E 711 .2 • B27 Copy 1 The True Story of the Assassination of President McKinley at Buffalo An Historic Memento of the Nation's Loss The True Story OF THE Assassination OF President McKinley AT BUFFALO WITH MANY SCENES AND PICTURES CONNECTED WITH THE TRAGEDY, INCLUDING THE LAST TRIBUTES OF RESPECT AT WASHINGTON AND CANTON By RICHARD H. BARRY who was present during the historic events, beginning with the President's visit to Buffalo and ending with the last ceremonies at Canton The Tra.de Supplied by the AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY &nd its Branch* The BUFFALO NEWS COMPANY, General SeJes Agents Buffalo, N. Y. ROBERT ALLAN REID, Publisher i 90 i Copyright 1901, by Kotiert Allan Kcid. All rights reserved 3 * s / - 2 - The True Story of the Assassination. MR. McKIN I political poli< > t the n ii receptions that any public man 1. :n Washington in a generation. He was peculiarly tive in his . the other fully as much of sincerity a> was given — ally more. irio>ity prom] of the attendance at these func- I curiosity is an impersonal thing at best, and sometimes an inhuman I the line along at the rate of 125 persons every minute. He tried always to utter some kindly word and usual 1) that he 11 . il affair of the meeting. At the Nashville Exposition, in 1897, the Secretary of War, seeing the of the President, ordered the door closed on a waiting crowd. The order was immediately countermanded by the superior authority of the President. He would brook nothing of the kind and insisted on treating the people generously. At Buffalo, on the afternoon of President's Day, there was a private reception to >ome 1500 in the Government Building. There, after a fatiguing forenoon the President found no diffi< ulty in meet- • he strain for twenty minutes. It was noticed, however, that it required <>rt which, though concealed, was apparent to close observers, to carry him through the line of invited guesl This fatigue had disappeared on Friday, after a good night's rest and with pleasant day ahead. In the morning, at 7 o'clock, before breakfast, he left the house of Mr. Milburn, where he was staying, for his usual walk. )k him, entirely unattended and carelessly playful in his enjoyment of the wonderful crisp September atmosphere, through several blocks of Delaware, the most beautiful avenue in Buffalo, a city of beautiful avenues. The Milburn home is in a locality almost deserted at that early hour. An assa ght have shot him down thus with ease, but there would have been no scene then, merely the motive for a drama. Delaware Avenue, in the morning of such a day, tatically oppressive with its beauty, and no doubt the President lingered over it Fondly, without the . the 1 rush. He was gone twenty minutes, then he went to breakfast and then to the exposition. \h-. Mi kinley was with him. Her presence and her continued good feel e of much gratification to the President. She had been with him co 1 sly throughout the trip, and had had applause his. Another essential factor in the propitious chat the trip was the weather. It was lair throughout. The day of the speed at crowds had been hot — almost oppressive 2 o ►—I h >— * o X w til ac E- 1 <; w Q < 2 < Cl, co W w fc S Tin In i Stor^ "i mi Assassin \i ion with its sticky mid-summer humidity. Then came one of those cool, cynical-clear, Minerva-like nights that occur in the early tall in salubrious In. It followed a day whose low-drawn languor moved with soft dalli- aih e through the flexible humors of sensitive persons. The sun rose in a mist on the morning ot the tragi* daj and it < ame up red — a blood red — in a gauze of filmiest < loud that incited away before the forenoon was well advanced. Afternoon found everything sultry and enervating, a day that took the starch from women's i lothes and the energ) from men's bodies. The exposition ambulance picked up three cases of heat prostration before 3 o'clock. It was a real midsummer day, such as reminds men on the fortieth parallel that the climate of 1'orto Rico is theirs. The President was not oppressed. His smile had never been cheerier, ami his long rolling walk, like the spirited pace of a thoroughbred, had lost none of its eager < harm. lie covered tin- -round with the enthusiasm of a happy man and with the buoyancy of satisfaction. He spoke freely with his sci retarv, Mr. Cortelyou, with Mr. Milburn. the president of the exposi- tion, and with several local friends who made the short journey with him to the Falls. This was uneventful. It was like that of almost any other of the millions who have visited the exposition, except that it did not take in the ( 'anadian side. THE TEMPLE OF MUSIC. The President arrived at the Temple of Music a few minutes before 4 o'clock. Mrs. McKinley had left him down town. Everything was in readiness. 'The newspapers had not been prodigal in heralding — they were too crowded with other things — though the noon editions bore the conspic- uous announcement on their front pages that the President would hold a public reception, to last about half an hour, beginning at 4 o'clock, in the Temple of Music. The number of admissions to the exposition had been comparatively small, for the reaction from a great day is always a great slump. Over a hundred thousand had passed the gates on President's Day, but at 3 o'cloi k of the following afternoon there were less than sixty thousand persons on the grounds. Perhaps a third o\ these expected to attend the reception in the Temple. Idlers, partisans in the lower ranks, the distant worshipers ol greatness, and, most ot all. the intensely curious, formed the crowd -probably 99 per cent, from the lower and lowei middle ( lasses ot society. Gentility had had its reception on the daj preceding \ this was a time for the common people, from the verj ranks of which the Presidenl X u . ft 5 a- - < * o p CO x < * w J z K 2 U w 2 < w 5 £ = ^ B u < io 'I'm Tkii Stoio "i im Assassination