1901 ELECTRIC CHAIR EXECUTION Leon Czolgosz PRESIDENT McKINLEY ASSASSIN-LARGE [PHOTO SOURCE: https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/1901-electric-chair-execution-leon-403288485] |
On this date, September 6, 1901, the 25th
President of the United States, William McKinley, was shot and fatally wounded inside the Temple of Music on the grounds of the
Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York. McKinley was shaking hands with
the public when he was shot by Leon Czolgosz, an anarchist. The President died
on September 14 from gangrene caused by the bullet wounds.
William McKinley who was a devout Christian forgave his assassin but Leon Czolgosz still had to pay with his life. He was executed on October 29, 53 days after the crime and 47 after the president’s death. He was guilty beyond any doubt at all, thank God the Justice System was swift and sure at that time. I will post the article from Wikipedia.
Leon Czolgosz shoots President McKinley with
a concealed revolver. Clipping of a wash drawing by T. Dart Walker.
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Location
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Temple of Music, on grounds of Pan-American Exposition,
Buffalo, New York
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Date
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September 6, 1901
4:07 pm |
Target
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William McKinley (died September 14, 1901 of his
wounds)
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Weapon(s)
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.32 caliber Iver Johnson revolver
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Perpetrator
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Leon Czolgosz (executed by electrocution October 29,
1901)
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Motive
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To advance anarchism
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The
25th President of the United States, William McKinley, was shot and fatally
wounded on September 6, 1901, inside the Temple of Music on the grounds of the
Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York. McKinley was shaking hands with
the public when he was shot by Leon Czolgosz, an anarchist. The President died
on September 14 from gangrene caused by the bullet wounds.
McKinley
had been elected for a second term in 1900. He enjoyed meeting the public, and
was reluctant to accept the security available to his office. The Secretary to
the President, George B. Cortelyou, feared an assassination attempt would take
place during a visit to the Temple of Music, and twice took it off the
schedule. McKinley restored it each time.
Czolgosz
had lost his job during the economic Panic of 1893 and turned to anarchism, a
political philosophy whose adherents had killed foreign leaders. Regarding
McKinley as a symbol of oppression, Czolgosz felt it was his duty as an
anarchist to kill him. Unable to get near McKinley during the earlier part of
the presidential visit, Czolgosz shot McKinley twice as the President reached
to shake his hand in the reception line at the temple. One bullet grazed
McKinley; the other entered his abdomen and was never found.
McKinley
initially appeared to be recovering, but took a turn for the worse on September
13 as his wounds became gangrenous, and died early the next morning; Vice
President Theodore Roosevelt succeeded him. After McKinley's murder, for which
Czolgosz was put to death in the electric chair, the United States Congress
passed legislation to officially charge the Secret Service with the
responsibility for protecting the president.
Background
In
September 1901, William McKinley was at the height of his power as president.
Elected in 1896, during the serious economic depression resulting from the
Panic of 1893, he had defeated his Democratic rival, William Jennings Bryan.
McKinley led the nation both to a return to prosperity and to victory in the
Spanish-American War in 1898, taking possession of such former colonies as
Puerto Rico and the Philippines. Re-elected handily in a rematch against Bryan
in 1900, according to historical writer Eric Rauchway, "it looked as if
the McKinley Administration would continue peaceably unbroken for another four
years, a government devoted to prosperity".
McKinley's
original vice president, Garret Hobart, had died in 1899, and McKinley left the
choice of a running mate to the 1900 Republican National Convention. In advance
of the convention, New York's Republican political boss, Senator Thomas C.
Platt, saw an opportunity to politically sideline his state's governor, former
Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore Roosevelt, by pushing for his
nomination as vice president. Roosevelt accepted the nomination and was elected
on McKinley's ticket.
Leon
Czolgosz was born in Detroit, Michigan, in 1873, the son of Polish immigrants.
The Czolgosz family moved a number of times as Paul Czolgosz, Leon's father,
sought work throughout the Midwest. As an adult, Leon Czolgosz worked in a
Cleveland factory until he lost his job in a labor dispute in 1893. Thereafter,
he worked irregularly and attended political and religious meetings, trying to
understand the reasons for the economic turmoil of the Panic of 1893. In so
doing, he became interested in anarchism. By 1901, this movement was feared in
the United States—New York's highest court had ruled that the act of
identifying oneself as an anarchist in front of an audience was a breach of the
peace. Anarchists had taken a toll in Europe of a half-dozen officials and
members of royal houses, and had been blamed for the 1886 Haymarket bombing in
Chicago.
