| Publication information | 
| Source: National Magazine Source type: magazine Document type: editorial column Document title: “Affairs at Washington” Author(s): Chapple, Joe Mitchell Date of publication: February 1903 Volume number: 17 Issue number: 5 Pagination: 559-74 (excerpt below includes only pages 566 and 568) | 
| Citation | 
| Chapple, Joe Mitchell. “Affairs at Washington.” National Magazine Feb. 1903 v17n5: pp. 559-74. | 
| Transcription | 
| excerpt | 
| Keywords | 
| Nehemiah G. Ordway; William McKinley (compared with Abraham Lincoln); Nehemiah G. Ordway (public statements). | 
| Named persons | 
| Abraham Lincoln; William McKinley; Nehemiah G. Ordway. | 
| Document | 
  Affairs at Washington [excerpt]
[. . .] Ex-Governor Ordway was sergeant-at-arms in the house of represen- [566][568] 
  tatives at the time of Lincoln’s death, and had charge of the funeral train 
  which bore the remains from Washington to Springfield, Illinois. Governor Ordway 
  tells some interesting incidents concerning that trip. His close observations 
  of Lincoln during those days made it seem to him that Lincoln was inspired in 
  his decisions and his unfailing good nature and patience under the most trying 
  circumstances.
       He says McKinley always reminded him of Lincoln, 
  and his tragic death seemed one of those curious cycles of history which cannot 
  be explained.
       “Each had in him the elements that made men love 
  them as devotedly and tenderly as they would a woman, and they seemed inspired 
  by an intuition direct, positive and firm and yet never offensive.”
       Governor Ordway pointed out as we stood on the 
  corner near the White House, a spot where Lincoln used to love to linger in 
  the long summer twilights and all alone—“just thinking,” as he used smilingly 
  to remark when interrupted. Curiously enough, this same spot under the identical 
  trees was a favorite haunt of President McKinley during the trying days of the 
  Spanish war.