McKinley’s End and the Rise of Roosevelt
[excerpt]
S
5, 1901, President McKinley, present upon invitation at the Pan-American
Exposition in Buffalo, delivered an address which proved to be his
last public utterance. It was memorable both as a sagacious survey
of affairs and as indicating some modification of his well-known
tariff opinions in the direction of freer commercial intercourse
with nations under other flags.
We could not, he implied, forever sell
everything and buy little or nothing. The period of exclusiveness,
he said, was past. Reciprocity treaties were in harmony with the
spirit of the times, measures of retaliation were not. If some of
our tariffs were no longer needed for revenue or to protect home
industries why should they not be employed to extend and promote
our markets abroad? The President expressed further the conviction
that in the same commercial interest we must encourage our merchant
marine and construct both a Pacific cable and an Isthmian canal.
These projects of Mr. McKinley’s statesmanship,
approved by nearly the entire public, he did not live to put in
execution. On his second day at Buffalo, Friday, September 6th,
about four in the afternoon, the President stood in the Temple of
Music on the Fair grounds, shaking hands with hundreds as they filed
past. A boyish workman came [289][290]
along, his right hand in a handkerchief. Mr. McKinley extended his
hand to the youth’s unencumbered left. The bandaged right arm quickly
rose, two shots rang on the air, and Mr. McKinley staggered back
into the arms of a bystander, grievously wounded. The President’s
first thoughts were for others. He requested that the news be broken
gently to Mrs. McKinley, and expressed fear lest the occurrence
should injure the Exposition. As cries of “Lynch him!” arose from
the maddened crowd, the stricken chief begged those about him to
see that no hurt befell the assassin. The latter was forthwith taken
into custody to await the result of his deed. President McKinley
was with equal despatch conveyed to the Emergency Hospital, where
his wounds were probed and dressed.
Spite of considerable weakness and too
rapid heart-action, the symptoms for several days gave strong hope
that the patient would recover. At the home of Mr. Milburn, President
of the Exposition, whither President McKinley had been carried,
he received the tenderest care and the most skilful treatment. The
Cabinet officers were reassured, and left Buffalo. Vice-President
Roosevelt retired to the Adirondacks. The President himself, vigorous
and naturally sanguine, did not give up hope till Friday, a week
from the date of his injury.
Then his condition became alarming. Digestion
ceased, nourishment even by injection became impossible, traces
of septic poison appeared. By night the world knew that McKinley
was a dying man. In the evening he regained consciousness. “Good-by,
good-by, all,” he said. “It is God’s way; His will be done.” “Nearer,
my God, to Thee; e’en tho’ it be a cross that raiseth me,” he murmured.
Before the dawn of Saturday the soul was loosed from its suffering
body.
After a simple funeral at the Milburn mansion
the remains lay at the Buffalo City Hall till midnight, then for
a day at the Washington Capitol, whence they were borne to the old
home at Canton, O. [290][291]
September 19th, the day of the interment,
was feelingly observed all over the country and even in foreign
parts. In no considerable American town could one building hold
the mourning concourse. By King Edward’s orders special commemorative
services were held in Westminster Cathedral. Messages of condolence
from the four quarters of the globe poured in upon the widow. For
five minutes telegraph clicks and cable flashes ceased, and for
ten minutes the wheels upon many lines of steam and street railway
stood still.
It was too early to determine the exact
altitude at which the name of William McKinley would stand upon
the roll of America’s illustrious men, yet all but the narrowest
partisans believed that it would be high, where all posterity could
see and read it. Ardent eulogists made him the peer of Washington
and Lincoln. Some thought this extravagant, but few if any regarded
it strange. The President had been taxed with opportunism, with
inconsistency, and with partiality to moneyed interests, but sober
review, after the man was gone, removed emphasis from these charges.
Some of his views had certainly changed. His altered attitude concerning
silver was much remarked upon, but this, as pointed out in a previous
chapter, was apparent only and not a modification of principle.
If, in regard to protection, he at last swung to Blaine’s position
favoring reciprocity, which, as the author of the McKinley Bill,
he had been understood to oppose, it should be remembered that the
United States had meantime become a mighty exporter of manufactured
products, competing effectively with England, Germany, and France,
the world over.