Two
American presidents had been assassinated in the 19th century—Abraham Lincoln
in 1865 and James Garfield in 1881. John Wilkes Booth, Lincoln's assassin, had
been embittered by the Confederate defeat in the American Civil War; Charles
Guiteau, the assassin of Garfield, was an eccentric (possibly insane) man
motivated by personal political and religious views who had unsuccessfully
sought office in Garfield's administration. Although two presidents had been
struck down by assassins, McKinley did not like security personnel to come
between him and the people. When in his hometown, Canton, Ohio, he often walked
to church or the business district without protection, and in Washington went
on drives with his wife without any guard in the carriage.
Presidential
visit
Plans
and arrivals
McKinley
gave a short speech at his second inauguration on March 4, 1901. Having long
been an advocate of protective tariffs, and believing the Dingley Tariff,
passed during his first year in office, had helped the nation reach prosperity,
McKinley planned to negotiate reciprocal trade agreements with other countries.
This would open foreign markets to US manufacturers that had dominated the
domestic market thanks to the tariff, and who sought to expand. During a long
trip planned for the months after his inauguration, he intended to make major
speeches promoting this plan, culminating in a visit and address at the Pan-American
Exposition in Buffalo on June 13.
McKinley,
his wife Ida, and their official party left
Washington on April 29 for a tour of the nation by train, scheduled to conclude
in Buffalo for a speech on which had been designated as "President's
Day". He met with rapturous receptions in the Far West, which had never
seen a president. In California, the First Lady became seriously ill, and for a
time was thought to be dying. She recovered in San Francisco, but her husband
canceled the remainder of the tour and the McKinleys returned to Washington.
The speech at the Exposition was postponed until September 5, after McKinley
spent some weeks in Washington and two months in Canton. He used his time in
his Ohio home working on the Buffalo speech and in supervising improvements to
his house. He intended to remain based in Canton until October.
Czolgosz
had lived on his parents' farm near Cleveland beginning in 1898, working
little—he may have suffered a nervous breakdown. He is known to have attended a
speech by anarchist Emma Goldman in May 1901 in Cleveland: he approached her
before the speech and asked her to recommend books on anarchism; she obliged.
The talk, in which Goldman did not advocate violence but expressed
understanding for those driven to it, was a great influence on Czolgosz; he
later stated that her words burned in his head. He came to see her at her
Chicago home in July as she was about to depart on a trip with her daughter to
Buffalo to see the fair, and the two anarchists rode together to the train
station. Goldman expressed concern to another radical that Czolgosz (who was
using the alias Fred Nieman) was following her around; soon after, he
apparently departed Chicago. William Arntz, a worker at a park in Canton,
stated that he had seen a man resembling Czolgosz in mid-1901, when the President
was staying at home and sometimes visiting the park. The man was wearing two
guns, and when Arntz reminded him that firearms were not permitted outside the
park's shooting range, responded dismissively. Arntz sought the police, but the
man was never found.
Later
in the summer, Czolgosz moved to Buffalo, though his reasons for doing so are
not known. Author and journalist Scott Miller speculated that he may have
chosen Buffalo because of its large Polish population. He boarded in the suburb
of West Seneca and spent much of his time reading. Czolgosz then left for
Cleveland, though what he did there is uncertain; he may have picked up
anarchist literature or procured more money. After Cleveland, Czolgosz went to
Chicago, where he saw a newspaper mention of President McKinley's impending
visit to Buffalo. He returned to Buffalo, as yet uncertain of what he would do;
he at first only sought to be near the man who to him embodied injustice. On
Tuesday, September 3, he made up his mind. Czolgosz later stated to the police:
It was in my heart, there was no escape for me. I could not have conquered it had my life been at stake. There were thousands of people in town on Tuesday. I heard it was President's Day. All those people seemed bowing to the great ruler. I made up my mind to kill that ruler.
