On March 18, 1865, less than a month before he assassinated President
Abraham Lincoln,
John Wilkes Booth appeared at
Ford's Theatre, Washington, in the play
The Apostate which was performed as a
benefit for John McCullough. McCullough came West in 1866 with his mentor Edwin Forrest where he grew as an actor through practice before audiences in
Sacramento and
Virginia City. The most celebrated roles of McCullough's career,
King Lear,
Virginius, and
Richelieu were first performed before
Virginia City audiences. In 1869, in partnership with
Lawrence Barrett, McCullough built the
California Theatre on Bush Street in San Francisco. It boomed during economic prosperity becoming one of the best regarded theaters West of the Rocky Mountains. Selling out his interest in 1877, McCullough created a combination company that toured America. He was known for an intelligent, but not intellectual Hamlet and had an average Joe quality in performance which tied him to the West's working classes. McCullough died in 1885, six days after his 53rd birthday. Edwin Booth reportedly declined to contribute to the fund for McCullough's elaborate granite gravesite monument in
Philadelphia, stating that greater actors than him, such as his own father and Edwin Forrest, had no similar monuments upon their graves. ==Haunting==