You may have never heard of it before, but “Our American
Cousin” is arguably one of the most historic stage plays in American history.
This three-act play by Tom Taylor debuted in 1858, and is now best known for
being the play Abraham Lincoln was watching the night he was assassinated by
26-year-old John Wilkes Booth at Ford’s Theatre on April 14, 1865.
For as long as I can remember, I’ve been interested in Civil
War history (I’ve even been to Ford’s Theatre in Washington, D.C.), but I’d
never read “Our American Cousin.” My interest in the play really ramped up
several years ago when I read James L. Swanson’s outstanding book, “Manhunt:
The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln’s Killer,” which heavily detailed the events on
the night of Lincoln’s assassination. For that reason, I put “Our American
Cousin” on my “bucket list” a while back and finally took the time to read it
during the past week.
Aside from its ties to the Lincoln assassination, the play was
fun to read. It’s a comedy about a very proper family in England who is paid a
visit by a backwoods cousin from Vermont. The American cousin, Asa Trenchard,
has been made heir to the family’s valuable aristocratic estate, and he gets
into all sorts of comical situations as he interacts with single, gold-digging
ladies and a host of reserved, well-to-do English relatives. In the end, the
rustic American is shown to be the wisest and best natured of them all.
Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth was one of the most
famous actors of his generation, and he was very familiar with “Our American
Cousin.” During the performance at Ford’s Theatre on April 14, 1865, Booth
timed the shot that killed Lincoln to happen during one of the play’s funniest
lines, hoping the audience’s laughter would mask the gunshot that killed the
president. The shooting occurred around 10:15 p.m., about halfway through the
second scene of the play’s third act, and, as you might have imagined, they
didn’t finish the play that night.
After the shooting, Booth jumped from Lincoln’s box to the
stage, breaking his leg in the process. He fled backstage to a horse he had
waiting in the alley and escaped from the city despite the fact that the army
had shut down all roads and bridges out of the city. Twelve days later, Union
soldiers tracked Booth to a farmhouse near Port Royal, Va., where he was shot
and killed.
I did enjoy reading “Our American Cousin,” and I think many
of you would enjoy reading it as well. If you’d like to read it for yourself,
you can download a free copy of it from the Project Gutenberg Web site. The
version I read was free through Amazon.com. I download it for my Kindle Fire,
and it took a couple of days to read. In all, it’s about 80 pages long.
In the end, how many of you have read “Our American Cousin”?
What did you think about it? Did you like it or not? Let us know in the
comments section below.
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