Wife of John T. Ford - Edith
Branch Andrews Ford Daguerreotype c. 1850.
Edith was born 19
Aug 1831 in Hanover Parish, Richmond, Virginia, United States. Died 22
Oct 1922 at age 91 in Baltimore. She married John Thompson Ford, 2
July 1849 in Richmond, Virginia.
Wikitree: “Edith married theater manager John Ford and together the couple had fourteen children, including four sons who died in infancy. Eleven children were living when John T. died at 65.
Sold with certificate of provenance from Rare Nest Gallery, Chicago. CATALOG #: PMK0005
BIOGRAPHY: John T. Ford
1829, Baltimore – 1894,
Baltimore
Ford was born on April
16, 1829. After completing school, he left Baltimore to work for his uncle, a
tobacco merchant in Richmond, Virginia. Ford did not find the work to his
liking and soon found employment with a bookseller in the city. When he tired of
that, he returned to Baltimore and found work as the road manager for George
Kunkel’s Nightingale Minstrels in 1851. After a successful tour with the
company, Ford, Kunkel and another partner leased the Holliday Street Theatre in
Baltimore and Ford was thereafter a theater owner, manager and promoter. In
time, Ford would own the Holliday Street Theatre as well as theaters in
Richmond, Philadelphia and three in Washington, D.C., including the one to
which his name is most closely associated, on Tenth Street.
It was there that John
Wilkes Booth assassinated Abraham Lincoln. Ford knew most of the best stage
performers of his day and was well acquainted with the Booth family. Because of
his association with the Booths, his management of the theater and perhaps
because he was from Maryland, home of most of the assassination conspirators,
Ford and two brothers were arrested in the wake of the assassination. The
Federal government held him for 39 days and seized Ford’s Theatre. His close
association with the events of the assassination would be linked to Ford for
the rest of his life. In the end, the Federal government compensated Ford for
the loss of his theater and fully exonerated him, so he was able to continue
his success in the theater world. Also, Ford was an active member of Baltimore
civic and business life. Ford married Edith Branch Andrews of Hanover County,
Virginia, outside Richmond. They had eleven children who survived to adulthood.
Ford died on March 14, 1894 and is buried in Loudon Park Cemetery, Baltimore.
Source: Maryland Historical Society
We are selling several
hundred pieces related to John T. Ford, Ford’s Theater and Ford’s descendants
who were all figures in American theater from 1840 – 1970. See my Ebay store – category “American
Theater History” for updates.