[untitled]
The adjourned meeting of the Franklin County
Bar to hear the memorial prepared by the committee appointed at the meeting
of Monday last, was held at the court house in Columbus last Saturday forenoon.
The Bar of this city attended in a body and a
number of other most prominent citizens of Columbus were present. Among those
present was General Carrington, who from 1848 to 1860 practiced at the Franklin
county [sic] Bar, being associated with the late Gov. Dennison. He was appointed
in 1860 by Gov. Dennison adjutant general of the state, and on the breaking
out of the war in 1861 was appointed colonel in the regular army, and always
remained in the service.
The Memorial was read by the Hon. R. A. Harrison,
and is as follows:
M
WILLIAM M KINLEY,
Twenty-fifth President of the United States.
To the Bar Association of Franklin county [sic],
Ohio:
Your committee, appointed to draft resolutions
on the death of President William McKinley, respectfully submit the following
report:
Resolved. That we deeply deplore the terrible
crime resulting in the tragic death of William McKinley, which so suddenly plunged
a nation into grief, deprived his country of an illustrious chief executive,
and shocked the civilized world.
Resolved. That we wish hereby to place on record
our unqualified condemnation and execration of the dastardly blow directed at
once against the person of the president, and against the government whose laws
he administered with unswerving fidelity to duty, guided always by the sentiment,
that: “The strongest and best government is the one which rests upon the reverent
affection of its own people.”
Resolved. That our profession sustained a distinct
and permanent loss when William McKinley, then a young man, to quote from his
own lips, “turned away from plans which had been formed for a life’s career,”
surrendered his law practice, and entered the public service, for, by h[?] [?]lication,
his success as an advocate, and [?] mastery of legal principles, he had already
given promise of attaining distinction in his profession.
Resolved. That his unfailing courtesy, his modesty,
his uniform kindness, and the peculiar charm of his manner, during the four
years he resided here while governor of the state, so endeared him to our citizens
generally, including members of this bar, that we feel in his death a deep sense
of personal loss.
Resolved. That his bravery as a soldier, the purity
of his private life, his manly and dignified discharge of every public duty,
his loyalty to the highest ideals of patriotism, have justly won for him a place
in the front rank of modern statesmen, the universal respect of mankind, and
the admiration and affection of his fellow countrymen.
Resolved. That, while joining in the universal
expression of grief at the death of President McKinley, and extending to his
widow to whom he was so tenderly devoted our warmest sympathy, we wish to record
our abhorrence of those doctrines, so destructive in their tendencies to all
government, which directly led to his assassination, and we demand that prompt
and effective steps be taken, by those who make and administer the laws, to
prevent the repetition of such offenses, for the following reasons:
Three times in our Nation’s history the president,
who by virtue of his office is commander in chief of the army and navy of the
United States, has been assassinated. Of these sad and lamentable chapters in
American history, the third is the most alarming. It is the first time the chief
executive of the Republic has been murdered by an anarchist, and for no other
reason than that he was the official representative of the government of the
United States. Mr. Lincoln was assassinated at the conclusion of a great civil
war; General Garfield was assassinated at a time of intense party factional
and personal feeling and a bitter and unrelenting feud; whereas William McKinley
was assassinated at a time of profound peace and of general concord and an era
of good feeling throughout the entire country, and solely because he was the
chief magistrate of the government of the people, by the people, and for the
people of the United States. The assassin and his associates seek to overthrow
by violence all constituted institutions of society and of government, all law
and order, and all rights of property, with no purpose of establishing any other
system of law and order in the place of that destroyed. The propaganda of murder
advocated by modern revolutionary anarchists is aimed against all government
of whatever character and however liberal and free. The assassination of President
Carnot, of the Republic of France, in the year of 1894, was the work of this
party of anarchists. Every assassination and attempted assassination of official
representatives of government merely because they stand for government, have
[134][135] since then been their diabolical work.
They have been very active, as their bloody work shows. Within seven years they
have shot the president of the two greatest Republics in the world, besides
killing the monarch, of a great power, the empress of another great power, the
prime minister of still another European Kingdom, and have attempted to take
the life of the heir to Britain’s throne. And now, having assassinated the president
of the United States, they have slain five of the highest official representatives
and administrators of the governments of the great nations of the world, for
no other reason than that these five persons stood for government in whatever
form.
It thus appears clear that the anarchistic epoch
of assassination is upon the civilized world, and that the United States is
not free from the atrocities and terror and destruction which it carries in
its train. Revolutionary anarchy evidently regards the free, liberal and beneficial
institutions of the United States with as much hatred and malice as it does
the harshest despotism in Europe. It is a wild, insensate thing, and by the
fatal pistol shot of one of its advocates aimed at the great republic in the
person of its chief executive, it has struck a cruel blow at the cause of personal
liberty and human freedom in the very land where that cause is most deeply rooted
in the minds and cherished in the affections of the people.
Under these circumstances it is evident that the
assassination of President McKinley, by an avowed revolutionary anarchist, demands
the most anxious, thorough and profound consideration by the citizens of the
United States and their representative bodies, of the question whether it is
not high time to enter upon a stern, and, if possible, certain, repressive treatment
of all such enemies of free institutions and of government in whatsoever form.
