How the President Is Guarded
T precautions
taken to protect the person of the chief magistrate from bodily
injury have in the case of no chief executive been anything like
as elaborate as the safeguards which surround the most democratic
European sovereign, and in the case of President McKinley the means
adopted for precautionary purposes have, by his own express wish,
been modified as much as possible. It may be safely said that no
previous President has so exposed himself to possible harm. During
the five years of his tenancy of the White House President McKinley
has gone driving almost every day, and very frequently he and Mrs.
McKinley have gone unattended, for long rides in the country near
Washington. Finally, the President’s love for walking has proven
a great and constant source of uneasiness to many of his friends
and to the Secret Service officials who consider themselves responsible
for his welfare. At wholly unexpected times he has gone out alone
for long strolls in the White House grounds and the adjacent streets,
and, worse still, he has persistently indulged in an early-morning
promenade at an hour when few pedestrians are stirring.
Only two Presidents—Lincoln and Cleveland—exercised
unusual precautions to prevent assassination. In the case of Lincoln
the great civil strife raging during his incumbency made it entirely
natural that soldiers should be stationed as guards at the White
House, but for all that he several times placed his life in jeopardy
by seemingly rash acts. President Cleveland admittedly feared assassination,
and apparently there was some ground for his uneasiness, since on
one occasion during his administration a man suspected of intending
to harm the chief executive actually gained admission to the White
House.
When Cleveland was in office there
was existent no regulation providing for the succession of a member
of the Cabinet in the event of the death of both the President and
Vice-President, and after the demise of Vice-President Hendricks,
President Cleveland redoubled his efforts for self-protection, even
abandoning several projected trips to various parts of the country.
During his residence at the White House, President Cleveland never
went driving that his carriage was not closely followed by a vehicle
containing several detectives, and very frequently a guard on horseback
rode beside the President’s carriage. When he went on a duck-shooting
excursion down the Potomac he journeyed on a lighthouse tender manned
by half a hundred marines, and a year or so before he retired from
office he had a sentry-box erected on the front lawn, but this President
McKinley ordered removed soon after his inauguration.
Profiting by the lesson taught by
the assassination of President Garfield, the officials arrange for
the careful patrol of the railroad station from which the President
is to depart, and this same precaution is taken at every station
where the train stops and at every terminal where the Presidential
party debark during a tour, the railroad officials co-operating
with the Secret Service men in the undertaking. A watchfulness equally
complete is maintained while the train bearing the President is
speeding from place to place. Track-walkers and section gangs inspect
every bridge and tunnel at the latest possible moment before the
passage of the train, and a locomotive precedes the Presidential
train on a running schedule only a few minutes in advance of that
of the “special”—so brief an interval, in fact, that it would be
literally impossible for any persons to loosen a rail or place obstructions
on the track during the few minutes intervening before the passage
of the Presidential train.
A brief outline of the precautions
taken prior to the journeys of President McKinley to the Pacific
coast and to Buffalo will indicate how intricate is the protective
system called into action. Major Sylvester, the chief of police
of Washington, and also president of the Police Association of the
United States and Canada, wrote in advance to the chief of police
of every city to be visited, apprising him of the time of arrival
of the chief executive, and giving advice as to the best manner
in which to deploy officers and detectives to protect the President.
Simultaneously the Secret Service men in every large city to be
visited were instructed to place themselves in readiness to co-operate
with the Secret Service men accompanying the Presidential party,
and, finally, local detectives in each city are on such an occasion
detailed to aid the Secret Service men in placing all suspicious
characters under surveillance.
As a rule, there has never been more
than one Secret Service man with President McKinley when he was
making a journey, although, as explained, this man has been joined
by one or two other members of the same organization in each large
city. The reason for limiting the guard to a single operative upon
ordinary occasions was found in President McKinley’s well-known
dislike for obtrusive protective measures. President McKinley frequently
recognized the Secret Service men who remained persistently at his
side, but he has made no objection to their presence, as he was
well aware that were these men removed others would be speedily
detailed in their places.
President McKinley’s closest attendant
among the Secret Service men is George Foster, an experienced operative
connected with the Secret Service Bureau at Washington, who was
with the President when he was attacked at Buffalo. Foster has virtually
served as the bodyguard of the chief executive for several years
past. He accompanied President McKinley on his California tour,
and was stationed at Canton during the chief magistrate’s vacation
interval at his old home at Canton. Whenever the President went
through a crowd, or held a reception, he was right at his elbow
all the time.
Another feature of a revised form
of procedure now in process of formulation is to always place the
President above the masses on public occasions—out of reach of any
assailant, as it were. In parades it is planned to invariably provide
plenty of room between the President’s carriage and the mass of
the people. Finally, in the case of public receptions, in the future
there will be provided a sufficient number of detectives and Secret
Service men to form a long lane, through which each person who wishes
to greet the President must pass, and it is believed that with such
an inspection it will be impossible for any intending assassin to
employ a ruse, such as concealing a revolver in a handkerchief,
as was done at Buffalo.
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