Mr. McKinley’s progressive insight into
the tariff question betrayed his mental activity and hospitality,
as his final deliverances thereupon exhibited fearlessness. None
knew better than he that what he said at Buffalo would be challenged
in the name of party orthodoxy. Even greater firmness was manifest,
when at an earlier date, speaking in Savannah, he ranked Robert
E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson [291][292]
as among America’s “great” sons. With this brave tribute should
be mentioned his nomination of the ex-Confederate Generals FitzHugh
Lee and Joseph Wheeler as Major-Generals in the United States Army.
Such words and deeds showed skilled leadership also. Each was fittingly
timed so as best to escape or fend criticism and to impress the
public.
Mr. McKinley’s apparent vacillation, also
his complaisance toward men and interests representing wealth, was
due in no slight degree to an exquisite finesse in virtue of which
he stooped to conquer. He led by seeming to follow, or by yielding
in inch took an ell. He possessed by inheritance a quick sense of
the manufacturer’s point of view, for his father and grandfather
had been ironmasters. He also had a certain conservative instinct,
characteristic of his party, which deemed the counsel of broadcloth
wiser than the clamor of rags, and equally patriotic withal. Notwithstanding
this, history can not but pronounce McKinley’s love of country,
his whole Americanism, in fact, as sincere, sturdy, and democratic
as Abraham Lincoln’s.
The deceased President’s power and breadth
as a statesman were greatly increased by the responsibilities of
the Presidency. Before his accession to that office he had helped
shape but one great public measure, the McKinley Bill, and his speeches
upon his chosen theme, protection, were more earnest than varied
or profound. But witness the largeness of view marking the directions
of April 7, 1900, to the Taft Philippine Commission: “The Commission
should bear in mind that the government which they are establishing
is designed not for our satisfaction or for the expression of our
theoretical views, but for the happiness, peace, and prosperity
of the people of the Philippine Islands, and the measures adopted
should be made to conform to their customs, their habits, and even
their prejudices, to the fullest extent consistent with the accomplishment
of the indispensable requisites of just and effective government.”
President McKinley judged men well. His
appointments were nearly always wise. He managed discreetly in crises.
[292][293] He saw the whole of a situation
as few statesmen have done, penetrating to details amid obscure
aspects which others, even experts, had overlooked. During the Spanish
War his advice was always helpful and at points vital. Courteous
to all foreign powers, and falling into no spectacular jangles with
any, he was obsequious to none.
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The certainty that Mr. McKinley’s
name would be forever remembered with honor was not due merely or
mainly to the fact that his Administration marked a great climacteric
in our national career. His intimates in office and in public life
unanimously testified that in shaping the nation’s new destiny he
played an active and not a passive rôle. He dominated his Cabinet,
diligently attending to the advice each member offered, but by no
means always following it. Party bosses seeking to lead him were
themselves led, oftenest without being aware of it, to accomplish
his wishes.
As a practical politician, in the better
sense of the word, McKinley was a master. Repeatedly, at critical
junctures, he saved his following from rupture, letting the opposition
become an impotent rout. What contrast in American political warfare
more striking than the pitiful demoralization of the Democracy at
the end of the 1900 campaign, compared with the closed ranks and
solid front of the Republican [294][295]
party! Anti-imperialists like Carnegie and Hoar, silver men like
Senator Stewart, low-tariff Republicans of the West, all kept step
and held aloft the McKinley banner.
The discipline proceeded from the candidate’s
influence, from his harmonizing personal leadership, exercised not
through oratory, for he had none of the tricks of speech, not even
the easy knack of story-telling, but by the mere force of his will
and his wisdom.
Mr. McKinley’s private character was exemplary.
His life-long devotion to an invalid wife, his fidelity to friends,
the charm, consideration, and tact in his demeanor toward every
one, and, above all, the Christian sublimity of his last days, created
at once a foundation and a crown for his fame.
The assassin, Leon Czolgosz, was promptly
indicted, placed on trial, convicted, sentenced, and executed, all
without any of the unseemly incidents attending the trial of Guiteau
after Garfield’s assassination. These rapid but perfectly orderly
and dispassionate proceedings were a great credit to the State of
New York.