On
September 3, Czolgosz went to Walbridge's Hardware Store on Buffalo's Main
Street and purchased a .32-caliber Iver Johnson revolver. He had as yet no
clear plan for the assassination of the President. The following day, William
and Ida McKinley arrived in Buffalo by train. The cannon that fired a salute to
the President on his arrival in the city had been set too close to the track,
and the explosions blew out several windows in the train, unnerving the First
Lady. About a dozen people on the platform, believing the damage was caused by
a bomb, shouted "Anarchists!" As William McKinley stepped down from
the train to the official welcome, Czolgosz shoved his way forward in the
crowd, but found the President too well guarded to make an attempt on his life.
A
day at the fair; excursion to Niagara Falls
McKinley's
trip to Buffalo was part of a planned ten-day absence from Canton, beginning on
September 4, 1901, which was to include a visit in Cleveland to an encampment
of the Grand Army of the Republic; he was a member as a Union veteran. The
McKinleys stayed in Buffalo at the Milburn House, the large home of the Exposition's
president, John G. Milburn. On Saturday, September 7, they were to travel to
Cleveland and stay first at the home of businessman and future Ohio governor Myron
Herrick, a friend of the President, and then with McKinley's close friend and
adviser, Ohio Senator Mark Hanna. Upon arrival in Buffalo, the presidential
party was driven through the fairgrounds on the way to the Milburn House,
pausing for a moment at the Triumphal Bridge at the Exposition so the visitors
could look upon the fair's attractions.
While
in Buffalo, McKinley had two days of events: On Thursday, September 5, he was
to deliver his address and then tour the fair. The following day, he was to
visit Niagara Falls, and, on his return to Buffalo, meet the public at the
Temple of Music on the Exposition grounds. Part of the reason for bringing
McKinley repeatedly to the fair was to swell the gate receipts; the popular
President's visit was heavily advertised. The public reception at the Temple of
Music was disliked by his personal secretary, George B. Cortelyou, who,
concerned for the President's security, twice tried to remove it from the
program. McKinley each time restored it; he wished to support the fair (he
agreed with its theme of hemispheric cooperation), enjoyed meeting people, and
was not afraid of potential assassins. When Courtelyou asked McKinley a final
time to remove the event from the schedule, the President responded, "Why
should I? No one would wish to hurt me." Cortelyou warned McKinley that
many would be disappointed since the President would not have time to shake
hands with all who would line up to meet him. McKinley responded, "Well,
they'll know I tried, anyhow." Unable to persuade the President to alter
his schedule, Cortelyou telegraphed to authorities in Buffalo, asking them to
arrange extra security.
On
the morning of Thursday, September 5, the fair gates were opened at
6:00 am to allow the crowds to enter early and seek good spots to witness
the President's speech. The Esplanade, the large space near the Triumphal
Bridge where the President was to speak, was filled with fairgoers; the crowd
overflowed into the nearby Court of the Fountains. Of the 116,000 fairgoers
that day, about 50,000 are believed to have attended McKinley's speech. The
route between the Milburn House and the site of the speech was packed with
spectators; McKinley's progress by carriage to the fair with his wife was
accompanied by loud cheering. He ascended to a stand overlooking the Esplanade,
and after a brief introduction by Milburn, began to speak.
In
his final speech, McKinley urged an end to American isolationism. He proposed
trade arrangements which would allow US manufacturers new markets. "The
period of exclusiveness is past. The expansion of our trade and commerce is the
pressing problem. Commercial wars are unprofitable." The crowd greeted his
speech with loud applause; at its conclusion, the President escorted Ida
McKinley back to her carriage as she was to return to the Milburn House while
he saw the sights at the fair. McKinley toured the pavilions of other Western
Hemisphere nations, attracting crowds and applause wherever he went. He
presided over a luncheon at the New York State Building, and attended a
by-invitation-only reception at the Government Building. He was heavily guarded
by soldiers and police, but still tried to interact with the public,
encouraging those who tried to run to him by noticing them, and bowing to a
group of loud young popcorn sellers. He made an unscheduled stop for coffee at
the Porto Rican Building before returning to the Milburn House in the late
afternoon. Despite a Cortelyou warning to the organizers that she might not
attend due to her delicate health, Ida McKinley had been present at a luncheon
in her honor by the Exposition's Board of Lady Managers, and after dinner, the
President and First Lady returned to the fairgrounds, pausing at the Triumphal
Bridge to watch the fair illuminated by electricity as the sun set. They went
by boat to the Life Saving Station to view the fireworks from there before
returning to the Milburn House.
