| Publication information | 
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       Source: The Authentic Life of William McKinley Source type: book Document type: book chapter Document title: “Nearing the End” [chapter 17] Author(s): McClure, Alexander K.; Morris, Charles Edition: Memorial edition Publisher: none given Place of publication: none given Year of publication: 1901 Pagination: 290-301 (excerpt below includes only pages 295-97)  | 
  
| Citation | 
| McClure, Alexander K., and Charles Morris. “Nearing the End” [chapter 17]. The Authentic Life of William McKinley. Memorial ed. [n.p.]: [n.p.], 1901: pp. 290-301. | 
| Transcription | 
| excerpt of chapter | 
| Keywords | 
| Pan-American Exposition. | 
| Named persons | 
| William McKinley. | 
| Notes | 
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       From title page: The Authentic Life of William McKinley, Our Third 
        Martyr President: Together with a Life Sketch of Theodore Roosevelt, the 
        26th President of the United States; Also Memorial Tributes by Statesmen, 
        Ministers, Orators and Rulers of All Countries; Profusely Illustrated 
        with Reproductions from Original Photographs, Original Drawings and Special 
        Pictures of the Family by Express Permission from the Owners. 
      From title page: Introduction and Biography by Alexander K. 
        McClure, Author of the “Life and Times of Abraham Lincoln.” 
      From title page: The Life and Public Career by Charles Morris, LL.D., Author of the “Life of Queen Victoria.”  | 
  
| Document | 
  Nearing the End [excerpt]
Among the events of the opening year of the twentieth century one of the most interesting was the Pan-American Exposition, [295][296] held in the city of Buffalo, N. Y., from May 1st to November 1st. This project was first planned in 1897, the exposition to be held on a small scale, in 1899, on Cayuga Island, near Niagara Falls. The Spanish-American War, however, checked the project, and when it was revived it was on a more ambitious scale. Buffalo was chosen as the site, and the original fifty acres were expanded into 330 acres, the ground chosen including the most beautiful portions of Delaware Park. A fund of $5,000,000 was provided by the city and citizens of Buffalo, appropriations were made by the State of New York and the Federal Government, and the work was begun on an estimate of $10,000,000 of expenditures.
PAN-AMERICAN EXPOSITION
     The purpose of this Exposition is 
  clearly indicated in its name. It concerned itself solely with the countries 
  of the two Americas and the new possessions of the United States, of which it 
  was proposed to show the progress during the nineteenth century, a leading object 
  of the enterprise being to bring into closer relations, commercially and socially, 
  the republics and colonies of the Western Hemisphere and promote intercourse 
  between their peoples. The Department of State, in June, 1899, invited the various 
  governments of the American Continents to take part in the enterprise, and acceptances 
  were very generally received.
       The preparations made for the Exposition were 
  of the most admirable character, and, when completed, the grounds and buildings 
  presented a magnificent scene. While on a smaller scale than the Philadelphia 
  and Chicago World’s Fairs, the Buffalo Fair surpassed all previous ones in architectural 
  beauty. Instead of presenting the pure white of the Columbian Exposition, there 
  was a generous use of brilliant colors and rich tints, which gave a glowing 
  rainbow effect to the artistically grouped buildings; the general style of architecture 
  being a free treatment of the Spanish Renaissance, in compliment to the Latin 
  American countries taking part. The elaborate hydraulic and fountain arrangements, 
  the [296][297] horticultural and floral settings, 
  and the sculptural ornamentation, added greatly to the general effect.
       Of the varied elements of the display, that of 
  electricity stood first, the enormous electrical plant at Niagara and its connection 
  by wire with Buffalo affording unequalled facilities in this direction. The 
  Electric Tower, 375 feet high, was the centre-piece of the Exposition, the edifice 
  itself being stately and beautiful and its electric display on the grandest 
  scale. The vari-colored electrical fountain was strikingly beautiful. There 
  were winding canals, caverns, and grottoes, water cascades, towers, domes and 
  pinnacles, and other objects of attraction, not the least of them the Midway, 
  with its diversified display, a feature which has become indispensable to all 
  recent enterprises of this character. We have spoken especially of this superb 
  Fair from the sad relations which President McKinley was to hold to it—a subject 
  of national grief which we reserve for later treatment.