These enemies seek to accomplish their diabolical purposes by the means of violence
and terror, and in that way they strike at law and order by the murder of the
official representatives and administrators of the law of the land. Hence, they
indiscriminately and murderously assault the presidents of republics as well
as kings and emporers [sic]; and, as was shown in the celebrated case tried
in Chicago several years since, they murder the instruments of the laws’ enforcement,
the police, chosen for the protection and security of the people from violence
and crime. Their leaders place their hope in armed insurrection finally, and
until that can be effected, they advocate resort to assassination and other
violent means of war upon law and order. Every member of this anarchistic party
is taught by its leaders that his first duty is to prepare the way of the revolution
in its definite and violent form by spreading their revolutionary doctrines
among the people. They proclaim that a total revolution of the existing fabric
of society is their ultimate end. They all welcome with enthusiasm the assassination
of official representatives of government, as they have celebrated and welcomed
the assassination of the president of the United States.
In this country, anarchists have heretofore attracted
little attention or notice except when they have sought to propogate [sic] their
diabolical ideas by illegal violence or murder. This want of greater attention
to them, resulting, as it has, from the delusion that these public enemies are
merely baneful exotics, introduced from foreign countries, that have not taken
and cannot take root on American soil, accounts for the fact that proper and
needed precautions have not been taken against them. If such precautions had
been taken the world would not now be mourning the assassination of our beloved
president. These enemies of all law have been allowed license of speech, liberty
of organization and privilege of public parade. They have had an unrestrained
field for their murderous propaganda. The ports of the country have been open
to this society of European destructives, under our ancient custom of asylum
to political offenders. In this year, in New Jersey, societies have been [?]
to celebrate the assassin of the king of Italy as a martyr, [making?] him the
hero of a play in which were reproduced the circumstances of the murder. Should
not such organizations be suppressed as criminal conspiracies? Is not the organization
of associations to accomplish the avowed purposes of revolutionary anarchists,
the most fiendish criminal treachery to the government they seek to destroy?
It is a fundamental principle, laid down by all publicists as a self evident
maxim, that the first duty of a government is to defend and maintain its own
existence. Society can not exist without laws and officers to enforce them.
It follows that all legitimate means and instrumentalities should be used to
suppress anarchism and to put an end to the crimes of anarchists and to suppress
them. Active and strong public opinion against these public enemies can do and
accomplish much towards their effectual suppression. But the enactment of wholesome
laws and their execution with a firm hand can aid in carrying out the determination
of the people, not only to prevent the growth of anarchism, but to finally exterminate
it, at least in this land of liberty and law. While all men desire liberty,
none but the strongest can realize that desire but for the restraining hand
of law. Governments are instituted partly because some men will injure their
fellows, and the common desire for liberty can not be gratified without the
common safe guard [sic] of law. And every American should ever bear in mind
that liberty and law are not only intimately connected, but that liberty is
the creature of law essentially different from that authorized licentiousness
that trespasses upon the rights of others. Law is the offspring of high civiliza-
[135][136] tion. It is an idea which the savage
never can understand. And liberty, be it remembered, exists in proportion to
the wholesome restraint of law. Anarchy would result in and be succeeded by
absolute despotism. The doctrine that the universe is governed by law, the very
least as feeling her care, and the greatest as not exempted from her power,
is no mere abstract speculation which men may hold or reject, and be none the
better or worse for holding or rejecting it. No; it is a doctrine fraught with
the most momentous consequences in all the relations of human life. Law is not
something arbitrary; it is a function of reason, and a great part of civilization.
If they could do so, revolutionary anarchists would dethrone the Supreme Ruler
of the Universe, and enthrone anarchy in his stead.
Statutes should be enacted suppressing the promulgation
and advocacy by revolutionary anarchists of their teachings. Meetings and parades
by them should be prohibited. Membership in any of their associations or organizations
should be punished. From accounts of the transactions at many of the anarchistic
meetings some of their transactions constitute breaches of the peace. Inciting
others to commit crime is a breach of the peace and makes participants amenable
to the penalties of an unlawful assembly. The penalties now provided are insufficient
for breaches of the peace committed by anarchists. Some years ago an experiment
was tried in the city of Philadelphia of breaking up gangs of anarchists by
sending them to jail for the brief period that the law in force allowed. Half
a dozen of them were placed on trial before Judge Michael Arnold, and were convicted
of the offense of “conspiring to destroy government, abolish courts of justice,
and subvert the well-being of society.” But the extreme penalty that could be
imposed upon the culprits was six months imprisonment and that simply sufficed
to confirm them in their antagonism to established authority without deterring
them from indulging in further conspiracies for its overthrow. This fact shows
that existing legislation is inadequate, and that such crimes as these culprits
were convicted of, should be made a felony, rather than a mere misdemeanor.
