McKinley, William
MKINLEY,
W, twenty-fourth President of the
United States, died at Buffalo, N. Y., on September 14, 1901, from
a bullet wound received at the hand of an assassin on September
6, while holding a public reception at the Pan-American Exposition.
He was born in the village of Niles, Trumbull County, O., January
29, 1843, and came of Scotch-Irish stock, of which the first American
representative settled in Pennsylvania about the middle of the eighteenth
century. William McKinley, after attending for a time the school
of his native village, was taken by his parents to Poland in Mahoning
County, to enjoy the better educational advantages offered by the
academy in that town, where, as a student, he soon distinguished
himself by his assiduity, and particularly by his parliamentary
skill in the academic literary society. At sixteen he entered the
junior class of Allegheny College, at Meadville, Pa., but was compelled
by poor health to abandon his collegiate career shortly afterward,
and became a teacher in the public schools. Responding to President
Lincoln’s call for volunteers after the firing on Fort Sumter, he
enlisted as a private in the Twenty-third Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
on June 11, 1861, in which regiment Rutherford B. Hayes was a major.
McKinley’s first promotion was to commissary-sergeant on April 15,
1862, and in this line of duty he performed meritorious service
at the battle of Antietam, for which he was commissioned second
lieutenant on September 24 of the same year. He served throughout
the war, rising to the rank of major by successive promotions for
merit, and at different periods served as aide to Generals Hayes,
Crook, Hancock, and Carroll. At the close of the conflict, although
personally desirous of following a military career, he left the
army in deference to the wishes of his family and entered the law
office Judge [sic] Glidden at Canton, O. In 1867 he graduated at
the Albany (N. Y.) Law School, and being admitted to the bar of
Ohio, began practice at Canton. From 1869 to 1871 he was prosecuting
attorney for his county, but failing a reelection in the latter
year, returned to his legal practice, although retaining an active
interest in [464][465] politics. In
1875, during the contest for governor, between Hayes and Allen,
McKinley came for the first time into more than local prominence
as a campaign orator, speaking for Hayes, the Republican candidate.
In the following year he was sent to Congress and immediately became
prominent for his advocacy of the principles of protection for American
industries. From the time of his first election he served seven
successive terms in Congress in spite of the fact that Democratic
gerrymanders in 1878 and 1884 placed him in especially difficult
districts. In his Congressional career, Mr. McKinley was from the
very first a specialist in tariff legislation, and of him in this
connection, Mr. Blaine said: “He was soon recognized in the House
as one of the most thorough statisticians and one of the ablest
defenders of the doctrine of protection”—the doctrine with which
his name has always been most intimately associated. In 1880, in
succession to James A. Garfield, he was appointed to the ways and
means committee, and he remained an active member of that body during
the rest of his Congressional service, becoming its chairman in
1890, and as such, the author of the “McKinley Bill,” a high protective
measure passed in that year. Coming as the bill did just before
the election of representatives to Congress, its unfavorable reception
by the country was clearly shown by the Democratic majority immediately
chosen, and the measure received its death-blow before it had been
fairly tested. Succumbing to the general Democratic victory and
to the fact that his district had been gerrymandered professedly
to keep him out of Congress, McKinley was defeated in 1890, although
he reduced the prior Democratic plurality of 2,900 in that district
to 302.
