An Anarchist Shoots the President at the Pan-American Exposition
F
Leon Czolgosz, the assassin, a Polander, whose
home is at Cleveland, announces that he is an anarchist and declares that he
was induced by the teachings of Emma Goldman, the notorious anarchist incendiary
whom New York tolerated altogether too long, to decide that the present form
of government in this country was all wrong. He said he thought the best way
to end it was by the killing of our noble-minded, generous-hearted, loving President.
The dastardly criminal would substitute a government by assassination for a
government by the people. This is the legitimate outcome of our lax immigration
laws, which permit an invasion of anarchists, both men and women, from the slums
of Europe, and an outcome of our equally lax State laws, which tolerate the
murderous declarations of these wretches at public and private meetings. The
cowardly and fiendish assault on our President should result in the prompt reform
of our defective Federal and State legislation on these subjects.
The tragedy occurred about four o’clock on the
afternoon of September 6th, while the President stood upon the slightly elevated
platform of the Temple of Music at the Pan-American Exposition at Buffalo. He
stood at the edge of the dais and was thought to be well guarded by several
United States Secret Service detectives. The President was in a cheerful mood
and was enjoying the hearty evidences of good-will which everywhere met his
gaze. Upon his right stood John G. Milburn of Buffalo, president of the Pan-American
Exposition, chatting with the President, and introducing to him persons of note
who approached. Upon the President’s left stood Mr. Cortelyou.
The Story of an Eye-Witness.
A
“Their palms had hardly touched before I heard
two shots in quick succession. A hush and quiet instantly followed. The President
straightened up for a moment and stepped back five or six feet. Secretary Cortelyou,
who had been standing at his side, burst into tears, and exclaimed, ‘You’re
shot!’ The President murmured, ‘Oh, no, it cannot be!’ But Secretary Cortelyou
and Mr. Milburn had torn open the President’s vest, and the tell-tale blood,
flowing from the wound in the abdomen, revealed the fearful truth. The President
had dropped into a chair and now turned deathly pale. Meanwhile, the other wound
in the breast had been uncovered and both Mr. Milburn and Secretary Cortelyou
were in tears. The President, seeing their emotion, put up his hand and gently
murmured that he was all right, or some reassuring words, and appeared to faint
away.
“The Secret Service men, Foster and Ireland, at
one bound seized the assassin, before the smoke had cleared away, and, in fact,
before the sound of the second shot was heard. The negro, Parker, also turned
instantly and confronted Czolgosz, whose right hand was being tightly held behind
him by the detectives and whose face was thrust forward. Parker, with his clenched
fist, smashed the assassin three times squarely in the face, and was apparently
wild to kill the creature, while all the crowd of artillerymen, policemen, and
others, also set upon the object of their wrath.
“The women in the vast audience were hysterical,
and the men were little less than crazy. The transformation from the scene of
smiles and gladness of a moment before, to the wild, rushing, mighty roar of
an infuriated crowd, was simply awful. The police and military at once set about
the task of clearing the building, which they accomplished with amazing celerity
and good judgment, considering the fact that a crowd of 50,000 at the outside
were pressing into the entrance.[”]
Different Accounts of the Shooting.
A
Accounts differ, too, as to what he said. One
reports that, as he reeled and fell into the arms of Secretary Cortelyou, he
exclaimed, “May God forgive him!” The excitement was so intense that no one
knew what to do, until some one suggested to carry the President behind the
bunting with which the dais was decorated, and seat him on a chair. Some men
tore the benches aside and trampled the bunting down, while Mr. Milburn and
Secretary Cortelyou half carried the President into the passage-way leading
to the stage. The President’s foot caught in the bunting and he stumbled. A
reporter extricated the foot, and the President was carried to a seat, where
a half dozen men fanned him, a woman in the crowd having passed up her fan.
Secretary Cortelyou inquired:
“Do you feel much pain?” The President slipped
his hand into the opening of his shirt front near the heart, and said:
“This wound pains greatly.”
As he withdrew his hand and noticed the blood
on his fingers he looked at it, dropped his hand, and appeared to become faint.
Minister Aspiroz, of Mexico, and others were affected to tears. The former exclaimed,
dramatically, “Oh, my God, Mr. President, are you shot?” The attendants tried
to restrain the excited Mexican, who was about to fall at the President’s feet.
The latter, gasping after each word, replied, “Yes—I—believe—I—am—” and almost
fainted again. Mr. Milburn supported the President’s head, and the wounded man
revived and sat quietly in his chair, his legs spread out on the floor and his
lips clenched firmly, as if awaiting death.
Another report of the exciting incident says that,
after the assassin’s shots, there was a moment’s pause in the great Temple of
Music, and then somebody shrieked, “He’s shot the President!” The crowd surged
toward the President, while others pounced upon the assassin and began to beat
his life out, until the police interfered. Women were falling into hysterics,
and a man shouted, “He’s dead! He’s dead! Oh, my God!” A level-headed policeman
stilled the tumult by crying out in a loud voice, “No, the doctor says he lives,”
which quieted the excitement and checked the riot. This reporter adds that when
the President was shot he fell into the hands of Detective Gerry and coolly
asked him, “Am I shot?” Gerry unbuttoned the President’s vest, and, seeing blood,
replied, “I fear you are, Mr. President.”