Czolgosz,
gun in pocket, had arrived early at the fair, and was quite close to the podium
before McKinley arrived. He considered shooting the President during his
speech, but felt he could not be certain of hitting his target; he was also
being jostled by the crowd. Czolgosz had not made up his mind when McKinley
concluded his speech and disappeared behind security guards. Nevertheless, he
attempted to follow McKinley as the President began his tour of the fair, but
was thrust back by officers. Czolgosz saw no further chance at getting close to
the President that day, and he returned to his $2/week rented room above a
saloon.
On
the morning of Friday, September 6, 1901, McKinley dressed formally as usual,
then departed the Milburn House for a stroll through the neighborhood. The
President nearly slipped away unguarded; when the police and soldiers noticed
him leaving, they hurried after him. Czolgosz also rose early with the intent
of lining up for the public reception at the Temple of Music; he reached the
Exposition gates at 8:30 am, in time to see the President pass in his
carriage en route to the train station for the visit to Niagara Falls. The
McKinleys traveled by train to Lewiston, where they switched to trolleys to
view the Niagara Gorge. When the party reached the municipality of Niagara
Falls, they transferred to carriages to see the sights. The party drove halfway
across the Honeymoon Bridge overlooking the Falls, though McKinley was careful
not to enter Canada for reasons of protocol. It was a hot day, and Ida McKinley
felt ill due to the heat; she was driven to the International Hotel to await
her husband, who toured Goat Island before joining his wife for lunch. After
smoking a cigar on the veranda, the President drove with his wife to the train
which now awaited them nearby, and saw her settled there before touring the
hydroelectric plant at the Falls. The train then returned to Buffalo so
McKinley could attend the reception at the Temple of Music. Ida McKinley had
originally intended to accompany her husband to the auditorium, but as she was
not fully recovered, she decided to return to the Milburn House to rest. As the
time allotted for the reception had been pared down to ten minutes, the
President did not expect to be separated from his wife for long. As it was only
3:30, McKinley stopped for refreshments at the Mission Building before
proceeding to the Temple of Music.
The last photograph of the late President
McKinley. Taken as he was ascending the steps of the Temple of Music, September
6, 1901.
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Shooting
and death of McKinley
At
the Temple of Music
When
given the opportunity to host a public reception for President McKinley, fair
organizers chose to site it in the Temple of Music—Louis L. Babcock, grand
marshal of the Exposition, regarded the building as ideal for the purpose. The
large auditorium was located close to the Esplanade, in the heart of the fair,
and had doorways on each of its four sides. In addition to rows of chairs on
the floor of the hall, it had spacious galleries. Babcock spent the morning of
September 6 making the physical arrangements for the reception. Floor seating
was removed to create a broad aisle, running from the east doors through which
the public would be admitted, to where McKinley would stand. Once members of
the public shook hands with McKinley, they would continue on to exit the
building. An American flag was draped behind McKinley, both to screen him from
behind, and for decoration—several potted plants were arrayed around the
President's place to create an attractive scene. Besides its utility for other
purposes, the ornate building was one of the architectural features of the fair.
Considerable
arrangements had been made for the President's security. Exposition police were
stationed at the doors; detectives from the Buffalo police guarded the aisle.
In addition to McKinley's usual Secret Service agent, George Foster, two other
agents had been assigned to the Buffalo trip because of Cortelyou's security
concerns. Babcock was made nervous by a joke at lunch in an Exposition
restaurant that the President might be shot during the reception. He had
arranged for a dozen artillerymen to attend the reception in full-dress
uniform, intending to use them as decoration. Instead, he had them stand in the
aisle with instructions to close on any suspicious-looking person who might
approach the President. These men were not trained in police work, and served
to crowd the area in front of the President and obstruct the views of the
detectives and Secret Service. At such events, Foster usually stood just to the
left and behind McKinley. However, Milburn wished to stand to McKinley's left
to be able to introduce anyone he knew in the line to the President, and Foster
and another agent instead stood across the aisle from McKinley.
Photograph of the scene of the en:William
McKinley assassination at the Temple of Music, inside the en:Pan-American
Exposition, Buffalo, New York, Sept. 6, 1901. Site of the shooting
marked with an X. Photographer: C.D. Arnold. Source: President McKinley's
Pan-American Address at Buffalo, N. Y., With a Short Biographical Sketch of the
Late President. Buffalo, N. Y. : Bensler & Wesley Printers, 1901.
