Official Report of the Proceedings of the Twenty-Ninth
Annual Meeting
of the American Public Health Association [excerpt]
The Chair will call upon Dr. Holton
as a member of the Committee on Resolutions to present the resolutions
of respect to the memory of our late President.
Dr. Holton then read the resolutions
prepared by the Committee, as follows:
“Your Committee appointed to draft
resolutions regarding the death of President McKinley beg leave
to submit the following resolutions:
Resolved, That the American
Public Health Association has received with deep sorrow the intelligence
of the sudden and tragic death of the beloved President of the United
States. [363][364]
Resolved, That in President
McKinley we recognize the highest type of modern civilization, a
patriotic citizen, a Christian gentleman, and a sagacious and enlightened
statesman.
Resolved, That we respectfully
extend our heartfelt sympathy to Mrs. McKinley in this her hour
of bereavement, and to other members of the family.
Resolved, That a copy of these
resolutions be spread upon the records of this Association and given
to the press for publication.”
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It was moved by Dr. Durgin that the
resolutions be adopted. Seconded.
The Chair would suggest that some
members would possibly like to express themselves in regard to these
resolutions, and I will call upon Ex-President Bailey.
D. W
B.—Mr. President, and members of
the Association: I feel words must fail me to express the depth
of sorrow that we all feel. Yet it is a sad pleasure to me to speak
a word on this occasion. As expressed I think well in our resolutions,
we recognize in the late President all that is best in modern civilization.
In every relation in life, as a statesman, as a soldier, and as
a Christian, and as to his family relations, we all doff our hats
when we contemplate the loyalty of this man to his afflicted wife.
Coming as I do from the South I would
like simply to call attention to the fact that no man since the
Civil War has done so much as President McKinley to unify this country
of ours. Without partisan bias when it came to the Spanish War we
found that a Wheeler, a Lee and a Breckenridge were his prominent
agents in the carrying on of this war, so that to-day in the South
as never since 1860 have we had such feeling toward a President
or towards the flag of our country. So for this we may be thankful
for this man.
The very heinous crime precludes almost
its mention and yet allow me to express in this presence that this
country since its organization has always been open to receive everybody
from other climes who desire to come to us. While that is still
our wish for those who come for the betterment of themselves and
mankind and who desire to become Americanized, adopting the principles
of this Government as their own, yet let me say that the day has
come when it must be expressed that we have no place in this country
for those who come with the view of promulgating principles that
are so much at variance with the principles upon which this Government
is founded, and that [364][365] there
is no longer a place in this country for such spirits to come and
concoct their damnable schemes.
Simply then, and briefly, I would
urge the adoption of these resolutions in their full spirit, that
we do recognize an irreparable loss, that we recognize in this man
one worthy of our deepest love, and I am sure that we likewise congratulate
ourselves and feelingly return thanks for the expressions that have
come to us from our sister nations and I might say from the world. (Applause.)
D. C.
P. W, New Orleans, La.—Mr. Chairman,
in seconding the resolution I voice the sentiments of the people
of the extreme South, the section from which I come. We were recently
favored by a visit from our now deceased President. Our people turned
towards him with smiles and extended hands. They held out arms full
of flowers and rent the air with their cheers for the man, the citizen
and the President. The same bells that then rang out pæans for that
man are now tolling dirges as his body lies just about ready to
be consigned to the tomb. There is no section of the country that
feels more acutely and more bitterly the killing of President McKinley
than does the South. He was their friend. In the killing of President
Lincoln the South was visited with dire punishment for any hand
she might have had in that assassination; and today the South mourns
the loss of this President who was the first since that time to
extend open fellowship and invite us to join in the house of our
fathers in the Union. Today, sir, we find no place for any reflections
upon the previous history of any party or any man in that party,
but we do recognize the onward march of William McKinley towards
prosperity, peace and protection to every citizen of the land regardless
of State or sectional birth. We mourn his loss today more than we
can express, and on behalf of the South I join in the deepest regret
that we have to pass these resolutions; with the most heartfelt
earnestness in the truth of every word that they express. (Applause.)
T P.—The
Dominion of Canada has already in words most fittingly spoken and
full of the deepest sympathy, expressed itself on this question.
It would not be inappropriate, however, if at this meeting a further
expression should be presented, and I will call upon Dr. Bryce for
a word.
D. B,
Toronto, Can.—Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen: It is appropriate
that a representative from the Dominion of Canada should have expressed
in open meeting here the feelings of admiration for the late President
which we all hold and should likewise have expressed feelings of
regret for his untimely decease. [365][366]
At the request of your Executive Committee
and your Chairman I am asked to add a few words in connection with
this expression of condolence on the part of the Association in
the resolution which has just been read. The death of the President
is one which must be regretted not alone by the people of the United
States, not alone by the people of Anglo-Saxon lineage, but by all
the civilized peoples of the earth; but I suppose to no one does
that death come nearer than to the people lying to the north, a
people who are not only the same in birth and aspirations, but also
the same in their daily relations, because we are practically one
with you, but especially because we see in the virtues of the life
of the late President McKinley so many of those qualities which
have been seen in our late Queen, a sort of loadstar to draw every
good Briton, and I will say every good citizen of the world, the
highest sense, towards the ideal.
The fact that this Association is
called upon to pass these resolutions has seemed to me an extremely
appropriate thing, since the very aims and objects of this Association
are to suppress those very irregularities, whether in society or
not, which this sad circumstance has been an illustration of. Sad
as the circumstance of the assassination is, it must come home to
every one of us workers in the carrying out of the laws of the Almighty,
as we understand them, to realize in it that it is one of the necessary
results of an unalterable law, whether those catastrophes that we
have seen striking society from time to time have affected some
innocent person, some whole city, or some whole nation. To us, the
work of regulating society comes as close as the regulating of an
epidemic or of some catastrophe at sea through an imperfect vessel
or some railway collision, which may be due to lack of knowledge
of construction or lack of care in managing a train. When we point
to the death of the President as an illustration of something, somewhere
needing regulation, we feel that it devolves upon us not only to
sympathize with the effects of such irregularity incident to the
lack of harmony amongst the social elements, but points us still
more, it seems to me, in the direction we have so long worked and
impels us to work more earnestly and also shows us that in society
we are subject to laws which are as unalterable as the movements
of the planets, and that if we are ever to see evolved that harmony,
which seems to be the purpose of the Creator, we will have to work
along all the lines known to us whereby our labors shall go to make
up the infinite harmony which are operant with the highest principles,
whether of nature or of the Creator. I have only to add that I fully
and heartily agree not only for myself but for my country in the
resolutions which have been submitted. [366][367]
Dr. Eduardo Licéaga of Mexico then
spoke in Spanish, his remarks being translated by Dr. Gihon. He
said:
On the part of myself and my colleagues
and my Government in Mexico, I desire to express our heartfelt participation
in your sorrow. Referring to Dr. Bryce, I will say that he is practically
one of the same people with yourselves and it would be natural for
him to feel as you do, but the Mexican race is a different race,
different people and speak a different language, but nevertheless
our grief and sorrow are equally as profound as yours, and I desire
you to feel that we are with you in all the sorrow that you feel
yourselves. (Applause.)
The resolutions were adopted by a
unanimous standing vote.
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