A third narrative is still somewhat different.
The narrator recites that the President, after he had been shot, was calm, seemed
to grow taller, and had a look of half reproach and half indignation in his
eyes as he turned and started toward a chair unassisted. Then Secretary Cortelyou
and Mr. Milburn went to his help. Secret Service Agent S. R. Ireland and George
F. Foster had grappled with the assassin, but, quicker than both, was a gigantic
negro, James F. Parker, a waiter in a restaurant in the Plaza, who had been
standing behind Czolgosz, awaiting an opportunity, in joyous expectation, to
shake the President’s hand. He stood there, six feet four inches tall, with
250 pounds of muscular enthusiasm, grinning happily, until he heard the pistol
shots. With one quick shift of his clenched fist he knocked the pistol from
the assassin’s hand. With another he spun the man around like a top, and, with
a third, he broke Czolgosz’s nose. A fourth split the assassin’s lip and knocked
out several teeth, and when the officers tore him away from Parker the latter,
crying like a baby, exclaimed, “Oh, for only ten seconds more!”
The best medical skill was summoned, and within
a brief period several of Buffalo’s best-known practitioners were at the patient’s
side. The President retained the full exercise of his faculties until placed
on the operating table and subjected to an anæsthetic. One bullet had taken
effect in the right breast just below the nipple, causing a comparatively harmless
wound. The other took effect in the abdomen, about five inches below the left
nipple, two inches to the left of the navel, and about on a level with it. When
the President was placed on the operating table he seemed to be suffering little
pain. When he was told that an operation was necessary, he said, “Gentlemen,
do what seems best and necessary.” The attending surgeons were Drs. R. E. Parke,
M. D. Mann, and Edward W. Lee. Dr. Mann made an incision of the abdominal cavity
four inches long and found that the bullet, a thirty-two or a thirty-eight calibre,
had passed entirely through the stomach, permitting the contents of the latter
to be discharged into the abdominal cavity. The two holes in the stomach were
stitched, and the intestines and entire abdominal cavity were thoroughly cleaned
and the incision sewed up. The operation lasted for two and a half hours and
was most serious. This was at 4.30 P. M. At 7.30 the President was removed from
the hospital to the home of his host, John G. Milburn.
Four surgeons carried the stretcher on which the
President lay. His head rested on a pillow and a white sheet concealed all but
his face, which [l]ooked as white as the linen around it. There was not a sound
from the crowd. All heads were bare. It could be seen that the President was
conscious, that his eyes were open, but he made no sign. Dr. Parke, who had
removed his coat and rolled up his shirt sleeves, entered the ambulance and
sat at the President’s head, while Dr. Wasden, of the Marine Hospital, sat at
his feet. General Welch and Colonel Chapin sat with the driver, and the military
guard rode out at the head of the ambulance. Behind the ambulance went two automobiles
carrying Secretary Cortelyou, Secretary Wilson, Mr. Milburn, and Dr. Mann.
Arrived at the Milburn residence, all persons
outside the medical attendants, nurses, and the officials immediately concerned
were excluded, and the task of probing for the bullet, which had lodged in the
abdomen, was begun by Dr. Roswell Parke.
While the wounded President was being borne from
the Exposition to the Milburn residence between rows of onlookers with bared
heads, a far different spectacle was being witnessed along the route of his
assailant’s journey from the scene of his crime to Police Headquarters. The
trip was made so quickly that the prisoner was safely landed within the wide
portals of the police station and the doors closed before any one was aware
of his presence.
Immediately after the President was cared for
at the Exposition hospital, Director-General Buchanan started for the Milburn
residence to notify Mrs. McKinley. He broke the news as gently as possible to
her nieces, the Misses Barber, and the President’s niece, Miss Duncan, and Mrs.
Milburn. Mrs. McKinley had just arisen from a nap and was inquiring the cause
for the President’s delay, as he was expected to return about six o’clock, and
it was then nearly seven. Meanwhile, Dr. Rixey, her physician, had arrived,
accompanied by Colonel Webb Hayes, son of the former President, an intimate
friend of President McKinley. Dr. Rixey gently broke the news to Mrs. McKinley,
who stood the shock most bravely.
Czolgosz, it is said, not only boasts that he
is an anarchist, but admits that he was chosen by an anarchist circle to commit
the terrible deed. It is said that he was connected with the fearful Haymarket
outrage in Chicago, and that he was a rabid exponent of red-flag ideas in Cleveland,
Detroit, Chicago, and other Western cities. He is a German Pole, a blacksmith,
and speaks good English. He weighs 160 pounds, has blue eyes, dark-brown hair,
a dark complexion, regular features, and a prominent nose. A crowd of 50,000
persons gathered about the Buffalo police headquarters would have lynched him
on his arrival at the police station if the authorities had not fought desperately
to restrain the outbreak.