Samuel Beckwith
Captain Samuel H. Beckwith | |
---|---|
Birth name | Samuel Horace Beckwith |
Nickname(s) | Grant's Shadow |
Born | 11th New York Infantry | December 18, 1837
Battles/wars | Civil War |
Captain Samuel H. Beckwith (December 18, 1837 – December 6, 1916) was a
telegraph and cipher officer to Ulysses S. Grant. He was nicknamed "Grant's Shadow" by other staff officers. Beckwith was the first to transmit news of John Wilkes Booth's whereabouts after Lincoln's assassination, leading to Booth’s capture.[2] Beckwith was also present as Grant's telegraph officer on Abraham Lincoln's visits.[3]
In Washington, Lincoln used to daily visit the telegraph office, and cipher operator David Homer Bates was later to recall these visits, along with the testimony of Thomas T. Eckert, Charles A. Tinker, Albert B. Chandler, and Albert E. H. Johnson in Lincoln in the Telegraph Office (1907).[4]
Popular culture
In the 2012 film Lincoln, the character of the Washington war-room telegraph officer is credited as Grant's officer "Samuel Beckwith" but appears to be based on the memoirs of Washington cipher officer David Homer Bates. He was played by Adam Driver.
References
- ^ a b LeClaire, Barbara (August 31, 2007). "Capt Samuel H. Beckwith". Military Telegrapher and cipher operator. Find a Grave. Retrieved February 26, 2016.
- ^ Congressional edition - Page 39 United States. Congress - 1866 "... General H. H. Wells, then under General Augur's command, George Cottingham and Alexander Lovett, detectives, and Samuel H. Beckwith, a telegraph operator, rendered important service leading to the arrest of Booth and Herold, and the .."
- ^ David Homer Bates Lincoln in the Telegraph Office 1907- Page 65 Beckwith — Grant's cipher-operator — told the writer in November, 1906, that a few days after the President's arrival at Grant's headquarters, the flap of the telegraph tent was slowly turned back and there appeared at the opening ..."
- Thomas T. Eckert, Charles A. Tinker, Albert B. Chandler, and the writer — who served as cipher-operators in the War Department telegraph office — and Albert E. H. Johnson, custodian of military telegrams."