had come and whose idolatrous support had given him his immense prestige. Vs the Presidential party, preceded and loll owed by platoons of mounted polite and hedged about bj secrel service officers, drove from the station through a quarter-mile avenue of blue-coated exposition guards, the desultory < rowds that lined the wa) threw out haphazard < heers. The applause at the remple was not perfunctory. There were enough people there to create enthusiasm and the spirit of welcome was amply present. The President inspired a personal regard, always magnetii in such a crowd as greeted him there, and as he bowed in measured though sincere politeness, the sweaty e came up to him in soothing greeting — a greeting upon which his appetite had long fed, and which he craved with much the same insistence that prompted it. I he entire occurrences of the two days — the beauty o\ the exposition, his wife's continued health, the presence of his friends, the favorable recep tion of his momentous speech, received, as he had hoped it would be, without a full realization of its import, the propitious weather and the strenuous applause — had by that time impregnated him with negative content and positive buoyance. He entered the Temple by a rear door, saw- the arrangements were complete (he did not inspect them minutely, for he surrendered sui h details to others, and had always been lax in guarding his person), bowed to the guards and reporters present, walked up the aisle to the appointed station and said, pleasantly, that the place was cool. The Temple was cool, for it had been locked up all day. This offered relief from the swelter without and seemed worthy of its august name. 1 rom a point just north of the center, extending southeast and northwest at a fort) five degree angle, slightly broken, were two aisles reaching from the apex like the bend in a linger. These aisles were formed by tightly packed folding seats, pushed back smartly, so that they formed a great inextricable jumble, spread over the floor in reckless confusion, whose edges at the aisle were nicely mended by long strips of purple cloth, pieced at the end in a continuous weave of undulating imitation — invitation to the President's stand at the tenter. There great palms lifted their somnolent, green shade and a yellow dome, like polished amber, reflected the soft lambent lighl that streamed in richl) from the western windows. For guards there were the regulation exposition polue, I nited States artillery men, < ity detectives and governmenl secrel service men. A short lull tame, the President took his plate, Mr. Milburn at the left, Mr. Cortelyou al the right, Detectives Ireland and foster three feet away in 2 < h w - g V. v; o u o a ^ s- 1 I in Trui Stor^ "i mi Assassination LEON F. CZOLGOSZ The Assassin. front, several reporters behind, diplomats and offii ials surrounding, with the guards lining the aisle. •• Let them < ome," said the President. 'I 'he doors were opened and the surge outside pushed in the tide o( humanity. There was the usual push, the usual hot day sweat, the usual trodden feet, the usual quiet patience of the waiting thousands, and soon a stead) stream ol people was being pushed by the guards through the aisle and past the President, as logs are propelled dow u a sluice by men with canl hooks at a spring drive. 'This c on tinned for about eighl minutes, when there appeared at the door — unnoticed at the t line —a well-knit young man, whose righl hand, with seeming innocence, was in his back pocket. Thai hand held a pistol, and both were concealed from e\rn tin- treat herous depths of the po< kel bj a dirt) rag. The rag was a handkerchief, but it had been carried for several days and in the perspiring President McKinley at Buffalo 13 heat no face mop was presentable after such long usage. It was a cheap handkerchief, plain, unmarked, ordinarily small and sorely soiled, yet it held the deadliest venom on earth. The hand was slightly nervous, so was the man. Only a close observer would have seen it. The precision of the next few moments would prove that he had nerves of steel; the villain at the climax of a tragedy usually has stage fright, and the young man has since admitted that he came within an ace of backing out there, but was already in the Temple, while the crowd behind made retreat impossible, and forced him slowly to the precipice. He closed his teeth — good, white ones, though he has the fondness of a tobacco slave for a cigar — and screwed his resolution up to the point of doing. He was well built, had a good wiry form of medium height, an intelligent face with a brow high but narrow, the aquiline nose of determination, a firm chin, a coarse sensual mouth and blue German eyes. It was the head of an egotist, the mouth of an impressionable youth, the nose and chin of a resolute man. The eyes were responsive but not sympathetic, and at that moment were stolid, with little of the fierce light that burns in the basilisk iris of a fanatic. His hair was brushed in wavy brown disorder back from his forehead. At first glance he was not a striking figure. He wore a cheap, dark suit of woolen cloth, a flannel shirt and a string tie — all ordinary, all unnoticeable. He appeared as a mechanic, a printer, a shipping clerk, a worker at some high-class trade. He moved on down the line, drawing near the President. As soon as he was well past the door he withdrew the hand- kerchief-enclosed pistol from his pocket, holding both in front of him, as though the hand were wounded and in a sling. THE ASSASSIN. This young man's history, now partly obtainable, is of interest. It is worth tracing. His name was Leon F. Czolgosz (pronounced Tchollgosch ). He was 28 years old, born in Detroit, Michigan. He came of poor, Polish- German parents. The mother does not yet speak English, though she has been in this country many years. The father was so indigent that at the time of this