The site was originally a house of worship, constructed in 1833 as the second meeting house of the
First Baptist Church of Washington, with
Obadiah Bruen Brown as the pastor. In 1861, after the congregation moved to a newly built structure,
John T. Ford bought the former church and renovated it into a theater. He first called it Ford's Athenaeum. It was destroyed by fire in 1862 and was rebuilt.
Assassination of Abraham Lincoln ,
Lincoln,
Mary Todd Lincoln,
Clara Harris, and
Henry Rathbone In April 14, 1865, five days after
General Lee's surrender at
Appomattox Court House, President
Abraham Lincoln attended a performance of
Tom Taylor's play
Our American Cousin at Ford's Theatre.
John Wilkes Booth entered the presidential box and shot Lincoln in the back of the head with a 5.87-inch
derringer, wounding him. Booth stabbed Major
Henry Rathbone as Rathbone came at him, then leapt from the box onto the stage and made his escape through the back of the theater, en route stabbing orchestra leader William Withers Jr. The assassination was witnessed by a theater full of about 1,700 people, possibly including the then 5-year-old
Samuel J. Seymour who claimed to be the last living witness to the Lincoln assassination before his death in 1956. An unconscious Lincoln was taken across the street to the nearby
Petersen House, where he died the next day. Following the assassination, the theater was shut down for a criminal investigation which continued until Booth's co-conspirators were executed in July 1865. Once it was in his possession again, Ford announced that the theater would reopen on July 10, 1865, with a performance of
The Octoroon; or, Life in Louisiana. It was advertised that "the Theatre is in the same condition as when last opened to the public", and that Ford planned to give some of the proceeds to a fund for the construction of a monument to Lincoln, as he had done at his other theater in Baltimore. However, Ford was met with angry letters and threats. On the night of the reopening, Secretary of War
Edwin Stanton had the theater seized again to prevent any incidents and dispersed the crowd waiting to enter. and an order was issued forever prohibiting its use as a place of public amusement. Between 1866 and 1887, the theater was taken over by the U.S. military and served as a facility for the
War Department with records kept on the first floor, the
Library of the Surgeon General's Office on the second floor, and the
Army Medical Museum on the third. In 1887, the building exclusively became a clerk's office for the Record and Pension Office of the War Department when the medical departments moved out. File:Ford's Theatre interior, Washington, D.C.jpg|View from beneath the balcony. The Presidential Box is on the right. File:Fords Theatre 1865.jpg|Ford's Theatre in 1865
Disrepair and restoration On June 9, 1893, the front section of the three interior floors collapsed when a supporting pillar was undermined during excavation of the cellar, killing 22 clerks and injuring another 68. This led some people to believe that the former church turned theater and storeroom was cursed. The building was repaired and Record and Pension Office clerks were moved back on July 30, 1894. In 1928, the building was turned over from the War Department Office to the Office of Public Buildings and Parks of the National Capital. A Lincoln museum opened on the first floor of the theater building on February 12, 1932—Lincoln's 123rd birthday. In 1933, the building was transferred to the
National Park Service. The restoration of Ford's Theatre was brought about by the two-decade-long lobbying efforts of Democratic National Committeeman Melvin D. Hildreth and Republican
North Dakota Representative
Milton Young. Hildreth first suggested to Young the need for its restoration in 1945. Through extensive lobbying of Congress, a bill was passed in 1955 to prepare an engineering study for the reconstruction of the building. In 1964, Congress approved funds for its restoration, which began that year and was completed in 1968. On January 21, 1968, Vice President
Hubert Humphrey and 500 others dedicated the restored theater. The theater reopened on January 30, 1968, with a gala performance. The presidential box is never occupied. The theater was again renovated during the 2000s. It has a current seating capacity of 665. The reopening ceremony was on February 11, 2009, which commemorated Lincoln's 200th birthday. The event featured remarks from President
Barack Obama as well as appearances by
Katie Couric,
Kelsey Grammer,
James Earl Jones,
Ben Vereen,
Jeffrey Wright, the President's Own
Marine Band,
Joshua Bell,
Patrick Lundy and the Ministers of Music,
Audra McDonald and
Jessye Norman. In March of every year, the
Abraham Lincoln Institute holds a symposium at Ford's Theatre. == Ford's Theatre National Historic Site ==