Publication information |
Source: Merck’s Archives of Materia Medica and Drug Therapy Source type: journal Document type: editorial Document title: “President McKinley’s Death” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: October 1901 Volume number: 3 Issue number: 10 Pagination: 373-74 |
Citation |
“President McKinley’s Death.” Merck’s Archives of Materia Medica and Drug Therapy Oct. 1901 v3n10: pp. 373-74. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (personal response); William McKinley (personal character); McKinley assassination (public response); William McKinley (death, cause of); William McKinley (medical care: personal response). |
Named persons |
James A. Garfield; William McKinley. |
Document |
President McKinley’s Death
NOTHING that has occurred within the present century so completely shows the
limitations of human power in its attempted mastery of nature as the calamity
that has left this nation in deep mourning over its former chief executive.
We are proud, and rightly so, of our educational facilities and of the influence
that education exerts upon the moral nature of our people, yet it was one educated
in American schools who in so cowardly a manner assassinated our beloved President.
In defiance of our best efforts to inculcate reason and civilization into the
lowest strata of the community by free education, a savage grew up among us
capable of doing a deed that makes humanity shudder. The fact that his parents
were foreign born, and that this foreign influence may have affected the result,
does not materially alter the case. Our powerlessness to save ourselves from
such deeds by education alone is only too apparent. We boast of the great influence
of our churches and of the power they exert upon the young in keeping them within
the paths of rectitude, and the proof of their good works is constantly before
our eyes. But neither the influence of the school nor that of the church can
cope with exceptional cases.
All public men must necessarily have opponents,
but no other man of eminence ever had more friends or more well-wishers than
William McKinley. In his many years of public service, through his just, honest,
and kindly ways, he won the affection of multitudes of his fellow-citizens,
and none could say a word against him personally. His own inoffensiveness, the
bulwark of kindly feeling thrown around him by his friends, even the smile with
which he greeted the assassin while offering to take his hand, all failed to
save him. Nor was he lacking in such protection as force could throw around
him. Guarded on every hand by skilled private detectives, educated to thwart
criminals, and to be alert and prepared for just such emergencies, one might
have hoped for better results. Alas! here, too, the impotence of human effort
became manifest; and in the face of it all what more can we say than was so
pathetically said by the President himself, “It is God’s way.”
During the time that he was under treatment for
his wounds the whole civilized world was sending forth heartfelt wishes as well
as sincere prayers for his recovery. The churches throughout the land were appealing
in his behalf. Catholic, Protestant, and Hebrew were alike solicitous for his
return to health. Prayers, too, proved unavailing, for neither they nor tears
were able to alter the supreme decree or raise the standard of human power.
The medical reports scattered over the country by the press seemed, for a number
of days, to betoken a realization of the nation’s wishes—a speedy recovery of
the distinguished sufferer. Journals, both lay and medical, were rejoicing in
the good prospects that seemed to be foreshadowed; but it all ended in the gloom
of despair. In the moment of ap- [373][374] parent
triumph high encomiums were published regarding present-day surgery and medicine.
But these eulogistic comments only served at last to emphasize the impotence
of man before the great unexplored and unknown regions of nature that lie around
us. The majority of men appear to look upon the known as everything, and never
seem to dream that there is a greater territory of the unknown. Much as we now
know, we must know vastly more before we are able to cope successfully with
the exigencies of new conditions. The President’s case, unfortunately, introduced
a condition that transcended the highest present-day human skill. The report
of the autopsy says:
“The bullet which struck over the breast-bone did not pass through the skin and did little harm. The other bullet passed through both walls of the stomach near its lower border. Both holes were found to be perfectly closed by the stitches, but the tissue around each hole had become gangrenous. After passing through the stomach the bullet passed into the back walls of the abdomen, hitting and tearing the upper end of the kidney. This portion of the bullet track was also gangrenous, the gangrene involving the pancreas. The bullet has not yet been found. There was no sign of peritonitis or disease of other organs. The heart walls were very thin. There was no evidence of any attempt at repair on the part of nature, and death resulted from the gangrene, which affected the stomach around the bullet wounds, as well as the tissues around the further course of the bullet. Death was unavoidable by any surgical or medical treatment, and was the direct result of the bullet wound.”
Had the bullet taken a less fatal course, had
a condition of gangrene not ensued, and had recovery taken place, the attending
physicians and surgeons would have won from the public unstinted and exaggerated
praise. Since death was unavoidable, in our present state of knowledge, they
received a large amount of undeserved censure. But while many unfriendly words
have been penned against them, yet it is very gratifying to see that our best
lay journals have looked upon the matter in its true light. Taking the conditions
as they were, and giving due weight to every fact, honesty compels every qualified
man to conclude that neither he nor any other human being could have changed
the outcome a particle. Our surgeons venture farther now than ever before in
the history of man, but they cannot go beyond the very depth of their knowledge.
Our medical knowledge can do more for the suffering to-day than ever before,
but we do not yet know how to immunize the body against the appearance and fatal
advancement of gangrene within the internal organs. Such treatment is yet beyond
the borderland of therapeutics. No one has so far sufficiently studied the laws
governing the development of gangrene as to learn what, if any, remedy will
stimulate healthy circulation in torn and bruised tissues, and what, if any,
antiseptic will check the development of gangrene in any tissue. To acquire
such knowledge necessitates a vast amount of experimenting with bruised and
mangled tissues, and in the use of drugs new and old that affect the circulation
and destroy disease germs. But this is research along lines to which many well-meaning
but misguided people object.
Modern methods of scientific research can be relied
upon to give just as brilliant results in materia medica and therapeutics as
they have given in electricity and mechanics. In so far as such methods have
already been applied to materia medica they have borne out this conclusion.
Let us then permit and encourage free research after methods of controlling
those forces that change diseased conditions to health, and the problem of the
diagnosing and replacing of internal gangrenous tissues will soon be solved.
When President Garfield was assassinated we were far behind our present day
knowledge as to how to manage such a case. Unfortunately President McKinley’s
wound introduced new problems not as yet solved. Soon we expect to be able to
cope with these and so extend the area of our conquered territory. Of course,
the broader that territory becomes, the less likely are our surgeons and therapeutists
to be baffled with unknown conditions. Great national calamities like the one
that has overtaken us stir the human heart to its depths and cement civilized
men into closer bonds of fellowship through sympathy. But it does even more
than this, since it directs the scientific mind toward efforts of research that
tend to minimize the difficulties of treating the sick. Every failure of human
endeavor should lead to good through increased knowledge.