Image available here and booklet from Bensler & Wesley
with the photo of the assassination scene available here, in the collection of the en:University
of Buffalo. Image believed to be in the public domain because it was
first published in 1901.
|
The Temple of Music, as seen on a post card.
Like most of the Exposition's structures, it was removed after the Exposition
closed.
|
Through
the afternoon, crowds had filled the floor outside the blocked-off aisle, and
the galleries as well, wanting to see the President, even if they could not
greet him. McKinley arrived on schedule, glanced at the arrangements, and
walked to his place, where he stood with Milburn on his left and Cortelyou on
his right. The pipe organ began to play "The Star-Spangled Banner" as
McKinley ordered the doors open to admit those who had waited to greet him. The
police let them in, and McKinley prepared to perform his favorite part of the
job. An experienced politician, McKinley could shake hands with 50 people per
minute, gripping their hands first so as to both guide them past him quickly
and prevent his fingers from being squeezed. Cortelyou anxiously watched the
time; about halfway through the ten minutes allotted, he sent word to Babcock
to have the doors closed when the presidential secretary raised his hand.
Seeing Cortelyou looking at his watch, Babcock moved towards the doors. As the
reception continued, the organist played works by Bach. The procession of
citizens shaking hands with their Chief Executive was interrupted when
12-year-old Myrtle Ledger of Spring Brook, New York, who was accompanied by her
mother, asked McKinley for the red carnation he always wore on his lapel. The President
gave it to her, then resumed work without his trademark good-luck piece. The
Secret Service men looked suspiciously on a tall, swarthy man who appeared
restless as he walked towards the President, but breathed a sigh of relief when
he shook hands with McKinley without incident and began to move towards the
exit. The usual rule that those who approached the President must do so with
their hands open and empty was not being enforced, perhaps due to the heat of
the day, as several people were using handkerchiefs to wipe their brows; the
man who followed the swarthy individual had his right hand wrapped in one, as
if injured. Seeing this, McKinley reached for his left hand instead. As the two
men's hands touched at 4:07 pm, Czolgosz shot McKinley twice in the
abdomen with a .32 Iver Johnson revolver concealed under the handkerchief.
As
onlookers gazed in horror, and as McKinley lurched forward a step, Czolgosz
prepared to take a third shot. He was prevented from doing so when James
Parker, an American of part-African part-Spanish descent from Georgia who had
been behind Czolgosz in line, slammed into the assassin, reaching for the gun.
A split second after Parker struck Czolgosz, so did Buffalo detective John Geary
and one of the artillerymen, Francis O'Brien. Czolgosz disappeared beneath a
pile of men, some of whom were punching or hitting him with rifle butts. He was
heard to say, "I done my duty." McKinley staggered backwards and to
the right, but was prevented from falling by Cortelyou, Milburn, and Detective
Geary; they guided him across some fallen bunting to a chair. The President
tried to convince Cortelyou he was not seriously injured, but blood was visible
as he tried to expose his injury. Seeing the pummeling being taken by Czolgosz,
McKinley ordered it stopped. Czolgosz was dragged away, but not before being
searched by Agent Foster. When Czolgosz kept turning his head to watch the
President while being searched, Foster struck him to the ground with one punch.
After
stopping the beating of Czolgosz, McKinley's next concern was for his wife,
urging Cortelyou to take care how she was told of the shooting. The initial
crowd reaction had been panic, and an attempt to flee the hall, which was
frustrated by others surging inwards to see what had occurred. As McKinley was
carried out on a stretcher to an electric-powered ambulance, there was a moan
from the crowd at the sight of the President's ashen face. Foster rode with him
on the way to the fair's hospital. On the way there, McKinley felt in his
clothing and came out with a metal object. "I believe that is a bullet."
McKinley had been shot twice; one bullet had deflected off a button and only
grazed him; the other had penetrated his abdomen.
The room at the hospital at the Pan-American
Exposition where President McKinley was operated on following his shooting,
September 6, 1901
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Operation
The
ambulance carrying McKinley reached the Exposition hospital at 4:25 pm.