At once an agitation was started to secure
his nomination for governor, and at the State convention in June
of 1891, he was made his party’s candidate by acclamation. During
the ensuing campaign he delivered 134 speeches in every part of
Ohio, dealing principally with detailed discussions of the question
of protection and free trade. He was elected over Governor James
E. Campbell by a plurality of 21,500, and two years later, having
again received the unanimous nomination of the party, was elected
by 80,995 plurality. During his first term (1893), Governor McKinley
became involved in serious financial difficulties, by having too
freely indorsed the notes of a personal friend. It was the governor’s
intention to retire from office in order to meet these obligations,
but a subscription list circulated among his personal friends, of
whom Mr. Marcus A. Hanna was a leader, raised the required amount
(about $100,000), and Mr. McKinley continued in office. In his second
term he unfortunately gained an unpleasant notoriety from sensational
newspaper stories charging him with subservience to street-railway
lobbyists.” To increase the State revenue a bill was introduced
to extend the “Nichols Law” (providing for the taxation of telephone,
telegraph, and express companies, in the proportion of their property
within the State to their property elsewhere), to cover freight
and equipment companies and street railways. Later, the part relating
to street railways was struck out, and from the fact that the men
most actively interested in street railways in Ohio had also been
the most prominent in defraying the governor’s personal liabilities
in 1893, a connection between the two circumstances was immediately
discovered by his political detractors, some of whom did not hesitate
to assert that McKinley had himself called on the author of the
bill (Senator Whittlesey) to urge its alteration. Again, during
the legislation to bestow on the legislature the power to grant
street-railway franchises for 99 years instead of 25 as theretofore,
when it transpired that a conference of senators and capitalists
had been held in the governor’s office, an additional clamor was
raised by the Democratic press. Statements unusually harsh, more
harsh than even the heat of political warfare ordinarily sanctions,
were made against the moral as well as the civic character of the
governor, and the persistent circulation of these canards overshadowed
the substantial service rendered by McKinley during his incumbency.
In his two terms he brought the National Guard to the highest point
of efficiency it had ever known, he made judicious selections in
his official appointments, restrained his legislatures from indulging
in the extravagant appropriations and special legislation to which
they were inclined, maintained the State charitable institutions
on their high plane of excellence, and in particular, accomplished
the organization of the State Board of Arbitration, the outcome
of a plan previously explained by him in Congress. Need for such
a body existed in Ohio, on account of the unsettled labor conditions,
and the board was instrumental in averting subsequent rioting and
bloodshed.
After his retirement from the governor’s
office McKinley lived in seclusion at Canton for a time. But he
had already made his place in the national politics of the Republican
party, and in 1896 he was called upon to accept the nomination for
President, which on two former occasions he had avoided only by
his strict adherence to lofty ideals of political justice. In 1888,
as chairman of the Ohio delegation, which had been pledged to secure
the selection of John Sherman as the Presidential candidate, he
attended the convention of his party and became prominent as chairman
of [465][466] the committee on resolutions.
As the balloting progressed an effort was made to nominate McKinley,
a movement which he quelled by declining in these words: “I cannot
with honorable fidelity to John Sherman, who has trusted me in his
cause and with his cause; I cannot consistently with my own views
of integrity consent, or seem to consent, to permit my name to be
used as a candidate before the convention. I do not request, I demand,
that no delegate who would not cast reflection upon me shall cast
a ballot for me.” Again in 1892, while chairman of the convention
of that year, he quieted a stampede in his favor by peremptorily
demanding the withdrawal of his name from consideration, because
he had pledged himself to accomplish the renomination of Benjamin
Harrison. In 1896 he was nominated by the St. Louis convention on
the first ballot, receiving 661½ out of 922 votes. The platform
of the convention had declared unequivocally for the gold standard,
and the uncertain position of Major McKinley on this question caused
great anxiety throughout the party as to what his stand would be.
This doubt arose from the remembrance that in his earlier political
career he had advocated a monetary policy exactly opposed to what
was embodied in the St. Louis platform, and no positive recantation
of that policy had been publicly made. In 1878 he had favored the
plan to resume the coinage of the silver dollar which had been discontinued
since 1873 by coining “not less than $2,000,000 nor more than $4,000,000
of silver bullion per month” (Bland-Allison Bill)—this over President
Hayes’s veto and against his party; and in 1890 he was an ardent
supporter of the Sherman Law, providing for larger purchases of
silver. During his first term as governor of Ohio (1892), he announced
that free coinage would be bad for the country, and in the Congressional
campaign of 1894 he spoke vaguely in favor of the gold standard.
