W.W. Baker
Cadet
- Joined
- Dec 28, 2020
The Confederate raider, John Yates Beall, operated out of Canada and planned an attack on Lake Erie's Johnson's Island prison camp, among other actions. He was ultimately captured and executed after a failed raid on a train carrying Confederate generals near Buffalo, N.Y. in late 1864. Before he was executed in February 1865, Beall had support from a number of key Washington VIPs, including 91 members of Congress, who appealed to Lincoln to commute Beall's death sentence. Lincoln basically washed his hands of the matter and deferred to Major General Dix in NY who had authority over the execution and insisted that it be carried out.
My question: How was it that Beall, a Virginia aristocrat with deep attachment to the Confederacy and its goals and few known contacts in the North, was able to gain such support in DC and elsewhere for a commutation of his death sentence?
My question: How was it that Beall, a Virginia aristocrat with deep attachment to the Confederacy and its goals and few known contacts in the North, was able to gain such support in DC and elsewhere for a commutation of his death sentence?