Publication information |
Source: Monthly Bulletin of the Bureau of the American Republics Source type: government document Document type: article Document title: “Death of William McKinley, President of the United States” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: September 1901 Volume number: 11 Issue number: 3 Pagination: 445-47 |
Citation |
“Death of William McKinley, President of the United States.” Monthly Bulletin of the Bureau of the American Republics Sept. 1901 v11n3: pp. 445-47. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination; McKinley assassination (public response); McKinley assassination (international response); William McKinley (public statements); Pan-American Exposition (opening and related matters); Pan-American Exposition (personal response); William McKinley (personal history). |
Named persons |
Nancy Allison McKinley; William McKinley; William McKinley, Sr. |
Notes |
Document No. 356, Part 9.
56th Congress, 2d Session. House of Representatives.
Alternate source title: Monthly Bulletin of the Bureau of the American Republics, International Union of American Republics. |
Document |
Death of William McKinley, President of the United States
W
The feelings of horror, indignation, and sorrow
which overspread the entire country at the time of the commission of the crime
was followed by a few days of buoyancy and hope, as the symptoms indicated that
the President might recover, only to be followed by despair and death, and a
wave of intense grief which has enveloped the whole Republic. These feelings
were not confined to the United States, however, but to a great extent embraced
the sentiments of the whole civilized world. Nowhere, perhaps, outside of his
native country, was there more sincere manifestations of grief at Mr. M K ’
untimely death than in the Latin American countries with whom he desired to
have the closest fraternal and commercial relations, as his address delivered
at Buffalo, part of which is published in the present issue of the M
B , indicates. [445][446]
At the opening of the Pan-American Exposition,
President M K sent
from San Francisco, Cal., which city he was then visiting, the following message
to his “fellow-citizens of the United States and fellow-Americans from all of
our neighboring nations,” which clearly shows his interest in the welfare of
them all:
“I send you greetings from the shores of the Pacific,
with the fervent prayers for the benediction of Heaven upon this beneficent
enterprise, with sincere congratulations to all those whose energy and devotion
have brought it to pass, and with heartfelt welcome to our guests from our sister
Republics, to whom we wish continued and abundant prosperity. May there be no
cloud upon this grand festival of peace and commerce, no thought of rivalry
except that generous competition in useful arts and industries which benefits
all! I earnestly hope that this great exhibition may prove a blessing to every
country of this hemisphere, and even that the world at large may profit by the
progress of which we give proof by the lesson of our efforts and their results.
I trust that it may become evident, before this exhibition closes, that our
vast and increasing prosperity is fruitful of nothing but good to our elders
in the brotherhood of nations, and that our onward march may forever exemplify
the divine sentiment of ‘peace on earth and good will to men.’”
W M K
was born at Niles, Ohio, January 29, 1843, and was the son of W
and N (A ) M K .
He was educated in the public schools, and for a short period was a teacher.
On June 11, 1861, he enlisted as a private in Company E, Twenty-third Ohio Volunteer
Infantry, and participated in a number of battles in the civil war. He was successively
promoted for gallantry in action to second lieutenant, first lieutenant, captain,
and major, and was honorably discharged from the military service (at the close
of the war) on July 26, 1865. He studied law at the Albany (New York) Law School,
and was admitted to the practice of law in March, 1867, and was elected prosecuting
attorney of Stark County, Ohio, in 1869.
In November, 1876, he was elected to the National
Congress from the Canton (Ohio) district, and on April 15, 1878, delivered his
first notable speech on the tariff question in the House of Representatives.
He was reelected to Congress in the following years: 1878, 1880, 1882, 1884,
1886, and 1888, each year becoming more and more prominent in national affairs.
It was during his last term of service, while serving as chairman of the Ways
and Means Committee of the House, that he reported the bill which was afterwards
known as the “McKinley tariff law,” and which was enacted on October 6, 1890,
forming the practical basis of the present tariff system of the country.
In November, 1891, he was elected Governor of
the State of Ohio for the term of two years, being afterwards reelected to the
same office in 1893. At the close of his second term he returned from Columbus,
[446][447] the capital of the State, to his old
home in Canton, to resume the practice of law. In June, 1896, he was nominated
as the Republican candidate for President of the United States, and was elected
the following November by a plurality of 600,000 votes. He was inaugurated on
March 4, 1897, and proved to be one of the most popular Presidents ever chosen.
In 1900 he was again nominated by his party as its candidate and was reelected
by a popular plurality of 825,000. He was inaugurated for the second time as
Chief Magistrate of the Nation on March 4, 1901. The momentous events occurring
during his first Administration, and the few months of the second in which he
was permitted to live, are matters of recent history and will not be dwelt upon
in this connection. Suffice it to say that President M K
won the respect and admiration of all his countrymen irrespective of party affiliation,
and all mourn for him as for a beloved friend. He was a devoted Christian, his
last conscious remarks being the repetition of the words “Nearer, my God, to
Thee, nearer to Thee.” He died in the assurance of a blessed immortality, leaving
the record of his earthly career to be treasured as a rich legacy by his fellow
countrymen.