In 1896, however, his speech in acceptance of the Presidential nomination
heartily indorsed the gold plank in the party platform, and showed
his monetary conversion to be complete. His principal opponent in
the following campaign was William Jennings Bryan, of Nebraska,
and the “paramount issue” the money question. Deeming it undignified
for a Presidential candidate to tour the country in the effort to
win a greater popular vote, McKinley remained at Canton, and there
conducted what was perhaps the most remarkable campaign in American
politics. From his own doorstep he delivered 300 speeches between
June 19 and November 2, to persons who had come from all parts of
the country to hear him, and in that time it was estimated that
he addressed an aggregate audience of more than 750,000. The election
gave McKinley a popular plurality of 601,854 votes out of 7,104,779,
and in the electoral college the result was: McKinley, 271; Bryan,
176.
McKinley became President on March 4, 1897,
with the following cabinet: Secretary of state, John Sherman; secretary
of the treasury, Lyman J. Gage; secretary of war, Russell A. Alger;
secretary of the navy, John D. Long; secretary of the interior,
Cornelius N. Bliss; attorney-general, Joseph McKenna; postmaster-general,
James A. Gary; and secretary of agriculture, James Wilson. In his
inaugural address he recommended a new tariff law, a commission
to study and propose changes in the fiscal laws, and the adoption
of international arbitration treaties. A special session of Congress
convened on March 15, and in response to a message from the President,
passed the Dingley Tariff Bill. From the first the foreign relations
of the country occupied the foremost position in Congress. The subject
of the annexation of Hawaii was freshly agitated, and the President
sent a new treaty to the Senate. Before any action was taken a protest
was received from the Japanese minister, objecting to any arrangement
that might conflict with the treaty already in force between Japan
and Hawaii, which bad been violated by the latter. This matter was
settled by the agreement of Hawaii to pay a money indemnity to Japan,
and the republic became formally a part of the United States on
August 12, 1898. For many years the relations between Spain and
the island of Cuba had been such as to cause the greatest concern
in the United States. An insurrection of long standing existed there,
which Spain was plainly demonstrating her inability to subdue. Charges
of excessive cruelty were affirmed against Governor-General Weyler,
and the starving condition of the Cuban reconcentrados aroused a
bitter sentiment against Spain. The President at the beginning of
his administration showed that his treatment of the matter was to
be conciliatory. Urging upon Spain the desire of this country to
see the conflict quickly ended, he offered to assist in the accomplishment
of such a result by arbitration. The offer was declined, with the
promise of administrative reforms that would soon end the insurrection.
At the same time (October 23, 1897), Spain besought the United States
to continue the measures to prevent filibustering expeditions which
were giving great assistance to the Cubans. An autonomous government
for Cuba was inaugurated in January, 1898, but because of its restrictive
character changed affairs little or not at all. In the meantime
public sentiment in the United States had become more hostile, and
the jingo press was already clamoring for war. The anti-American
element among the Spaniards in Cuba was growing daily more bitter,
and in January Consul-General Fitzhugh Lee, [466][467]
at Havana, requested that an American man-of-war be sent to that
port for the moral effect it might have. The Maine was sent,
which on February 15, was sunk by an explosion in Havana Harbor,
with the loss of 2 officers and 258 men killed or drowned and 58
wounded. The press in general became more insistent for an immediate
declaration of war, but the President was averse to an extreme move
without exhausting every honorable means to reach a settlement short
of war. Congress voted him $50,000,000 to be used for the national
defense at his discretion, and provided for the contingent increase
of the army to 100,000 men. On March 1, the President communicated
with Spain, stating that although the autonomist government had
been in operation for two months and less harsh rules had been adopted
for the prosecution of hostilities, affairs in Cuba were no better,
and asked for further change in the position toward the island.
On March 31, Spain submitted the following propositions: (1) To
arbitrate the Maine catastrophe; (2) to do away with the
reconcentration camps in the western provinces of Cuba and to place
3,000,000 pesetas to the credit of the poor farmers; and (3) to
grant an armistice whenever asked for by the insurgents. With this
reply, General Stewart L. Woodford, United States minister at Madrid,
asserted his belief that in making these propositions the Spanish
ministry had gone as far as it dared without incurring the danger
of overthrowing the government by revolution. He also said: “There
is no real war spirit here among the middle and lower classes. .