writing he was about Cleveland, his present home, looking for bread or for work, whichever should be obtainable. Czolgosz has been slightly known to the anarchists of Chicago and the West as Fred Nieman, a surname that in German means ''nobody." He has not been a promi- nent anarchist and it is only as a hanger-on that he is recalled. Emma Goldman, whose disciple he claims to be, is said to have refused him an i4 'I'iii I 5Tom "i i mi Ass issin \ 1 ion interview in Chicago when he asked to be accepted as a follower. loiter, however, she talked with him. But the parasite grows the lustiest and out ut the least promising come the best harvests. It was the last bom and the ■ despised Joseph the sou of Jacob who brought Egypt out ol (amine, and it was also the least promising in the family, Aaron burr, who plunged America in -loom and died a dastard's death. Czolgosz had learned from Emma Goldman the doctrine of free love. It is not known to what extent this influenced his life, but it likely was strongly felt, when it is known to what extent his anarchistic opinions led him. These opinions were imbibed from pamphlets, the vile printed stuff that < irculates in the sewers of the world and taints the fair name of ••literature" with its borrowed plumage. He talked with anarchists in their haunts — in low saloons, about factories and in dark alleys — in all the places where discontent is bred by suffering and deadly pique. lie saw the injustice, the misery, the squalor, the cruel wrong and the smirched existences of the nether world. With his imagina- tion fed by vicious newspapers and by various cheap propaganda, he saw the smug i omplai ency, the gilded hollow superiority of the self sty led upper i lasses, all the mock pageantry and familiar la< k luster show that is the con spicuous fact in American life. He saw government fail to govern, the police fail to protei I and the law tail to do justice. Most of all he saw the in- lity ofpropertj distribution. He fell the brunt of poverty and his partly mature intelligence told him thai he deserved more than he had. He saw the injustice and proposed revolution as a remedy. He reasoned as far as he could see and slopped ; there was a blank wall in front of him. Ahead he thought there was perfection ; he did not know that it hid chaos. He was an anan hist. The in h of notoriety seized him. This was evidenced, after he was hid behind steel bats, b) his feverish ungranted desire for the news papers. rhe idea thai another should have prominence, plaudits, ease and lation, while he. just as intelligent and just as deserving, was buried in blank obscurity, maddened him. It would be better ifkingsand queens and presidents— all who rule —were dead. Equality then would reign. He walked the streets for weeks, slowly coming to one conclusion: he must kill the President. Such was the man, rightl) name 1 M Nobody," a conscienceless atom, with a maggot in his brain, who was to inject foul murder into the fairest year oi the Republic 's e listen* e. lifting the red hand against the kindliest of men, placing Vmerica in the infam) ol ' >ld World treacherj and bringing to the President McKinley at Buffalo J 5 IRELAND AND FOSTER Secret Service Detectives, vccompanying iiif President, who helped secure the Assassin, at the Fatal Shooting. infinite separate homes of the country the anguish of a personal tragedy. There is every reason to believe that Czolgosz did not realize the enormity of the crime he contemplated. He remembered the injunction of his mentor, Emma Goldman, " the Medusa of Anarchists," who had told him in words hot with passion : " If the life of a tyrant is in your way, take it. The world will applaud your act." He had chosen William McKinley, a kind man, whose only sin was popularity and whose only crime was the wearing of the thankless laurel which that shibboleth bestows. ■ — He was to do the deed in broad day, under the golden dome of the exposition's shrine to music, whither that man had gone to extend the right hand of good fellowship to all who came. The dark and noisome crimes of centuries; the heinous deeds impelled by human greed and hate ; those things which by comparison make cowards noble and insane men wise ; those ruthless passions which through all the ages have put i6 The True Story of the Assassination JAMES PARKER .Mil HERCULEAN Nei i ' .'Mill 6 INCHES I \I I . WHO ASSIS1 ED IN SECURING 1 HI ASSASSIN. the sting of gall in the net tar of human life, were here to find a link in the chain of irrepressible events. It pla< es America side by side with the slimy insecurity of the Old World. There the" dirks have long been bran- dished, the staccato pistols have long reeked hot with murderous smoke, and behind slashed broadcloth imperial breasts have long heat wildly in anticipatory fear, but that is not America. The uneasi- ness of the head that wears a crown should have no counter- part in this land of the free. The President is nothing if not a creature of the people. He may be created by a coterie, may be a figurehead, but he is heart of the people's heart and blood of their blood. He comes from them, is of them and for them, and lives a short four years as their personified expression of ma- terial power, to merge again into the common bulk with the passing of his term of offi( e. He is not a despot, harbors no tyranny, endures no injustice, brooks no wrong, rules as wisely as he can and as justly as he may. loves his people and should be beloved bv them. President McKinley at Buffalo 17 Such was President McKinley, and such is the genesis of every Chief Executive. He has little hand in the oppression of the human race. He lends no authoritv to the wrongs of ages. It is not through him that men are bowed down. He cannot take the kink from social problems. He is as impassive in the face of environment as the sphinx in the lapse of time. He is merely the ephemeral expression of