The Execution of Czolgosz
To the Editor of the M N:
D S:
Agreeably to your request the following brief account of the execution
and autopsy of Czolgosz, the assassin of President McKinley, is
respectfully submitted:
The execution by electricity of Leon
F. Czolgosz, which took place in the State Prison at Auburn, New
York, on the morning of October 29, 1901, terminated the earthly
existence of the most monstrous magnicide of the age. Every precaution
was taken by the Warden of the Prison, under whose immediate supervision
and direction the execution was conducted, to minimize the opportunity
for notoriety, as well as to insure the taking-off of the prisoner
should be effected in an orderly and dignified manner.
The official witnesses, consisting
of prominent New York State officials, several physicians, representatives
of the respective press associations and two official physicians—Dr.
John Gerin, Prison Physician, and myself—having been assembled in
the execution room and received the usual admonition from the Warden
as to the maintenance of order and quiet during the execution, the
prisoner was conducted to the room by a guard on either side a few
minutes after 7 a. m. As he entered the room his head was erect
and his manner self-possessed and defiant. Immediately after being
placed in the fatal chair the binding straps were quickly adjusted
to his arms, legs and body, the head and leg electrodes were placed
in situ and connected with the wire which was to transmit
the lethal current through his body. The criminal offered no resistance
whatever, but during the preparations addresses himself to the witnesses
in the following significant language: “I killed the President because
he was the enemy of the good people—the good working people. I am
not sorry for my crime. I am sorry I could not see my father.” At
this juncture, everything being in readiness, the Warden gave the
signal to the official electrician in charge of the switch, who
immediately turned the lever which closed the circuit and shot the
deadly current through the criminal’s body. The instant the contact
was made the body was thrown into a state of extreme rigidity, every
fiber of the entire muscular system being in a marked condition
of tonic spasm. At the same time consciousness, sensation and motion
were apparently absolutely abolished.
Czolgosz was pronounced dead by the
attending physicians and several of the other physicians present
in four minutes from the time he entered the execution room, one
minute of which period was occupied in the preliminary preparations,
one minute and five seconds in the electrical contacts and the remainder
of the time in examinations by the physicians to determine the fact
of death.
Two electrical contacts were made,
occupying in all one minute and five seconds. In the first contact
the electro-motive pressure was maintained at 1,800 volts for 7
seconds, then reduced to 300 volts for 23 seconds, increased to
1,800 volts for 4 seconds, and again reduced to 300 volts for 26
seconds, when it was broken. The second contact was maintained at
1,800 volts for 5 seconds. That conscious life was absolutely destroyed
the instant the first contact was made was conceded by all of the
witnesses.
Immediately after the execution, the
lay witnesses having departed, and autopsy was made by Mr. Edward
A. Spitzka of New York, under the [752][753]
direction and supervision of the official physicians and in the
presence of several of the visiting physicians who were invited
to attend. The autopsy occupied more than three hours and embraced
a careful examination of all the bodily organs, including the brain,
all of which were found to be in a perfectly normal state—a conclusion
which was concurred in by all the physicians present.
In compliance with the expressed wish
of the relatives of the criminal, the Superintendent of State Prisons,
who was present, and the Warden, declined positively to allow any
portion of the body to be removed from the Prison. Consequently,
and regrettably, it was impossible to retain honorable possession
of any portion of the brain for future examination and study. Accurate
drawings, however, and detailed anatomical descriptions of the brain
were made by Mr. Spitzka for subsequent study and report. A careful,
naked-eye examination of the brain in all of its parts was also
made and full notes taken thereof. The organ and its appendages
appeared to be absolutely healthy and free from any abnormality
whatever, thus corroborating the opinion of the mental experts who
had examined the criminal during life, namely, that he was perfectly
sane.
Respecting the question of Czolgosz’s
mental condition, it appears that all of the mental experts at his
trial, on either side, namely, Drs. Putnam, Fowler and Crego for
the people, and Arthur W. Hurd and myself for the defence, after
repeated examinations, concurred in the opinion that he was sane.
A final examination of the criminal, with reference to his mental
condition, was made by Dr. Gerin and myself at the Auburn Prison
on the evening before his execution with entirely negative result.
In fact, none of these examinations disclosed, in the opinion of
any of the experts, the slightest evidence of mental disease or
mental degeneracy. On the contrary, he was regarded as exceptionally
intelligent for one in his walk of life. Furthermore, this conclusion
was fully corroborated by his manner, appearance and declarations
in the execution room as well as by the postmortem findings. Moreover,
Czolgosz’s bearing, conduct and declarations from the time he murdered
the President down to that of his execution have been entirely consistent
with the teachings and the creed of Anarchism and stamp him as an
Anarchist of the deepest dye.
C F. MD,
M.D.
85 Madison avenue,
New York.
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