Such anarchists renounce all the obligations of citizenship. Now, no man can
be in a community and out of it at one and the same time. No man should enjoy
the rights of citizenship which he has deliberately renounced. Have not the
people the right to enact that any man who publicly and expressly advocates
a violent attack upon our whole civil and political institutions, by murdering
their lawfully chosen representatives, or otherwise, thereby forfeits the privileges
and protection of the government he would destroy? In some instances the moral
turpitude of the instigator is greater than that of him by whose hand the murderous
assault is made. Every man who lives under the government of the United States
must be taught and made to understand that his rights and privileges are absolutely
dependent on its preservation.
A murderous assault upon the president of of [sic]
the United States and the instigation of such an assault, should be made felonies
punishable by the highest penalty known to the law. In view of the exceptional
nature and the gravity and enormity of these crimes, injuriously affecting many
millions of people, such penalty would be neither cruel nor unusual, within
the meaning of the constitution. While such punishment will not deter all men
from committing these crimes, it may in some degree check their commission.
So far as anarchists can be prevented from coming
into the country, they should, of course, be excluded, and the laws should be
amended so as to render their exclusion as certain as possible. A bill is now
pending in Congress providing for the creation of a National Bureau of Criminal
Identification in Washington, to operate as a clearing-house for all police
information that may be communicated to it by those charged with the enforcement
of the criminal laws in foreign countries, in our own counties, towns and cities.
This bureau is to collect criminal information and disseminate it. Information
concerning anarchists throughout the country would thus be exchanged by chiefs
of police and other officials who would thus be kept informed of their movements.
This bill is endorsed by the attorney general and the chiefs of police associations
of the United States and Canada. Its passage would bring about closer relations
between the police authorities of this and foreign countries, and an exchange
of all information touching anarchists and other criminals.
The suggestion that all anarchists now residing
in this country be expelled therefrom presents a complicated problem, which
would require the study of the laws of foreign countries and the solution of
novel, difficult and very important constitutional questions.
Legislation against anarchists should be so deliberately
enacted and be so plain that it will place no restrictions upon the liberties
of law-abiding and law-respecting citizens. But the plea of free speech and
of a free press should no longer be used as a shield to protect what is really
nothing but a most dangerous and heinous conspiracy and organization to destroy
the government of the United States and of all other nations, and to wreck society
itself.
Respectfully submitted,
(Signed.) R. A. Harrison, Geo. K. Nash, H. J. Booth, J. T. Holmes, Selwyn N. Owen, E. L. Taylor, Chas. E. Burr, D. K. Watson, E. P. Evans, Paul Jones.
——————————
After the reading of the Memorial which was
adopted unanimously by a rising vote and after some remarks by Gen. Carrigan,
Governor [136][137] Nash arose and addressed the
association as follows:
“Mr. President and Gentlemen: It is a privilege
which I esteem most highly to be permitted to join with my fellow members of
the bar of Franklin county [sic] in doing honor to the greatest and most patriotic
president the United States ever had.
“It is proper that we should do so because the
bar of Ohio furnished this man to our country. We all mourn his loss most deeply.
We miss him as a friend; we miss him as a president and the state and nation
have done all the honor they could in laying the remains away to rest in his
beloved city of Canton.
“We ought to be thankful that he has left behind
him a noble life, which will forever be remembered by the American people. It
will be a lesson to all generations to come of the patriotism of a noble man.
The whole life of William McKinley was devoted to the service of his country.
When as a private soldier he trudged over the national pike from Columbus to
Camp Chase carrying his musket upon his shoulder, he began to teach us that
lesson of patriotism. Every act of his during the days of war front 1861 to
1865 ought to inspire the young men of this country to devote themselves to
the nation which he loved so well. When he returned home as other soldiers did,
he prepared himself for the bar, was admitted and during that short period he
showed himself as a man who would make an eminent lawyer.
“But his love of country called his footsteps
in another direction. He became a member of the congress of the United States.
In that great body he was inspired by the same patriotism which moved him from
1861 to 1865; his every act, his every thought, all his work was for the benefit
of the country which he loved so well. Then he became governor of our beloved
sate. As such governor most of us here present knew him personally and learned
to love him. We loved him because he was a faithful official; because he was
upright and honest and because his every thought was for the benefit of the
state which he governed.
“The people of the United States learned to know
William McKinley as we knew him and called him to be president of this great
country of ours. He seems to have been called just at the right moment, as Lincoln
was. He was called just as this country was engaged in war with the foreign
power. The duties which were thrust upon him were irksome; they were exacting,
but the patriotism of William McKinley caused him to discharge every duty in
the most faithful manner. Victory soon came for this great country of ours,
a victory which had been planned for by William McKinley; our armies and our
navies were guided by his hand, and it was his faithful heart that sustained
our flag in every conflict. Complete victory was achieved; a new and great work
was undertaken for the nation. His plans for the greatness and future growth
of our nation had been unfolded, and just then God called him home. In this
life which I have briefly narrated is a monument to the glory of William McKinley
more lasting than any that can be framed or built by the hand of man. It will
be a lesson which will be studied by the future young men of this country for
all time. It will teach them to love their country, to love their flag and to
cause them to ward off danger from this republic whenever it may approach. I
thank you.”