News [excerpt]
A vast concourse of people at the
Buffalo exposition on the 6th were frenzied by an attempt upon the
life of President McKinley. As the shocking news ran over the wires,
the whole country shared for the moment in this feeling. But bulletins
from the president’s bedside soon encouraged hopes of his recovery;
and as hope ripened into confidence, the fury that at first threatened
to possess the people gave way to the sober second thought. Many
newspapers and some policemen, seconded by politicians of a certain
type, have endeavored to keep up the unwholesome excitement; but
upon the whole the public mind is singularly calm.
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The deplorable event occurred in
the Temple of Music at the exposition. President McKinley was holding
a reception. In this music temple were 3,000 persons, while 10,000
were pressing at the entrance for admission. A passage had been
formed by two parallel lines of soldiers, through which the public
passed, shaking the president’s hand as they went by him. In this
line was an obscure man, Leon Czolgosz (Tshawlgosts), who is now
notorious the world over. His right hand was covered with a handkerchief
as if it had been wounded. In fact it concealed a derringer pistol.
Czolgosz came into the president’s vicinity at about four o’clock
in the afternoon. As he reached out with his left hand, apparently
for the purpose of shaking the president’s outstretched right, he
fired upon the president twice, through the handkerchief that concealed
his weapon. One bullet struck the president on the upper portion
of the breast bone. It did not penetrate, but glanced off. The other
penetrated the abdomen, five inches below the left nipple and an
inch and a half to the left of the median line. It passed through
the stomach, and found lodgment in the muscles of the back, where
it still remains and probably always will, the surgeons having decided
to make no effort to extract it.
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The president sank into the arms
of friends and was speedily carried to the emergency hospital, where
distinguished surgeons operated upon him. They opened the body through
the line of the bullet wound, closed the perforation of the front
wall of the stomach with silk stitches, bound and closed the perforation
of the back wall in the same way, and searched without success for
the further course of the bullet. No injury to the intestines or
any other abdominal organ was discovered. Such is the substance
of the public statement made during the evening of the 6th by Mr.
Cortelyou, the secretary to the president. Since then Mr. McKinley’s
condition has steadily improved, and he is now considered out of
danger.
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As the shots reverberated through
the great music hall, a secret service officer, who stood directly
opposite the president, struck Czolgosz, hurling him to the floor,
while another seized the assassin’s hand and took away his pistol.
As Czolgosz fell, a large Negro, the next person in line, threw
himself upon him and would have mangled him to death had he not
been rescued by some of the soldiers. When finally arrested the
assassin gave the name of Nieman (German for no man), and explaining
his crime said he was an anarchist and had done his duty. During
the arrangements to remove him, lynching cries were raised in the
crowd, and the carriage in which he rode was violently attacked
by mobs. But some of the Buffalo police and the detachment of soldiers,
to whom alike special credit is due for their intelligent efforts
at the critical moment to perform their duty in a lawful manner,
succeeded in carrying him safely to police headquarters, where he
is still confined. Czolgosz has proved to be of American birth and
a resident of Cleveland. He is about 27 years of age.
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Immediately after the commission
of Czolgosz’s crime, the police of New York, Chicago, Philadelphia
and other cities became active and sensational, as well as somewhat
lawless, in what they describe as “rounding up anarchists.” They
were especially vigorous in Chicago, where serious charges of corruption
overhang them. Capt. Colleran, with a squad of five officers, went
on the evening of the crime to the house of Abraham Isaak, the publisher
of a communist-anarchist paper, and a friend and disciple of Prince
Krapotkin. The paper is called Free Society. It has come to our
office as an exchange for several months, and has seemed to be a
perfectly legitimate publication, advocating individualistic and
communistic principles of society and government in a reasonable
manner, and in no way encouraging lawless methods. As no lawless
quotations from its columns have yet been given out by the police,
it may be fairly inferred that the paper is not a lawless publication.