Although it usually dealt only with the minor medical issues of fairgoers, the
hospital did have an operating theatre. At the time of the shooting, no fully
qualified doctor was at the hospital, only nurses and interns. The best surgeon
in the city (and the Exposition's medical director), Dr. Roswell Park was in
Niagara Falls, performing a delicate neck operation. When interrupted during
the procedure on September 6 to be told he was needed in Buffalo, he responded
that he could not leave, even for the President of the United States. He was
then told who had been shot. Park, two weeks later, would save the life of a
woman who suffered injuries almost identical to McKinley's. The first physician
to arrive at the hospital was Dr. Herman Mynter, whom the President had met
briefly the previous day; the wounded McKinley (who had a good memory for
faces) joked that when he had met Mynter, he had not expected to need his
professional services. As McKinley lay on the operating table, he stated of
Czolgosz, "He didn't know, poor fellow, what he was doing. He couldn't
have known." With Park unavailable and with the fading afternoon light the
major source of illumination in the operating room, when another surgeon, Dr. Matthew
D. Mann arrived, the decision was made to operate at once to try to remove the
remaining bullet. Mynter had given McKinley an injection of morphine and
strychnine to ease his pain; Mann (a noted gynecologist without experience in
abdominal wounds) administered ether to sedate McKinley as the wounded man
murmured the Lord's Prayer.
For
hundreds of years, abdominal gunshot wounds had meant death by gangrene or
other infection, with doctors able to do little more than ease pain. Only
seventeen years previously, Dr. Emil Kocher, a Swiss surgeon, had been the
first to successfully operate on a patient who had received such a wound. To
increase the lighting, sunlight was reflected onto the wound by another
physician; towards the end of the surgery, a better light was rigged. The
hospital lacked basic surgical equipment such as retractors. With McKinley in a
weakened condition, Mann could do little probing of the wound to try to find
the bullet; his work was complicated by the fact that the President was a
heavyset man. The surgeon made an incision in the President's skin, and found
and removed a small piece of cloth which was embedded in the flesh. He probed
with his finger and hand, finding damage to the digestive system—the stomach
displayed both an entry and exit wound. Mann sewed up both holes in the organ,
but could not find the bullet itself; he concluded it had lodged in the
President's back muscles. He later wrote, "A bullet once it ceases to move
does little harm." A primitive X-ray machine was on display at the fair
but was not used on McKinley; Mann later stated that its use might have
disturbed the patient and done little good. He used black silk thread to stitch
the incision and wound, without drainage, and covered the area with a bandage.
As the operation concluded, Dr. Park arrived from Niagara Falls; he was
unwilling to interfere and at 5:20, McKinley was given another shot of
painkiller and allowed to awaken. He was taken to the Milburn House by the
electric ambulance. The First Lady had not been told of the President's
shooting; once the surgery was complete, the presidential physician, Presley M.
Rixey, gently told her what had occurred. Ida McKinley took the news calmly;
she wrote in her diary, "Went to Niagra [sic] Falls this morning.
My Dearest was receiving in a public hall on our return, when he was shot by a
... " Leech, in her biography of President McKinley, suggests that the
First Lady could not write the word, "anarchist".
Senator Mark Hanna (left), friend of
President McKinley, arriving at the Milburn House after the shooting
|
Apparent
recovery; eventual death
Within
minutes of the shots, the news was conveyed around the world by telegraph wire,
in time for the late newspaper editions in the US. In the era before radio,
thousands stood in cities across the country outside newspaper offices,
awaiting the latest bulletin from Buffalo. Fears that McKinley would not
survive the day of his shooting were allayed by reassuring bulletins issued by
Cortelyou based on information from the doctors. Large, threatening crowds
assembled outside Buffalo police headquarters where Czolgosz was brought. Word
that he had admitted to being an anarchist led to attacks on others of that
belief: one was nearly lynched in Pittsburgh.
At
the Milburn House, McKinley seemed to be recovering. On Saturday, September 7,
McKinley was relaxed and conversational. His wife was allowed to see him, as
was Cortelyou; the President asked his secretary, "How did they like my
speech?" and was pleased on hearing of positive reactions. Meanwhile, Vice
President Roosevelt (who had been on a Vermont vacation), much of the Cabinet,
and Senator Hanna hurried to Buffalo. Cortelyou continued to issue encouraging
bulletins. The President was permitted few visitors, and complained of
loneliness. As the crisis seemed to have passed, dignitaries started to leave
on September 9, confident of the President's recovery. Roosevelt left for a
vacation in the Adirondack Mountains after expressing outrage that Czolgosz
might serve only a few years under New York State law for attempted murder, the
maximum penalty for attempted murder in New York at that time being ten years. Attorney
General Philander Knox went to Washington, searching for a means to bring
Czolgosz under federal law. Secretary of State John Hay had been closely
associated with the two presidents to be assassinated: he had been Lincoln's secretary,
and a close friend of James Garfield. He arrived on September 10; met at the
station by Babcock with an account of the President's recovery, Hay responded
that the President would die.
