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This film recounts a great American drama: two tumultuous months when the joy of peace was shattered by the heartache of Abraham Lincoln’s assassination.
On March 4, 1865, at the United States Capitol, a crowd of 50,000
listened as President Lincoln delivered his classic second
inaugural address, urging charity and forgiveness to a nation in
the final throes of war. Just two months later, a train, nine cars
long and draped in black bunting, pulled slowly out of a station in
Washington, DC. Dignitaries and government officials crowded the
first eight cars. In the ninth rode the body of Abraham Lincoln -
America's first assassinated president. Some seven million people
would line the tracks or file past the casket to bid an emotional
farewell to the martyred president. But as the funeral train made
its way across nine states and through hundreds of cities and
towns, the largest manhunt in history was closing in on Lincoln's
assassin, the famous actor John Wilkes Booth. This film recounts a
great American drama: two tumultuous months when the joy of peace
was shattered by the heartache of assassination. At the heart of
the story are two figures who define the extremes of character:
Lincoln, who had the strength to transform suffering into infinite
compassion, and Booth, who allowed hatred to curdle into
destruction.