The murderer was born in this country,
of Russian-Polish parentage, in 1875. He received some education,
was apprenticed to a blacksmith in Detroit, and later employed in
Cleveland and in Chicago. It was said that at Cleveland he had heard
Emma Goldman deliver an anarchist address, and that this inspired
his fell purpose. No accessories were found. Nor did the dreadful
act betoken that anarchism was increasing in our country, or that
any special propagandism in its favor was on. To all appearance,
so far as America was concerned, the assassination was an unrelated
deed. A far more serious symptom was the lawless passion of those
who, some of them from pulpits, fulminated anarchy as bad as that
of the anarchists by demanding that Czolgosz be lynched.
The murderer’s heart had caught fire from
the malignant, red type of anarchy abroad, which had within seven
years struck down the President of France, the Empress of Austria,
[295][296] the King of Italy, and the
Prime Minister of Spain. In their fanatic diabolism its devotees
impartially hated government, whether despotic or free. They were
no less hostile to one than to the other of our political parties.
The murder had no political significance, though certainly a tragic
rebuke to virulent editorials and cartoons in papers wont to season
political debate with too hot personal condiment. President McKinley
had suffered from this and so had his predecessor.
Upon such an occasion orderly government,
both in the States and in the nation, reasonably sought muniment
against any possible new danger from anarchy. McKinley’s own State
leading, States enacted statutes denouncing penalties upon such
as assailed, either by speech or by act, the life or the bodily
safety of any one in authority. The Federal Government followed
with a similar anti-anarchist law of wide scope.
Vice-President Theodore Roosevelt took
over the Presidency with as little jar as a mi1itary post suffers
from changing guard.
Theodore Roosevelt was born in New York
City, October 27, 1858. He graduated from Harvard at the age of
twenty-one. When twenty-three he entered the New York State Assembly,
where he served with great credit six years. Ill-health took him
West, where for two years he “roughed it” as a “cowboy.” Afterward
he was a member of the United States Civil Service Commission and
president of the New York City Police Board. In 1897 he became Assistant
Secretary of the Navy, holding his position long enough to indite
the despatch which took Dewey to Manila. He then raised the United
States Volunteer Cavalry, commonly spoken of as “Rough Riders,”
and went to Cuba as their Lieutenant-Colonel, declining the colonelcy
in favor of Leonard Wood. Gallantry at Las Guasimas raised Colonel
Wood to be Brigadier-General and gave Roosevelt command of the regiment.
Returning from war, Colonel Roosevelt soon found himself Governor
of his State.
He here continued his course as a conservative
reformer. [296][297] He urged compulsory
publicity for the affairs of monopolistic combinations, and was
prominently instrumental in the enactment of the New York Franchise
Tax Law. Mere politicians began to account Roosevelt “dangerous.”
Party managers in the 1900 convention hoped by making him Vice-President
to remove him from competition for the Presidency in 1904; but the
tragic death of President McKinley foiled their calculations.
The new Chief Magistrate was no less honest,
fearless, or public-spirited than the recent one; it only remained
to be seen whether he was equally astute and cautious. Corning to
the office unfettered as he did, might, in one of so frank a temperament,
prove a danger. He was popular. Though highly educated and used
to the best associations, the people found him more approachable
than any of his predecessors. At a public dinner which he attended
one round of cheers was given him as “The President of the United
States,” another as “Roosevelt,” and a third as “Teddy.” Had McKinley
been in his place a corresponding variation would have been unthinkable.
President Roosevelt’s temper and method
were in pointed contrast to McKinley’s. McKinley seemed simply to
hold the tiller, availing himself of currents that deviously, perhaps,
yet easily and inevitably, bore him to his objective. Roosevelt
strenuously plied the oar, recking little of cross currents or head
winds, if, indeed, he did not delight in such. Mr. Depew aptly styled
McKinley “a Western man with Eastern ideas”; Roosevelt “an Eastern
man with Western ideas”; Roosevelt was the first President since
William Henry Harrison to bring to his office the freshness of the
frontier, as he was, anomalously, the first city-born or wealthy-born
incumbent.
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