McKinley
biographer H. Wayne Morgan wrote of the week following the shooting:
His hearty constitution, everyone said, would see him through. The doctors seemed hopeful, even confident ... It is difficult to understand the cheer with which they viewed their patient. He was nearly sixty years old, overweight, and the wound itself had not been thoroughly cleaned or traced. Precautions against infections, admittedly difficult in 1901, were negligently handled.
According
to McKinley biographer Margaret Leech, McKinley's apparent recovery "was
merely the resistance of his strong body to the gangrene that was creeping
along the bullet's track through the stomach, the pancreas, and one
kidney". Another X-ray machine was sent from New Jersey by its inventor, Thomas
Edison. It was not used on the President; sources vary on why this was—Leech
stated that the machine, which she says was procured by Cortelyou and
accompanied by a trained operator, was not used on orders of the doctors in
charge of McKinley's case. Miller recounts that doctors attempted to test it on
a man of about McKinley's size, but it proved to be missing a crucial part,
much to Edison's embarrassment.
McKinley
had been given nutritive enemas; on September 11, he took some broth by mouth.
When it seemed to do him good, the following morning they allowed him toast,
coffee, and chicken broth. His subsequent pain was diagnosed as indigestion; he
was given purgatives and most doctors left after their evening consultation. In
the early morning of September 13, McKinley suffered a collapse. Urgent word to
return to Buffalo was sent to Vice President Roosevelt, 12 miles (19 km)
from the nearest telegraph or telephone in the Adirondack wilderness; a park
ranger was sent to find him. Specialists were summoned; although at first some
doctors hoped that McKinley might survive with a weakened heart, by afternoon
they knew the case was hopeless. As yet unknown to the doctors, gangrene was
growing on the walls of his stomach and toxins were passing into his blood.
McKinley drifted in and out of consciousness all day; when awake he was the
model patient. By evening, McKinley too knew he was dying, "It is useless,
gentlemen. I think we ought to have prayer." His friends and family were
admitted, and the First Lady sobbed over him, "I want to go, too. I want
to go, too." Her husband replied, "We are all going, we are all
going. God's will be done, not ours" and with final strength put an arm
around her. He may also have sung part of his favorite hymn, "Nearer, My God,
to Thee", although other accounts have her singing it softly to
him. Ida McKinley was led away, her place briefly taken by Senator Hanna.
Morgan recounts their final encounter, "Sometime that terrible evening, Mark
Hanna had approached the bedside, tears standing in his eyes, his hands and
head shaking in disbelief that thirty years of friendship could end thus."
When a tentative, formal greeting gained no coherent response, Hanna
"cried out over the years of friendship, 'William, William, don't you know
me?' "
At
2:15 am on Saturday, September 14, 1901, President McKinley died. At the
time of McKinley's death, Roosevelt was on his return journey to Buffalo,
racing over the mountain roads by carriage to the nearest railroad station,
where a special train was waiting. When he reached that station at dawn, he
learned of McKinley's death.
The Milburn Residence, where President
McKinley died. Buffalo, N.Y. (Copyright, 1902, by Underwood & Underwood.)
|
Aftermath
An
autopsy was performed later on the morning of McKinley's death; Mann led a team
of 14 physicians. They found the bullet had passed through the stomach,
then through the transverse colon, and vanished through the peritoneum after
penetrating a corner of the left kidney. There was also damage to the adrenal
glands and pancreas. Mynter, who participated in the autopsy, later stated his
belief that the bullet lodged somewhere in the back muscles, though this is
uncertain as it was never found: after four hours, Ida McKinley demanded that
the autopsy end. A death mask was taken, and private services took place in the
Milburn House before the body was moved to Buffalo City and County Hall for the
start of five days of national mourning. McKinley's body was ceremoniously
taken from Buffalo to Washington, and then to Canton. On the day of the
funeral, September 19, as McKinley was taken from his home on North Market
Street for the last time, all activity ceased in the nation for five minutes.
