Dark Union
The Secret Web Of Profiteers,
Politicians, And Booth Conspirators That Led To Lincoln's Death
(Conspiracy Nation) -- Dark Union (Hoboken: Wiley
& Sons, 2003. ISBN: 0-471-26481-4) by Leonard F. Guttridge and Ray A. Neff
is the best book yet explaining what really was behind the assassination of
President Abraham Lincoln on Good Friday, April 14th, 1865.
Guttridge is an historian and author of several
books. Neff is an Emeritus Professor at Indiana State University. Archival
material upon which Dark Union is based is available to scholars at Indiana
State University's Cunningham Memorial Library.
Neff is well-known to Lincoln conspiracy students
as the scholar who first discovered Colonel Lafayette Baker's coded messages in
an old copy of Colburn's United Service Magazine and Military Journal. Baker,
head of the Union's National Detective Police (NDP, the FBI of its day), knew
plenty but feared for his life. So, he cautiously revealed what he knew, shortly
before he died from apparent arsenic poisoning. Conspiracy Nation previously
covered Neff's circa 1957 find in Ray Neff Discovers Coded Messages. (http://www.shout.net/~bigred/Neff.htm)
Readers may be familiar with the system of fiat
money, known as "Greenbacks", inaugurated during Lincoln's presidency. According
to a hard-to-obtain book, Lincoln: Money Martyred (Omni Publications, first
published in 1935; latest reprint 1989), Lincoln and his Treasury Secretary
tried to obtain loans from New York bankers to finance the Union war effort.
Terms offered for the loans were a usurious 24 to 36 percent interest.
Indignant, Lincoln refused the loans. Pondering what to do, the president
reportedly was advised by a close friend to get Congress to authorize the
printing of "legal tender" treasury notes -- greenbacks. There is some debate
over whether the greenbacks worked as reliable money. The author of Lincoln:
Money Martyred claims they did, until Congress tacked on an "exception clause"
rendering greenbacks "Good for all debts both public and private except duty on
imports and interest on government debts." The exception clause "put the
government in the light of refusing its own money for duty on imports, and gave
the bankers an excuse to refuse or discount [greenbacks], which they promptly
did, 30 percent..." (Lincoln: Money Martyred)
The issue of whether greenbacks (issued by the
government and not by the later, so-called "Federal" Reserve) were or could have
been viable is hotly debated. Whatever the case, the authors of Dark Union
portray the Union as going bankrupt and in desperate need of gold. To get the
needed gold, Lincoln was forced to allow secret trading of Confederate cotton,
"trading with the enemy": a triangle of trade involving the South, Northern
speculators, and Europe.
"But in early 1865 Lincoln began to vacillate in
regard to trading with the enemy, which, along with the imminent end of the
hostilities, threatened the huge profits at stake." (Dark Union) The aspect of
an imminent end of hostilities threatening huge business profits suggests a
theme developed by author Otto Eisenschmil: that Union victory may have been
purposefully botched for years.
Also motivating Lincoln's assassination was his
planned policy to go easy on the defeated Confederacy. This flew in the face of
members of his own Republican Party favoring harsh treatment toward the defeated
South, and of business types eager to profit from "Reconstruction."
Barely mentioned by the authors of Dark Union are
the "Copperheads", renegade Democrats operating a secret society called the
Knights of the Golden Circle. The power of this clandestine organization is
admirably described in Shadow of the Sentinel by Warren Getler and Bob Brewer.
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 2003. ISBN: 0-7432-1968-6)
Fleshing out the little-known history of Civil War
intrigue is the book, Come Retribution, which offers a scholarly look at the
Confederate Secret Service. (by William A. Tidwell. University Press of
Mississippi, 1988)
Bottom line: many covert forces were at work during
the Civil War, and information about them has only slowly been coming to
light.
Odds and Ends
Among the interesting pieces of
information in Dark Union
Wall Street operated its own, private telegraph
network which gave speculators (insiders) advance knowledge about war-time
events.
During the Civil War, southern cotton sold, in Europe, for six times
its usual price, payable in gold.
The notorious Dahlgren Raid apparently was
originated by Secretary of War Edwin Stanton.
Mary Lincoln's indebtedness due
to her shopping sprees gave mega-merchant A.T. Stewart extraordinary
influence.
Presence or lack of cotton exports directly influenced the
nation's gold supply; more gold available strengthened the greenback by a sort
of par: less gold meant more greenbacks needed to buy gold and
vice-versa.
The war dragged on perhaps because an early end would have left
Northeners less embittered and more inclined to go easy on the South. This would
have damaged rapacious businessmen's "Reconstruction" schemes.
Mexico was the
favored choice for postwar Confederate headquarters (this ties in with Knights
of the Golden Circle info contained in Shadow of the Sentinel (op. cit.)
As
in the immediate aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001, so too following the Lincoln
assassination: a limited view of what had actually happened was quickly foisted
upon the public.
Robert Lincoln, son of the murdered president, caused many
of his father's papers to be removed to Chicago, where some of them were soon
thereafter destroyed.
Following the Civil War, the National Detective Police
(NDP) ceased to exist. Most NDP agents migrated to the "United States Detective
Service" a "private agency controlled by God knows who," according to Lafayette
Baker's protege Andrew Potter.
A secret investigation of events surrounding
the Lincoln assassination was almost certainly conducted by the government
during the 1870s.
Booth Survived
This One Mad Act, by Izola Forrester, who
claimed to be Booth's granddaughter, presents persuasive evidence that Lincoln's
assassin did not die weeks after that sad event but survived many years
thereafter. Forrester has the assassin eventually residing in Ceylon. So too do
the authors of Dark Union prove the likelihood of Booth's survival and seclusion
in Ceylon. (Noteworthy is that Shay McNeal, author of The Secret Plot To Save
The Tsar, demonstrates that the Romanovs also were secluded in Ceylon following
their supposed assassination by the Bolsheviks.)
The authors of Dark Union also present a photo
credibly that of John Wilkes Booth taken in 1873, eight years after his supposed
death. It appears that Booth exchanged identities with a British man, John B.
Wilkes, to facilitate his seclusion. It also appears that the U.S. government
had no wish to reclaim the real Booth, due to the embarrassment to its
credibility that would cause as well as for fear that Booth would implicate
others, those truly complicit in Lincoln's death.
... "Today," complain the authors, "as always,
there are too many people who have a vested interest in preserving a standard
version of history. Instead of welcoming new discoveries, as genuine historians
should, they ignore or even try to suppress fresh evidence that tends to
contradict conventional accounts."