

Katharine Hepburn became the first performer to win a fourth Academy Award, this time for On Golden Pond. Henry Fonda won his first competitive Oscar for Best Actor for On Golden Pond.

Who is the only actor to win 4 Oscars? ›

Of all actors, living or deceased, Katharine Hepburn holds the record for the most Oscar wins across all four acting categories. She was the first and is still the only actor to win four acting Oscars in total, all of which she won for Best Actress.

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