Things To Do
|
Newsletter
|
Fraylife+
|
Fraylife+
  • Play

    Play

    • A Beginner’s Guide to Soccer
    • You Spin Me Right Round: D.C. Roller Skating 101 in 2021
    • Leading the League: The WNBA’s Natasha Cloud on Breaking Barriers + Inspiring D.C.
    • Spring Has Sprung: 10 Ways To Get Outside in the DMV
    • Play Week Combines Games + Social Impact
    • High and Go Seek Illustration
    • O Captain, My Captain: Washington Spirit’s Andi Sullivan
  • Life

    Life

    • Local Entrepreneurs Infuse CBD into Wellness
    • 19 Entrepreneurs Shaping D.C.’s Cannabis + CBD Industries
    • Upcycling in D.C.: Transforming a Culture of Consumption
    • The Green Issue: Experts + Advocates Make Case for Cannabis Legalization + Decriminalization
    • The District Derp Story
    • Grassfed Media Champions Cannabis Clients
    • Nat Geo Explorer Gabrielle Corradino on Plankton, the Anacostia + Conservation
  • Eat

    Eat

    • The State of Takeout in the District
    • A New Twist on Food Delivery: MisenBox
    • Next-Level Home Dining Experiences in D.C.
    • Foxtrot Market Is Officially Open for Business in Georgetown
    • Food Rescue + Assistance Programs Fill the Gaps in a Pandemic Food System
    • Hungry Harvest Helps to End Food Insecurity
    • Notable Summer Bar + Restaurant Reopenings to Try this Spring
  • Drink

    Drink

    • Pandemic Drinking: Derek Brown Leads the Way to Low-ABV Future
    • D.C.’s St. Vincent Wine Creates Covid-Conscious Experience
    • A New Way to Binge: Sobriety Anchors Business + Being for Gigi Arandid
    • King’s Ransom + The Handover in Alexandria Celebrate a First Year Like No Other
    • Wines of the World Are Just Around the Corner
    • Open-Air Drinking + Cocktail Delivery Changes in the DMV
    • Denizens Brewing Co.’s Emily Bruno: Brewing Change for Community + Industry
  • Culture

    Culture

    • The Artistry Behind D.C.’s Cannabis Culture
    • The Best Movies of 2021…So Far
    • The Survival of the Brutalist: D.C.’s Complicated Concrete Legacy
    • Plain Sight: A Street-Front Revolution in Radical Arts Accessibility
    • A Touch of Danger in Shakespeare Theatre Company’s “Romeo & Juliet”
    • Artgence + Homme: Where There’s Art, There’s a Story to Share
    • 21 D.C. Makers + Curators to Follow
  • Music

    Music

    • Emma G Talks Wammie Nominations and the D.C. Music Community
    • J’Nai Bridges: A Modern Mezzo-Soprano in a Changing Opera Landscape
    • Punk Legends The Go-Go’s Talk Four Decades of Sisterhood, Resilience + Zero Fucks Given
    • Ellen Reid “Soundwalk:” Exploring the Sonic Landscape at Wolf Trap
    • SHAED Releases First Full-Length Album in a “High Dive” of Faith
    • Obama + Springsteen Present “Renegades”
    • Christian Douglas Uses His “Inside Voice” on Pandemic-Inspired Debut Album
  • Events

    Events

    • Play Week 4.17-4.25
    • Midnight at The Never Get 4.30-6.21
    • Cannabis City Panel Presented by BĀkT DC + District Fray
    • Browse Events
    • DC Polo Society Summer Sundays 5.9
    • National Cannabis Festival’s Dazed & Amused Drive-In Party
    • Vinyl + Vinyasa 4.30
  • Fraylife+

Fraylife+
Spring ’25 Spirit Week: Spring Break
People gathering for Union Market's outdoor movie series.
The Complete D.C. Outdoor Movie Guide
Play Free This Summer: Here’s How to Score Big with a Fraylife+ Membership
Get Ready for the 2025 Maryland Craft Beer Festival in Frederick
Johns Hopkins Peabody Performance Series 2025
Tephra ICA Arts Festival Returns to Reston Town Center for Its 34th Year
Home » Articles » Culture » Sing Karaoke + Eat Chinese Food in the Building Abraham Lincoln’s Assassination was Plotted

Culture

Photo by Elizabeth Cutler.