. . [It] prevails only among the aristocracy and the generals and
officers of the army.” On April 3, he wired: “I know that the queen
and her present ministry sincerely desire peace, and if you can
still give me time and reasonable liberty of action, I will get
for you the peace you desire so much and for which you have labored
so hard.” On April 5 he asked if the President would restrain Congress
from hostile action, provided the queen would grant an immediate
and unconditional cessation of hostilities for six months. “This,”
he said, “means peace.” Secretary Sherman answered that the President
would not longer delay his special message to Congress, but would
refer to that body any message from the queen. On April 10, word
was received that the unconditional armistice had been granted.
On April 11, the President sent a special message to Congress, reviewing
in detail the negotiations between the two countries, and leaving
the decision to that body. A joint resolution was passed on April
19, recommending intervention to secure the independence of Cuba,
and it was approved on the following day. On April 21, General Woodford
received his passports, and four days later a resolution of Congress
was approved, declaring that war had existed since the 21st. The
President called for 125,000 volunteers, and by the end of the month
they had begun to concentrate at Tampa, Fla. A blockade of Cuba
was established on April 22, and on May 1, Admiral Dewey won a decisive
victory over the Spanish fleet in the harbor of Manila, P. I. On
May 19, a flying squadron under command of Commodore W. S. Schley
left Key West, Fla., in search of the Spanish fleet that had left
the Cape Verde Islands on April 29 under Admiral Cervera. It was
located at Santiago, and Commodore Schley repaired thither, being
joined there by Admiral W. T. Sampson, who took command of the American
fleet on June 1. General William R. Shafter with 16,000 men embarked
for Cuba on June 14 under the protection of 11 war vessels, and
landed on the 22d at Daiquiri, 17 miles east of Santiago. After
an engagement at Las Guasimas on June 24, the army took the heights
of El Caney and San Juan on July 1-2. On July 3 Admiral Cervera
sailed out of Santiago Bay, and, being met by the blockading fleet,
all of his vessels were sunk or disabled in the ensuing engagement.
The American troops took possession of Santiago on July 17. General
Nelson A. Miles, the commanding general of the army, landed at Guanica,
near Ponce, Porto Rico, on July 25, and in three weeks had taken
complete possession of the island with the exception of San Juan.
The peace protocol was signed on August 12 and the terms of peace
were agreed upon December 10. The treaty, which was ratified by
the Senate February 6, 1899, provided for the abandonment by Spain
of all claims of sovereignty over and title to Cuba, the cession
of Porto Rico and Guam, the cession of the Philippine Islands, and
the payment by the United States of $20,000,000.
Early in 1899 an insurrection against the
authority of the United States broke out under Emilio Aguinaldo
(q.v.) in the Philippines. The President had previously
appointed a commission of five, Admiral Dewey, General Elwell S.
Otis, Jacob G. Schurman, Dean C. Worcester, and Charles Denby, to
investigate conditions in the Islands, and to offer recommendations
for their administration, and he now placed General Otis in charge
of the military operations there, to put down the insurrection with
vigor. A serious problem arose in the fact that the volunteers then
in the Philippines had enlisted only for the Spanish War, and for
that reason it was necessary for them to be repatriated. Additional
regiments were organized, especially for Philippine service, and
the uprising was put down by districts as fast as the elusive tactics
of the Filipinos and the conformation of the islands would permit.