man-made power. To kill him does not injure the institution which he typifies. Government will continue as long as man endures. A murder will not obliterate the inertia of centuries. It does no more than stir a ripple in the placid surface of living institutions whose depths are greater than those of the bluest sea. Republican govern- ment may not be of the best. Xo government is perfect, nor will it be until man's double nature is ironed out like starched clothes under a flat iron. But assassination will not improve the imperfection that exists for contrast and for incentive. A question comes to even one : Is there any sane person on the broad earth who could deliberately shoot the President of the United States in so cowardly a fashion ? Czolgosz was technically sane. He had his wits. He planned his deed with the circumspection of an accomplished general, and when it was all over nodded significantly in quiet satisfaction and said : "I have done my duty." A State board would not send him to an asylum, but he had a deadlier disease. It is egotism. He was an atom, one man in millions, yet he set himself against the greatness of time, the institutions of the ages and millions of the human race. He placed his finger on the pulse of humanity and offered a remedy for its feverish, impetuous thrill. So far as it was in his power he opened the jugular vein. That is the apotheosis of self, the sublimation of the I. Don Quixote tilting at windmills formed no more pitiable spectacle. Czolgosz left Cleveland on Saturday. He bought the pistol at a Main Street store in Buffalo on Friday morning. In the interval he was contem- plating the act. In Buffalo he rented a small, cheap room at the home of a Pole named Nowak, on Broadway, a street partly stricken with poverty. He had not yet chosen the precise time, accessories and method for the act ; was merely resolute in general purpose. On the morning of Friday, the fatal day, he rose early — this is had from his confession. He was then decided on the time. It was to be that day. The exact moment he was not sure of. He would choose the most propitious. After dressing, he tied in a bundle what papers he had and placed them in an inside pocket. Breakfast he had at a cheap restaurant near the Nowak i.x 'I'm 'I'm i Story <>i ihi Assassination house, lie was (.-.iri) and ate with several bakery « ierk> employed next door. One of them remembers him only as a quiet, unpretentious man. deeply preoccupied. He wire good clothes, made to order in Chi< when on his last visit to Emma Goldman, and his dark shirt — a nondescript in quizzical, unknown Milor — announced his familiarity with the department store. His trade had been that of a wire puller, never eat: more than $g a week, hut tor iN months he had not worked. His clothes were bought since that time ; his shirt befo The silence, which is the one privilege Czolgosz gets for the enormous price he pays the electrii chair,was broken to explain his source ol revenue. 'The money for this long sustenance, tin- travel and the clothes, he says, saved at the wire mill and on a farm outside of Cleveland, where he worked for a while. After breakfast he went to the exposition grounds. On the way he dropped the bundle of papers in a sewer, where they still lie in the c ity's underground slime unfound by the most zealous scavengers. To rea< h the •unds he passed again through the low squalor of the city. In indigent misery smote him with only a further numb realization of tin- wro would try to right. lie was like a man stupefied with narcotics and then l\\ en another infusion. The tinted colors of early fall had just touched the trees, whose deep shade copiously conceals the seared roughness of the houses there, and mo on past great charitable institutions, the green covered in uncut reverence the gentle mounds of graves. The exposition was in the gardeners' mosl eous trim, and the sun, amply translucent in its forenoon flight, was brilliant. It seemed that if the exposition escaped suffocation in fresh enery it mus! inevitably be drowned in sunshine. To that paradise on earth the assassin came. The fresh glory of the autumnal morning did not enter his soul ; the pest behind had buried its venom too deep. What un- known muttered oaths, what dread midnight plottings, what brusque, -nailed conspiracy, what atrocious thoughts and leering deeds must have worked then influence in the hearl and brain of a man who could filter the elusive strains of sweet music, catch the dashing spray from laughing ton:. t. mis. see the swell and bulge of plastered must les in heroi< statues, know the infectious In hu it \ ofa careless I rowd and still plot murder ! The young m. in waited. lb- got to the grounds just after 8— earl) enough to sec the President drive through on his way to the tram foi Mi falls, lb- had hoped there would be a chance for a shot then, but found ao 'I'm I S v* oi rHE Ass vssin \ i i< >n none everything was it hurry, there was no crowd and too many rds. He kept his pistol in his po< ket and hung about with i ool assui in< e It was then that he < hose the Temple of Musi< and made his minute plans. i be a public reception. He would enter the line, reach the I'ri idem and shoot him. He would fire as long as he could (there were five chambers in the pistol, each loaded with a 32-caliber ball . he would be ped, and then--. "Well," he said, when told that he must die, days afterward, " that ua> the expe< tation from the beginn 1 There was an immense, sonorous pipe organ in the Temple — one of the largest and one of the best ever built. An organist was playing. At the moment he had opened the lower diapason foi a Bach sonata -a negatively invocation, charged with all the tremendous emotional and subtle aesthetic power thai that master possesses. Its tremulous pulsation caused by the magnify ent a< oustii s of the building sun harged the mellow air with in- tense unfelt weight — not oppressive, but formidable, like the deep displai e mi nt of a man-of-war. It was a solemn, solvent setting for the 1 ene to follow. < olgosz was in the line, slowly moving toward the President, for from four to five minutes. Behind him was a tightly-packed crowd which blocked retreat. < )u all sides were alert guards, likely to dete< t his diaboli* al intention at any moment. A few steps away was the Presidenl — coming nearer, nearer — and there was to be the test of his resolution, there awaited success and death, or failure and disgrace. In those few minutes he must have experienced Macbeth's anguish between the "conception of the deed and the doing The Chinese torture a man by slowly drop- ping water on his shaved and immovably-bound head, and a day brings in- sanity; Edgar Allan Poe pictures the frozen horror of the victim of the swinging pendulum, who la) in (hams and watched the knife approach his throat by steadily lessening inches; but neither, as a nerve test, could be cruciating than this assassin's wait. He deserved the stinging epithet that Miles bestowed on Geronimo "a tiger of the human race"; he was a hyena stalking uncons< ious game, he was a beast devoid of finer feeling, de- void of pity, devoid of wisdom, but he stood the fire test to which the weak cla) in poor potter] succumbs and tame out a hardened vessel. 11 1 1 si i< )< >ting. 'The si e ne itself is but partialis tobe des< ribed, Or rat he 1 to be desi ribed from var) les, no one of which is obtuse enough to comprehend the President McKinley at Buffalo DR. MATTHEW D. MANN the Surgeon who performed the Operation. gaps left by the others, for though hundreds were there, the k\v minutes of the shots and their denouement have left an inextricable tangle, about which everyone is sure of the exact happening and about which no two stories agree. A detective saw the swathed fist and said in passing comment : " This man has a sore hand." Another had an inkling of suspicion. "I don't know about that," he said, and reached for Czolgosz's arm. It was too late .' The first shot came, low — hardly louder than a cap pistol — then the second, as quick as the self- cocking trigger could work. A vague, startled thrill spread through the crowd ; it had been hit a stunning blow and for the moment was numb. About the President action was decisive, sharp, bewildering. A dozen men leaped for the assassin. A big negro, James Parker, burst through the crowd Thi I 3 rHE Ass vssin vtion and elbowed stance which was too late. George vernmenl rvice man, in momentary hot revenge, had smashed the : i e, the blood spurting to the tloor, where the two were grapplii ( desperate last shot, his face smeared bleary with tigerish emotion. But his shots, so e that the peppery powder mottled the President's white vest for many inches with itful black, had been fatal, ami the artilleryman who kickt his hand got merely cold satisfaction for his rescue. The marines of the Preside! d had meanwhile charged the crowd with fixed bayonets, crying, "Clear out, you sons of ," and were pricking some in driving them from the Temple. The President was singularly calm. Ahuge, deep rooted mountain oak, lightning stricken, stands as he stood then— alone, transfigured, mystified and silent — before toppling fall. Those who saw that face and noted its sweel grandeur and its indefinable surprised pathos will carry the memory to the grave. 'The Presidenl had been greeting little children and had just courteously bowed to an old man. He was cheery, light hearted, kindly, patient — such was his nature — and at that moment he was in the heydcy of Suddenly there was inje< ted into his life this foul, dank crime, blacker than night, more hideous than a dungeon's horrors. It was the en- vious Casca stabbing in the ne< k while truckling with a sycophant's leer ; but ar exclaiming, "Et tu, Brute ! " could have shown no greater pity and I reater wounded confidence than did Presidenl M< Kinleyat that supreme juncture. Hi- shoulders straightened to their fullest, broadest heighl and he quietly surveyed the fiend still holding the smoking, hidden pistol before him. The smile, with its dimpled placid sunniness, left his face, his white lips pres ed each other in a rigid line, their convex curving ends lost in the sunken i ontour of his mouth, and then for the briefest instant his assumed the penetration of a man who reads men a^ other men read books. For that space of time, measured by hardl) more than the wink ol an eye-lash, the two— assassin and victim— confronted each other. A multiplicity of emotion- showed in the President's face, but two were lack- ing. There was neither feai nor anger. First there was surprise, then reproach, then pity, benevolence, compassion, a sympathy for the wretch, and then an inkling of astounded horror as he realized the enormity of the attai k, and finall) as the assassin was felled to the floor his great eyes welled with gentle pa ion and a tear on each cheek told of < aim and chastened appeal foi him who broughl death thai wonderful, Mack day. He did not President McKinley at Buffalo 2 3 MISS KATHERINE SIMMONS AND MISS MAY D. BARNES the Nurses who attended upon the President and Surgeons at the Operation at the Exposition Hospital. once lose consciousness nor self-possession. Such a scene was never looked upon before and probably never will occur again. Never was dignity better exemplified, yet it was pathetic. Though hope came afterward, no one then doubted that the President had been fatally wounded. His faithful secretary, George B. Cortelyou, a man of thin and resolute physique, of wiry courage and canny calmness, was more self-possessed than any other save the President. He caught his chief as he fell and with the help of John G. — - < - «< - ± y - < cC > 2 D 3 < n z « - - 2 <3 c — - 3 < - g - z an President McKinley at Buffalo 2 5 JOHN G. MILBURN President of the Pan-American