The Booth Family, stained by one event

Bell Air, Harford County
April 14, 1865

John Wilkes Booth (1838-1865) assassinates President Abraham Lincoln and plunges his illustrious theatrical family into infamy.


London born Junius Brutus Booth (1796-1852) discovers acting at an early age and emigrates to Maryland seeking fame and finding success on the American stage. He settles on a Harford County farm he names Tudor Hall and sires 10 children. Due to drinking and bouts of madness, he has a run-in with the law when he threatens to “cut the throat” of President Andrew Jackson for not pardoning two men convicted of piracy.


The eldest son Junius B. Booth, Jr. (1821-1883) becomes an actor but is eclipsed by two brothers, Edwin Booth (1833-1893) who becomes the most famous Shakespearian actor in the country and John Wilkes Booth who becomes nationally infamous as an assassin. A sister, Asia Booth Clarke (1835-1888) flees to England after the Lincoln murder and writes a memoir about John Wilkes that is not published until 1938.


The Booth family farm, Tudor Hall, is open as a museum that interprets the many members of the family.

For More Information

Tudor Hall Museum

View Other Mosaic Pieces

Abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison begins his career in Baltimore

William Lloyd Garrison begins his abolitionist career, writing and coediting the newspaper, The Genius of Universal Emancipation in Baltimore in 1829. He is the most famous white American to devote his life to freeing the slaves. Photo shows Garrison (center) with two other abolitionists, Wendell Phillips and Englishman George Thompson.

Read More »

Babe Ruth born in Baltimore

George Herman “Babe” Ruth is born in Baltimore in 1895 to working class German parents, During 22 seasons of major league baseball he becomes baseball’s most famous player and a cultural icon. His home runs are the longest ever recorded.

Read More »

Land Recognition

We acknowledge the enduring presence of many American Indian tribes who once lived in Maryland and who now, having lost their lands, live in a diaspora. Read more.

© 2023 MARYLAND 400

Scroll to Top