Report of Capt. Benjamin F. Montgomery, Signal
Corps, in Charge of
Telegraph and Cipher Bureau at the White House [excerpt]
While the tragedy at Buffalo was
enacted subsequent to the close of the last fiscal year, the signal
officer on duty with the late President hopes it will not be thought
untimely or improper to refer in these supplementary paragraphs
to the work during the sad hours of watching and waiting, from the
afternoon of September 6, 1901, when the fatal shot was fired, till
the closing scene on September 19, 1901, when the body of our beloved
chief was consigned to the grave.
Within fifteen minutes after the late
President was struck down by the assassin’s bullet the signal officer
in charge at the Executive Mansion had secured two direct and exclusive
wires to Buffalo—one a telegraph wire and the other a long-distance
telephone circuit—and had put the office in direct communication
with the secretary to the President and those nearest to the distinguished
sufferer. The terminus of the telephone wire was close beside the
hospital, and from this source was first obtained the official details
of the horrible crime. All during the afternoon the long-distance
telephone connection was kept clear, and over this wire the news,
from moment to moment, was received and freely and promptly communicated
to the officials of the Government in Washington, the anxious relatives
and friends of the late President, and the public. Immediately upon
the removal of the late President from the hospital grounds to the
Milburn residence a telegraph wire was placed in the latter building
and there maintained, in good working order, from that moment, both
day and night, until the body was taken away to start on its journey
to the capital.
During this period there were sent
and received 4,351 messages, including official dispatches, bulletins,
and tidings of alternating hope and sorrow to the anxious world.
It will ever be a source of pride and gratification to the officer
in charge and the faithful assistants, who, without heed of time
or personal comfort, that they were given the high honor and the
great privilege to stand and serve with those who faithfully watched
by the bedside of the dying President.
Perhaps it is well to state at this
juncture that the telegraph and cipher bureau was the creation of
the great mind of the late President William McKinley, and it is
well known to his official advisers and intimate friends that he
has often spoken with evident pride and satisfaction of this particular
part of the Executive Office. On many occasions he has spoken to
the signal officer in charge in complimentary terms of this bureau
and often gave willing and cheerful testimony to what he termed
in his annual message of 1898 as a service which “was invaluable
to the Executive in directing the operations of the Army and Navy.”
The Chief Signal Officer I am sure
will not think it improper or in any manner a violation of the confidence
reposed if I recite an incident to illustrate the late President’s
high regard for the work of the Signal Corps. The night before the
late President left Canton, Ohio, for the trip to Buffalo he made
request of the signal officer in Washington, over long-distance
telephone, for certain data concerning the telegraph work of the
Army during the late war. The result of that conversation is the
following graceful tribute to the work of the Signal Corps of the
Army in his last public utterance, and which I take the liberty
to quote herewith:
“It took a special messenger of the
Government, with every facility known at the time for rapid travel,
nineteen days to go from the city of Washington to New Orleans with
a message to General Jackson that the war with England had ceased
and that a treaty of peace had been signed. How different now!
“We reached General Miles in Porto
Rico by cable, and he was able, through the military telegraph,
to stop his army on the firing line with the message that the United
States and Spain had signed a protocol suspending hostilities. We
knew almost instantly of the first shots fired at Santiago, and
the subsequent surrender of the Spanish forces was known at Washington
within less than an hour of its consummation. The first ship of
Cervera’s fleet had hardly emerged from that historic har- [1060][1061]
bor when the fact was flashed to our capital, and the swift destruction
that followed was announced immediately through the wonderful medium
of telegraphy. So accustomed are we to safe and easy communication
with distant lands that its temporary interruption, even in ordinary
times, results in loss and inconvenience. We shall never forget
the days of anxious waiting and awful suspense when no information
was permitted to be sent from Pekin, and the diplomatic representatives
of the nations in China, cut off from all communication inside and
outside of the walled capital, were surrounded by an angry and misguided
mob that threatened their destruction, nor the joy that thrilled
the world when a single message from the Government of the United
States brought through our minister the first news of the safety
of the besieged diplomats.”
|