Exposition. Milburn, president of the exposition, carried him to a nearby bench. Mr. Cortelyou leaned over the President and asked him if he suffered much pain. The President slowly drew his hand to his bosom, fumbled at his shirt and reached within, groped there with his fingers for a moment, then drew them forth, dabbled with blood. " This pains me," he said. It was the breast wound, not even serious, while the abdominal shot proved fatal. Then followed a moment of silence, during which the ambulance was being called and the prisoner secured. The President could be seen again moving his fingers inside and under his shirt bosom. He was calm, quiet, conscious, dignified. The movement to his breast was half halting, like a man groping in the dark, for he seemed dazed, though fully alive to the situation — just as a man in a trance who realizes all Till i - I'HE ASS VSSIN \l II IN tha; about him and yet is completely above the passing of the events, hand cai gain. He looked at the bloody fingers with circum- tion but with no < ritical examination, as if mental!}- commenting on his own I drawn by an assassin — it might be his life's blood Hie hand dropped to de as of no further consequence — it had the condition — and he stared into the fili- ed wall opposite, where the ent afternoon shadows were mal figured tapestry with the reflected light from the tawny-amber dome al and sit there blankly conscious, introspective with deep preoccupation. I here were tears in man) eyes. Respect withheld what might have i a curious crowd. The minutes slowly dragged their sullen feet away ooi there was -till some belated scuffling with the prisoner. I he President noted it and was drawn by its disturbing clatter from the repose ilation to which he had been brought. "Be easy with him, boys," he said, and then relapsed again for just the briefest space, the intervals all being hardl) noticeable in point of time, i revived and whispered the name of his secretary. Mr. Cortelyou bent him and heard, spoken slowly: " My wife don'l let her know of this and if she does don't let it be exaggerated." At thai moment Mr. Buchanan, the director-general of the exposition, was admitted to the Temple. He found his way to within a few steps of the President, who re< ognized him and who had by that time taken wakeful observation of the happenings about him. He looked in Mr. I'.ik hanan's dire* tion and as the other approached nearer said : ■• I am sorry that thi> should have happened at the exposition." Tho thoughts were uppermost in his mind : desire for fair play with the assassin, anxiety for his wife, and regret for the hint the exposition might receive. The arrival of the ambulance was six minutes after the shooting and throughout the ride to the hospital the President sat up. RECEPTION OF II IE NEWS. It was outside the Temple of Music, about the exposition grounds, in the i it) oi Buffalo, all over the United States and throughout the whole world that the new ipread like a < onflagration, ever widening in its grievous circle. It was but twentv years since Garfield had been assassinated and the memory oi .1 single generation comprised the murder of another President; that a third should fall b) a venomous bullet seemed incredible. A more unlikely tune for sue h a d<.-n\ c ould not be imagined. There was no personal ill will MRS. McKINLKV 'I'm I I- ' I S I • .1 ■ '. i H I HI Vss ISSIN \ l U >N \|;M.R McKINLEY her "i iiu President, reading \ special Bulletin as he returns from I III Mil BURN M.wsn IN. toward the wounded man. The fratri< idal heat in which Lincoln was killed olitical frenz) that brought Garfield's doom were alike unknown. I in the freest countrj on earth and in the fairest year of its exist- ence. It is probable that never before in history had the expression "Like thunder froin a clear sk) " been more apropos. The incredulous way in whi< h the news was re< eived was everywhere alike and one instance will show the pe< uhai tenor of the feeling. In the Ohio Building at the exposition, the commissioners in their fro k rid their ladies in evening gowns were awaiting the conclusion of the reception in tin- Temple, for the President was scheduled to visit them there immediately to pay his n i his home State. A man came in the rear entrance and announced that the President had been shot. No one paid President McKinley at Buffalo MRS. DUNCAN AND MISS ALICE McKINLEY Sistkks of the President, with Escorts, after visiting him during the days of suspense at the mllburn residence. much attention to him at first and then one of the hangers-on told him he was crazy. He persisted, hunted up one of the commissioners and told him. A bystander heard the remark and said with quizzical foolishness, like the dash of farce that Shakespeare puts in his blackest tragedies : "Yes, I suppose so. Shot with a camera." And with that the incident passed in the light talk of the afternoon. But the man with the rumor was not to be downed, and finally in response to the expressed alarm of several of the ladies two of the men started out to investigate. When they reached the Triumphal Bridge they saw the doors of the Temple closed, a great, hushed, awesome crowd outside and a portentous stillness in the air. Some- thing had surely happened ! Everyone knew that the President had been taken to the hospital, but 3° l ie Assassination SI N ITOR MARK H.ANNA HASTENING rO III- SID] AFTER 1 II 1 -HOOTING. [TING \ i I ill Mil l.i KN M VNSIl IN. that the assassin was still inside ami no one moved. The : was with the man who had done the deed. Ik- was about to l . knew what to expei t . would he he lynched, would i with him or would they take him off slowly and give the • : 1 a < han. i mpse of him ? Some hah suspected that he might rise i anger, e ofl his captors and -hoot al the crowd itself; others not believe that th< Pr< dent had been shot at all. There seemed to be ■ alization of the catastrophe. 