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Killing Lincoln
Killing Lincoln is the 2013 docudrama produced for the National Geographic Channel based on Bill O'Reilly's 2011 book of the same name. It details the events surrounding the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln (Billy Campbell) on April 14, 1865 and the capture of John Wilkes Booth (Jesse Johnson). It was written and executive produced by Erik Jendresen (Band of Brothers) and dedicated to the memory of Tony Scott, who had been developing Killing Lincoln at the time of his death. Killing Lincoln surpassed Inside 9/11 to become National Geographic's highest-rated television airing. The film does an excellent job of representing the actual firearms used during the assassination and its aftermath.
The following weapons were used in the film Killing Lincoln:
Philadelphia Deringer
John Wilkes Booth (Jesse Johnson) famously used a single-shot .44-caliber Philadelphia Deringer to assassinate Abraham Lincoln in Ford's Theatre.
John Wilkes Booth (Jesse Johnson) hands a Colt Model 1851 Navy Percussion to George Atzerodt (Mark Halpern) for his assassination of Vice President Johnson. Later, Booth himself carries a holstered Colt Navy revolver until his capture.
Lewis Powell (Josh Murray) carries a Whitney navy revolver during his assault on the Seward home. In real life, Powell truly had carried a Whitney revolver that night and used it to whip Frederick Seward so ferociously that the revolver broke apart in his hand. Union Intelligence Service spymaster and D.C. Cavalry Colonel Lafayette C. Baker (Thomas K. Belgrey) also draws his own Whitney revolver to keep Booth's wanted poster in place. thumb|none|400px|Whitney Second Model Navy Revolver - .36 caliber.
Springfield 1861
All Union soldiers in the film, including Sgt. Silas T. Cobb (Robin Lord Taylor) - the sentry from the 3rd Massachusetts Heavy Artillery that unwittingly let Booth and Herold cross into Maryland - carry Springfield 1861 rifles. The Union soldiers escorting Confederate prisoners from the Navy Yard have bayonets attached.
Spencer 1860 Carbine
After the assassination, John Wilkes Booth (Jesse Johnson) and David Herold (Seamus Mulcahy) ride to Surratt's Tavern in northern Maryland to retrieve two Spencer 1860 Carbines from tavern keeper John Lloyd (Paul Stober). Due to Booth's injury, Herold only takes one and leaves the other with Lloyd. It is well-reported that Booth and Herold did really retrieve one of the two Spencer carbines they had stashed.