| Publication information | 
| Source: Northwestern Christian Advocate Source type: magazine Document type: article Document title: “M’Kinley Memorial Services” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: 17 September 1902 Volume number: 50 Issue number: 38 Pagination: 6 | 
| Citation | 
| “M’Kinley Memorial Services.” Northwestern Christian Advocate 17 Sept. 1902 v50n38: p. 6. | 
| Transcription | 
| full text | 
| Keywords | 
| McKinley memorial services, first anniversary; McKinley memorial services, first anniversary (Washington, DC); Frank Bristol (public statements); William McKinley; William McKinley (last public address: public response); William McKinley (public statements); William McKinley (religious character); William McKinley (death: religious response). | 
| Named persons | 
| Frank Bristol; Abraham Lincoln; William McKinley; George Washington. | 
| Document | 
  M’Kinley Memorial Services
      Services in memory of Mr. McKinley were held 
  in churches throughout the land last Sunday, which was the anniversary of his 
  death. One of the most notable of these was that held in Metropolitan Methodist 
  church, Washington, D. C., of which the lamented president was a member. The 
  pastor, Rev. Dr. Frank M. Bristol, took for his text the words: “The memory 
  of the just is blessed.” In his tribute to the late president he said: “William 
  McKinley, like George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, grows in our esteem, our 
  patriotic affection and our national pride. Intellectually and morally, in genius 
  and in character, he was worthy of the honor we paid him in his life and of 
  the reverence with which we cherish his memory since his death.” Attention was 
  particularly called in some of the memorial addresses to the last address delivered 
  by Mr. McKinley before his assassination and to his closing words, which should 
  be written upon the hearts and memories of the American people: “Let us ever 
  remember that our interest is in concord, not conflict; and that our real eminence 
  is in the victories of peace, not those of war.”
       Few presidents enjoyed the affection of the people 
  more than did Mr. McKinley in his lifetime, but the passage of time will increase 
  that respect; while the revelation of his Christian character made during his 
  last hours will cause him to be reverenced as perhaps no other president has 
  ever been. Services in his memory will be of a strictly religious character, 
  thus continually from year to year calling the attention of the world to the 
  fact that it was his Christian faith and character that especially distinguished 
  him among the great statesmen of his time.