1 a and unsuspected that few felt its poignant pang; OC < h w U W h < > i—i oi Q « Oh h ID o >< ►J w h o o w o o w o w Q .9 f* 3 2 Tin 'i imk Assassination thr : and long-drawn tapering thrill of vengeful e home. the midst of it the dooi Idenly thrown i the assassin appeared and halted there in full sight for the briefest instant — a pale, deter- i ni i .< ed man. 'The brilliant afternoon sun stretched its searching ■ len finials of the western buildings and lit his defiant bust with ollar was gone — lost in the a uffle — and his flannel shirt, torn open at the throat, revealed a hard and s< rawny ne< k. His* hestnul red in the glinting sunlight, mat< hed his Mood smeared cheeks, and hi> whole air bespoke the conviction of a man who "had done his duty," >nly reply he would make when asked why he had fired the shots. That pause, with its sight of the assassin, was short hut intense. It brought its reply straight in the teeth of the dare-devil courage of the young man. "Lynch him," tailed several. These cries were not pronounced or ni/ed. No impetuous frenzy had yet seized the crowd. It seemed as though nearly everyone for the moment had lost all sense of outrage and of revenue. What cries there were were scattered and sporadic. There was unrest and muttered discontent and imprecation. Here and there a man pushed forward, and at one place a brawny negro rushed to the front yelling for a rope and in a sweaty hum kno< ked down three women, but there was no lyni hing. The marines were steadfast, and through the narrow lane they formed with their turned backs the detet tives hurried ( '/olgosz to a covered carriage and jumped in with him. The coachman hit the horses a terrific c ut. The) bounded out as from released catapaultS and the icw who grasped the wheels in vain hope of staying the flight to unmerited safety were jerked from their feet. On through the prepared lane the horses sprang at a swing- in- gallop, over the Triumphal Bridge, which the day before had been the scene of the wildest, most buoyant welcome, through the long, beautiful residence avenues, to downtown, tour miles away, and the assassin was site. The surgeons -the best in Buffalo— who had been tailed in, dei ided that an immediate operation was necessary. The President had been twice hit, the first shot striking the breast bone and glan< ing oil with onlj a slight abrasion of the skin, but the second and fatal one had entered the abdomen and had pierced the stomach twice, burying itself in the fleshy muscles of the bat k. It has never been found. \n hour and fifteen minutes after the oting the President was unconst ious with the ether thai had been given him. When asked if the operation should be performed, he replied : o -J < fc< D PQ W P > w w Q w 'J w Q CO Pi X o o h-3 W CO X. w X h < X u S z 5 m Thi i 5 '■ "i mi Assassination •■ 1 am in your hands. You know what is best. I*" that," and then he muttered slowly to himself: •• lh\ k . Thy will be dune " are merely similar to those of any other ; the surgical term for it An incision was made in »men by Dr. Matthew D Mann, the operating surgeon, the stomach turned and the ti irations made by the bullet sewn up, the wound ly i leansed, the stoma< h replai ed, the incision sewn and the effe< ts of the ether dissipated. The President was then removed to the home of Mi Milburn on Delaware Avenue. the next six days hope mounted high. Everyone except the chronic nblers thought the President would recover. Senator Hanna, his life- adfast friend, saw a rainbow in the sky and declared he believed in "the M< Kmley ->tar,'' and Vice President Roosevelt, who had hurried on a -],<■. ial tram to the bedside of the President, was so se< ure in his belief that he l< ida< ks, put civilization behind him and when he was next wanted was fort) two miles from a telegraph wire. The newspapers and the country looked for slow recovery and were counting the period of ex- pected convalescence. The Buffalo papers were rather gleefully commenting bility of the i ity be< oming what Se< retary Root de< lared it might ime, "the summer capital." Even the doctors were deceived. There were several indications, however, that the President was not yet pasl the danger point ; the feeding of food by injection became impossible because ol threatened inflammation and on Thursday morning it was de< ided to give him a light breakfast. lb- had toast, coffee, chicken broth, beef juice and finished with rare relish by asking for a cigar. That day. considering every- thing : remarkably brighl one. The weather was perfect and the in the road to rei over) . II II LAST DAY. Thursday night broughl the fn I ign oi danger. Hie physicians ed to give their patient violent purgatives and at 2:30 o'< lo« k of I ■ da) morning the collapse came. His life for the next twenty-four hours .in artii'n ial one That Friday fell on the 13th — doubly an unlucky daw cit) woke to get the fateful news that the President's pulse had almost ed its throb and from then on the tell tale mini ingS Of the Official bulletins ht merel) vai of a " hope against hope. " I lieie was a time through the morning when to ho] eseemed reasonable. Thi l - • "i nil Assassination ■! temperature had -one back to their normal condition of the day before, but when Secretar) l i lar afternoon visit to the newspapei , said with words which had been well ied : "Ift ntil morning there will be grounds for hope," the immediate analysis brought the conviction that there really was no ground for hope I I the < ity, from then on, the fai t of grave danger was .: that the air was charged with the momentous import of the situation. In the sii k room the day had been one of battle — a battle against death ; and outside, to the world uhii h did not know the details of that fierce fight, there was just as hard a sti nst the deadening tear of the worst. No wished to admit the grievous fact, but the conclusion was irresistible. 