Publication information |
Source: Forty Years of Active Service Source type: book Document type: book chapter Document title: “Conclusion—President M’Kinley—General Daniel Morgan” [chapter 14] Author(s): O’Ferrall, Charles T. Publisher: Neale Publishing Company Place of publication: New York, New York Year of publication: 1904 Part/Section: 2 Pagination: 354-67 (excerpt below includes only pages 355-57) |
Citation |
O’Ferrall, Charles T. “Conclusion—President M’Kinley—General Daniel Morgan” [chapter 14]. Forty Years of Active Service. New York: Neale Publishing, 1904: part 2, pp. 354-67. |
Transcription |
excerpt of chapter |
Keywords |
William McKinley (relations with American South); William McKinley (presidential character). |
Named persons |
William McKinley. |
Notes |
From title page: Forty Years of Active Service: Being Some History of the War between the Confederacy and the Union and of the Events Leading Up to It, with Reminiscences of the Struggle and Accounts of the Author’s Experiences of Four Years from Private to Lieutenant-Colonel and Acting Colonel in the Cavalry of the Army of Northern Virginia; Also, Much of the History of Virginia and the Nation in Which the Author Took Part for Many Years in Political Conventions and on the Hustings and as Lawyer, Member of the Legislature of Virginia, Judge, Member of the House of Representatives of the United States and Governor of Virginia. |
Document |
Conclusion—President M’Kinley—General Daniel Morgan [excerpt]
In conversation with President McKinley
at the Executive Office, to which I have referred, he gave evidence of the spirit
that animated him in the administration of the affairs of this Government until
the bullet of the miserable anarchist destroyed his noble life. He said: “Thank
God we hear [355][356] no longer the words Northerner
and Southerner. If the sections were not united heart and soul already, this
trouble has united them. In my appointments to places in the Army, far be it
from me to inquire whether an applicant comes from the North or South, or whether
his antecedents are secession or Union, except so far as it may be necessary
in order to apportion the appointments among the different States.”
By his every act and expression from the day of
his first inauguration to his sad and tragic death, his determination and purpose
were clearly shown to be, in truth and not merely in name, a National President,
without enmity for the South, without bias for the North. His wearing of a Confederate
badge at a Confederate reunion, and his suggestion that the United States Government
should make appropriations for the care of Confederate Cemeteries, showed how
full was his soul with the milk, not of human kindness merely, but the spirit
of fraternal love.
This was an exhibition of moral courage and superb
manhood that will link his name forever with the names of the world’s most courageous
and manly, most generous, magnanimous, and patriotic public servants. No President
from the birth of this Republic to the present hour ever grew more rapidly in
the hearts and affections of the American people than did William McKinley,
and when he was lying, hovering between life and death, the prayers that ascended
to the Throne of Grace for his recovery from every section of this Republic
were as countless as the leaves of a forest.
William McKinley was truly a National President.
He had as much faith in the patriotism of the South as he had in the patriotism
of the North. He would have trusted a Virginia Division to lead a forlorn hope
as soon as he would have trusted a Massachusetts Division. There was not a spark
of sectional feeling in his soul.
He loved the whole constellation, and one star
was as dear to him as another.
He loved his American soil, and the cotton-fields
of Georgia and wheat-fields of Tennessee delighted his eye with [356][357]
their opening bolls and golden sheaves as much as the ore beds of Pennsylvania
and the pine clusters of Maine. He loved his country’s oceans, lakes, bays,
and rivers, and the white sails of commerce on their bosoms filled him with
pride from whatsoever clime they came, North, South, East, or West.