Sing Karaoke + Eat Chinese Food in the Building Abraham Lincoln’s Assassination was Plotted

Share:

April 13, 2023 @ 2:00pm | Elizabeth Cutler

History can happen anywhere — even at your neighborhood karaoke joint, sushi spot or just a building you pass on your way to the Metro. 


In the early dawn hours of April 15, 1865, authorities searched an inconspicuous house in downtown Washington, D.C. on a tip from a local witness, they were in hot pursuit of John Surratt Jr. for his participation in the conspiracy to assassinate President Abraham Lincoln, shot by John Wilkes Booth just hours earlier. Surratt was on his way to evading arrest across the border in Canada, but the house and its legacy live on today at 604 H St. NW. 

Today, the building is home to Wok and Roll, a karaoke bar and restaurant serving Japanese and Chinese cuisines. Nestled between an alley and a pho restaurant in the heart of D.C.’s Chinatown neighborhood, it’s easy to walk by without noticing the plaque by the door that indicates the building’s unique history. 

In 1864, Mary Surratt turned the eight-bedroom building into a boarding house to earn money after her husband’s death. Between September 1864 and April 1865, Booth and fellow conspirators met several times there to plan the assassination.  

Indeed, the National Register of Historic Places records indicate that Booth met with Mary Surratt at the boarding house at 9 p.m. that night. Approximately one hour later, he fired a bullet into President Lincoln’s head. The rest, of course, is history.

Photo by Elizabeth Cutler.

“The building is not only significant to the story of the Lincoln assassination, [but also] to what Civil War Washington was really like,” says Jake Flack, deputy director of education at Ford’s Theatre. The war stoked a significant population surge in Washington, D.C., spurring a need for hotels and boarding houses like the one Mary Surratt owned. As historian and author John DeFerrari notes, the building is typical of the structures that used to fill many downtown D.C. neighborhoods — and there are not many left that predate the Civil War. 

As a Confederate sympathizer, moving into D.C. to run a boarding house didn’t just make financial sense for Mary Surratt. It was also an opportunity to “get her family out from under the microscope of the Union Army [in Southern Maryland, and] into Washington where they could blend in,” says historian and biographer Kate Clifford Larson. 

Though not the only place that the assassination conspirators met prior to the murder, the unassuming boarding house run by a white, middle-class widow became an ideal place for Booth, Surratt Jr., Lewis Powell and George Atzerodt to convene regularly.

“Even looking at the streets today, you can almost imagine this going on and how it was possible without people knowing ahead of time,” Larson adds. 

In early April 1865, the mood on the streets between the boarding house and Ford’s Theatre five blocks away would have been noticeably bright as the Civil War neared its end.

“For four years, there was a constant underlying fear that the city would be attacked,” Flack says. “By April 10, when the city realized that a surrender had happened, there was a huge city-wide celebration.”

President Lincoln arrived at Ford’s Theatre on April 14 amid that sense of relief, though that shared joy would be dramatically cut short hours later when his assassination shocked the country. 

For her part in the crime, which President Andrew Johnson described as having “kept the nest that hatched the egg,” Mary Surratt became the first woman executed by the U.S. federal government. Afterwards, the building at 604 H St. NW was sold at auction to help pay off the Surratt family’s debts. Over the years, it underwent stints as an illicit bottle supply company during Prohibition and as a political campaign office. Wok and Roll opened there in 2001. 

As DeFerrari says, “That such a casual place was where the great plot to assassinate Lincoln was refined shows that deep history is lurking where you least expect it.” 

Wok and Roll: 604 H St. NW, DC; wokandrolldc.com // @wokandrolldclife

Want to explore more of D.C.’s local history? Join the District Fray community for exclusive access to the stories that make our city thrive. Become a member and support local journalism today.

Elizabeth Cutler

Neighborhood

Chinatown

Share with friends

Share:

Related Articles

<h3>No Articles</h3>
COMPANY
About United Fray Team Hiring: Join Our Team!
GET INVOLVED
Become A Member Corporate Wellness Contact: Media Pitches + Advertising Inquiries
EXPLORE
Eat Drink Music Culture Life Play Events Calendar
OUR CITIES
Washington D.C. Jacksonville Phoenix United Fray
Sign Up

Get the best of D.C. delivered to your inbox with one of our weekly newsletters.

Sign Up

© 2025 District Fray – Making Fun Possible.