The capture of the rebel leader by General Frederick Funston (q.v.),
in March, 1901, [467][468] sounded
the end of organized revolt, the fighting thereafter being carried
on by scattered guerrilla bands, with inefficient leaders and defective
organization. The first Philippine Commission completed its report
and was discharged on January 31, 1900, and a new one was appointed,
headed by Judge William H. Taft, which after painstaking and thorough
investigation of the political needs of the Filipinos, established
a civil government with headquarters at Manila, on September 1 of
the same year. In 1900 occurred the Boxer uprising in the Chinese
empire, by which the United States, in common with other Powers,
sustained losses of life and property. In the subsequent indemnification
proceedings, the same spirit of conciliation that characterized
former official acts of President McKinley was seen, and in these
negotiations he was notably assisted by his able secretary of state,
John Hay (q.v.). Other important events which occurred
during the McKinley administration were the settlement of the Samoan
question, by which the tripartite government of Great Britain, Germany,
and the United States was abandoned, November 8, 1899, Great Britain
and Germany relinquishing all claims to the islands east of 171º,
which include Tutuila, with its splendid harbor of Pago-Pago; the
establishment of colonial government in Porto Rico; the reorganization
of the army; the consummation of the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, providing
for the construction of the Nicaragua Canal under American control;
the improvement of the merchant marine; and the establishment of
reciprocity treaties with European governments. In 1900 President
McKinley was unanimously renominated, and was reelected, with Theodore
Roosevelt (q.v.), of New York as Vice-President, by
an electoral vote of 292 to 155 for Bryan and Stevenson. He attended
the Pan-American Exposition at Buffalo in September, 1901, accompanied
by Mrs. McKinley and some of his cabinet, and was received there
with distinguished honors. After being shot he was taken to the
private residence of John G. Milburn, the president of the exposition,
and noted surgeons attended him, but were unable to save his life.
Thursday, September 19, the day of the interment at Canton, was
observed as a time of national mourning. In the cities throughout
the United States as well as in foreign capitals, memorial services
of the most impressive character were held, and the President’s
death was mourned as that of one who had entered deeply into the
universal heart.
It was the lot of William McKinley to conduct
an administration at a period replete with events of tremendous
moment to his country; but how far he controlled those events and
how far he was mastered by them, it is perhaps for another generation
to decide. He saw a war, the outcome of which placed the United
States in the first rank of world powers, and assuming the responsibilities
of such a position, he caused the application to the constitution
of an entirely new interpretation of the right to acquire territory.
In his administration occurred the first acquisition of territory
as colonial possessions, to be ruled by representatives appointed
by the central government, and in 1901 the supreme court rendered
a decision confirming the right of the United States to govern such
territories as dependencies without providing for their incorporation
as States and without according their inhabitants the rights of
citizenship. (See U S,
paragraph Constitutional Status of Porto Rico and the Philippines.)
His experience in Congress taught him how to treat that body, and
throughout his administration the most harmonious relations existed
between Congress and the President. This frictionless state of affairs
presented a striking illustration during 1898, when Congress did
not demand, as it might with perfect propriety have done, the publication
of the negotiations between the President and General Woodford,
which as a matter of fact were not given to the public until two
years after the close of the Spanish War. When defective bills were
introduced, the President was in the habit of summoning the authors,
and by explaining the inconsistencies to them, contrived to have
the measures offered in acceptable form, which explains his small
use of the veto power. Personally, his views on the two leading
questions of his twenty-five years of public life, the monetary
standard and the tariff, present a remarkable metamorphosis. His
position on the money question has already been described: but his
change on the theory of tariff, while not so complete, is fully
as important. In 1888, he said: “A revenue tariff is inconsistent
with protection, it is intended for a wholly different purpose.
. . . It can have but one effect—that of opening up our markets
to the foreign producer, impoverishing the home producer and enriching
his foreign rival.” On September 5, 1901, the day before his assassination,
he said: “We must not repose in fancied security that we can forever
sell everything and buy little or nothing. . . . Reciprocity is
the natural outgrowth of our wonderful industrial development under
the domestic policy now firmly established. . . . If perchance some
of our tariffs are no longer needed for revenue or to encourage
or protect our industries at home, why should they not be employed
to extend and promote our markets abroad?” It has been often declared,
by friends and enemies alike, that McKinley always “had his ear
close to the ground,” a statement that finds no better illustration
than the contrast furnished by the foregoing quotations. Before
everything else a party man, he [468][469]
showed in his development the submission to changing conditions
in his party and the desire to accomplish acceptable legislation.
In his private life McKinley presented a model character, one phase
of his personality, at least, to which his detractors can offer
no slight. In 1871 he married Miss Ida Saxton, of Canton, and from
this union two daughters were born, both of whom died in childhood.
A confirmed invalid, Mrs. McKinley depended upon the constant care
of her husband, whose burdens were never too heavy nor his moments
too full of anxiety to deprive her of the devoted attentions it
was his delight to pay.
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