1 h person who came from the Milburn house — physicians, cabinet minis : i ernors and members of the family — brought through the afternoon the word : •• He is in peril." and as the careless radiance of the ..int exposition beyond lit it> way into the starry sky all that could be s.iid by anybody was : " He is still alive. i »n thai last -ray and awful night as the great heart beat slower, each le minute keeping Mire count for the last lingering run of the life-sands, the tension among the wan hers grew. It became a tremendous pressure. The < re.ik of a -entry'- boot on the pavement in front of the Milburn house, where armed guards paced with (lock like regularity, brought < piick response from the newspaper men across the street, rhere were more than ioo of them. It was no idle croud, such as gathered down town swearing feeble vengeam e against the triumphant murderer. Each was a picked man, chosen for experiem e and skill. The chief papers ot Christendom and many of the minor one- were represented there. This immense tongue, which was to tell the fateful new - to So, 000,000 of William McKinley's fellow citizens and io other million- waiting wherever the telegraph toll- its disturbing click, was hushed in awful preparation tor it- direful loosening. At the word, that avalani lie ol new- was to be poured onto the world — a thunderbolt from the 1 rhe moments dragged, each one heavy with expectancy and each one supposed to be tli'- : ' Mi-. McKinlej was induced to take rest and the entire number oi those who waited were in the condition of a condemned man waiting lor the rope to drop A heart specialist from Washington ar- rived it midnight, at record breaking pace, in an electric automobile, but it \'..i • 10 lati I 1 "1 Himself could not have turned the hour glass back then. Tin I i:i i S'rom oi i hi Ass vssin vtion. end came quietly, like the ebbing of the i itlc-. at that indistinct time of morning when lives most frequently go out. The President had been unconscious for seven hour-: he died at 2 In the 1 iefore lapsing into mere breathing life, there oc< urred that spiritual uplift which was t<> place the final, lasting purport of a sa< red hene- <\i\ Fellows and Grand Army men filled the streets with their burnished regalia. < >n one of the « hief an hes, ere< ted by the public schools, was printed : "He loved us" and "We loved him." This was only the outward and manifest expression of the feeling whi< h evi- dently lay deep in all. The march up the main street the morning of the arn\al. with the tremulous, ineffable mournfulness of "Free as a Bird" in the overwrought air — simple, homely tunes always sink in farthest — was deeply impressive ; more so than the gorgeous pageant of generals and regu- lar troops that filed down Pennsylvania Avenue in the drizzly rain the day before. The final funeral — that which brought a culmination to the mournful journey begun in Iiuffalo four days previous — held among the neighbors and friends of William M< Kinley, and attended by the massive dignity of the chief men of the nation, will leave its memory stamped deep in all of those who saw its stately march and who felt its pitiful resignation. The number who will bear that memory is considerably oxer 100,000 — a far greater crowd than has ever walked the streets of that < >hio town at one time before. The mournful magnificence of the funeral procession was an event. To Mrs. M( Kinley and to others of the family the day was a single blank of drab grief; but the spectacle to others was both inspiring and depressing, both subdued and bold. Imagine a hearse like a polished piece blocked from the night, small and oblong, but almost appalling with its simply dignity, drawn by horses jusl as l.hu k, carrying for its burden all that remains of the late President of the Idled States ; preceded by its guard of honor. President Roosevelt, the cabinet, and the generals and admirals of the United States ; followed by the hist tottering veterans of the 23d Ohio, the regiment in which William McKinley fought for the preservation of the Union, and then by regiment imenl of volunteer infantry, by corps after corps of Masonii orders, bj companj alter company of regally-accoutred Knights Templar, and by THE RECEIVING TOMB, WEST LAWN CEMETERY, CANTON THE RESTING II Ac 1 OF 1111 BODY <>l PRESIDENT Ml'KlNLEY, WHICH WILL BE GUARDED DAY AND NIGHT FOR rWO YEARS. THE McKINLEY 151 RIAL LOT, WEST LAWN CEMETERY WHERE THI McKlNLEI CHILDREN \il BURIED. Wl> WHER1 I 111 PRESIDENT'S BODY WILL REPOSE. fcAR 48 'I'm True Story of mi Assassinatio L1BKHKY Uh LUNOKtbb 013 903 248 2 £ land after band playing dirges and slow hymns: on each side of a mile long avenue, solid blocks of people reach back until broken into segments by the intervening cornices of houses, and even then some places overrun with a multitude that swarms on roofs and over high built bridges j then add a gray sky thai frowns like a pall, and the magnificent picture of sad, .sweet desolation is complete. In the midst of that fair country, where the bosom of a gently-heaving hill is cloven 1>\ the upthrust of a spear of granite, all that was morta William M< Kinlev was laid .it resl that gloomy afternoon. And at the d of the last resting pla< e, while " Taps " rang out from • in umambient bugles, and as the grilles of the charnel house were closed forever on that loved form, a new President, shaken by sorrow but erect in virile manhood, stood with the unshed tears visible in his overwrought countenance, paused for a moment before 1 losely embra< ing (lowers of the almost buried tomb, glanced at the sky, s;uv a rift in its sullen tapestry, and walked back to his waiting people with that heritage of thankless grandeur in his memory and the destiny of a path of peace awaiting his approach. II'I.I'I I I 1EC1 >K VTION! \ I LJNERA1 SER\ I' :ES, C \n "!'• »N LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 013 903 248 2