Trains came to a halt, telephone and telegraph service was stopped. Leech
stated, "the people bowed in homage to the President who was gone".
In
addition to the damage done by the bullet, the autopsy also found that the
President was suffering from cardiomyopathy (fatty degeneration of the heart
muscle). This would have weakened his heart and made him less able to recover
from such an injury, and was thought to be related to his overweight frame and
lack of exercise. Modern scholars generally believe that McKinley died of
pancreatic necrosis, a condition that is difficult to treat today and would
have been completely impossible for the doctors of his time.
He, the said William McKinley, from the said sixth day of September, in the year aforesaid, until the fourteenth day of September, in the same year aforesaid, in the city and county aforesaid, did languish and languishing did live; on which said last mentioned day he, the said William McKinley, of the said mortal wound did die.- From the indictment by the grand jury of the County Court of Erie County for first-degree murder in State of New York v. Leon Czolgosz, September 16, 1901.
Czolgosz
went on trial for the murder of McKinley in state court in Buffalo on September
23, 1901, nine days after the president died. Prosecution testimony took two
days and consisted principally of the doctors who treated McKinley and various
eyewitnesses to the shooting. Defense attorney Loran L. Lewis and his
co-counsel called no witnesses, which Lewis in his closing argument attributed
to Czolgosz's refusal to cooperate with them. In his 27-minute address to the
jury, Lewis took pains to praise President McKinley; Miller notes that the
closing argument was more calculated to defend the attorney's "place in
the community, rather than an effort to spare his client the electric
chair". After a bare half hour of deliberations, the jury convicted Czolgosz;
he was subsequently sentenced to death and was executed in the electric chair
on October 29, 1901. Acid was placed in the casket to dissolve his body, before
burial in the prison graveyard.
After
McKinley's murder, newspaper editorials across the country heavily criticized
the lack of protection afforded to American presidents. Though it still lacked
any legislative mandate, by 1902, the Secret Service was protecting President
Roosevelt full-time. This did not, however, settle the debate. Some in Congress
recommended the United States Army be charged with protecting the President.
Not until 1906 did Congress pass legislation officially designating the Secret
Service as the agency in charge of presidential security.
The
aftermath of the assassination saw a backlash against anarchists; the Buffalo
police announced soon after the shooting that they believed Czolgosz had not
acted alone, and a number of anarchists were arrested on suspicion of
involvement in the attack. Czolgosz mentioned his contacts with Goldman during
the interrogation; authorities arrested her family to give her incentive to
turn herself in, which she did on September 10. She spent nearly three weeks in
jail; she, like all other arrestees thought to have conspired with Czolgosz,
was released without charge. Anarchist colonies and newspapers were attacked by
vigilantes; although no one was killed, there was considerable property damage.
Fear of anarchists led to surveillance programs which were eventually
consolidated in 1908 as the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Anti-anarchist
laws passed in the wake of the assassination lay dormant for some years before
being used during and after World War I, alongside newly-passed statutes,
against non-citizens whose views were deemed a threat. Among those deported, in
December 1919, was Goldman, who did not have US citizenship.
Leech
believed the nation experienced a transition at McKinley's death:
The new President was in office. The republic still lived. Yet, for
a space, Americans turned from the challenge and the strangeness of the future.
Entranced and regretful, they remembered McKinley's firm, unquestioning faith,
his kindly, frock-coated dignity; his accessibility and dedication to the
people: the federal simplicity that would not be seen again in Washington ...
[After McKinley's death,] old men came to the [White House] on errands of state
and politics, but their primacy was disputed by the young men crowding forward.
The nation felt another leadership, nervous, aggressive, and strong. Under command
of a bold young captain, America set sail on the stormy voyage of the twentieth
century.
All our people loved their dead President. His kindly nature and lovable traits of character, and his amiable consideration for all about him will long live in the minds and hearts of his countrymen. He loved them in return with such patriotism and unselfishness that in this hour of their grief and humiliation he would say to them: 'It is God's will; I am content. If there is a lesson in my life of death, let it be taught to those who still live, and leave the destiny of their country in their keeping.' Let us, then, as our dead is buried out of our sight, seek for the lessons and the admonitions that may be suggested by the life and death which constitutes our theme.
- Former President Grover Cleveland, Address to the students of Princeton University. The Authentic Life of President McKinley, page 409.
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