Arriving at Mr. Isaak’s house on the evening in question, the police
broke in, and, without a warrant, arrested eight persons besides
himself, including his wife and young daughter. Also without a warrant,
they searched his house and seized his papers. The prisoners were
locked up at the police station and subjected to what is known as
the “sweat box” examination. Warrants for the prisoners’ detention
were obtained on the 7th, and a hearing has been set for the 19th.
The women prisoners have since been unconditionally released; but
the others are still held without the privilege of giving bail,
and upon that ground writs of habeas corpus have been issued in
their behalf, returnable on the 13th.
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At the “sweat box” examination Isaak
told in substance the following story, as reported by the daily
press:
It is possible that I may have
met Czolgosz. There was a man I met July 12, the night Emma
Goldman left Chicago. I had never seen him or spoken to him
before, but he came to me and said his name was Czlosz. I suppose
he spelled it that way, though it might have been Schloss, for
all I know of the spelling. I went to the Rock Island station
to see Miss Goldman depart, and she said to me: “There is a
man there who wants to talk with you.” The man had spoken to
her after her last lecture just before she left our home, and
had come down to the city with her. He took me aside and asked
about our secret meetings. He did not go away with Miss Goldman,
but rode home with me on the elevated train, riding inside while
I stood on the platform. When we got home he came into my house,
remaining about ten minutes. He repeated his questions about
our secret meetings, and wanted to know how to join. He said
he was tired of theory, and was anxious [360][361]
to do something active. He asked me if we would provide him
means. I told him we would help him to get work, but would not
give him money. Then I took him to Esther Wolfson’s lodging-house
and paid for a room for him. I asked him to breakfast, but he
did not come, and I never saw him again. I thought the man was
a spy. He talked too violently. Then his question about secret
societies showed he was not a true anarchist. We have no secret
societies. All our meetings are public. If he had come to breakfast
I would have had my friends there, and would have searched him
thoroughly to see if he was square. We fear spies because there
are lots of them, and they try to stir us up to violence that
we don’t want, in order to betray us. They always talk about
secret societies. I feared the man, and despised him. If he
was as I thought, and as he has turned out to be, if he is the
assassin, he was the kind of a man I wanted nothing to do with.
I did not sympathize with him. I do not believe Czolgosz is
an anarchist, or if he is he is a crazy one. I would not help
him in any way. If he was sane, he took his chances, knew the
penalty and will not ask help. I am an anarchist. I am for a
campaign of education, not of violence, though. Assassination
is not our way. We are fighting the system. If he had assassinated
the czar I would have had sympathy with him. I sympathized with
the man who killed King Humbert. There is tyranny in those countries.
There is tyranny here, but the president is not necessarily
a tyrant. He is like many other men—no better, no worse. Are
our views responsible for this crime? Would you call the republican
party responsible for the assassination of Goebel?
——————————
After Czolgosz, the assassin, had
been secured, he attributed his murderous impulse to a speech he
had heard in Cleveland, delivered three or four months ago, by Emma
Goldman. For this reason efforts to arrest Miss Goldman were promptly
made. They resulted successfully on the 10th, when she was apprehended
in Chicago. When she appeared before the chief of police, Mr. O’Neill,
he offered his hand, but she refused to take it, saying: “If you
were at your home, chief, I would not object to shaking hands with
you, but I can’t shake hands with a police officer officially.”
She also was put through the “sweat box” process. Her statement,
as printed in the Chicago papers, was in substance, so far as it
relates to her views and her possible complicity in Czolgosz’s crime,
as follows:
Czolgosz is not my disciple.
I don’t believe he ever said he got his inspiration to kill
the president from my lectures. “I never talked in favor of
violence. I never advised anyone nor encouraged anyone, even
in a general way, to kill or assassinate anyone. Anarchists
don’t do such things.” If he heard my lecture in Cleveland it
“must have been my lecture of May 6, for I have lectured there
only twice this year. You can get a copy of the lecture and
see for yourself whether it encourages violence. The subject
was ‘Modern Phases of Anarchy,’ and the whole object was to
show that anarchy is a philosophy of life, to be attained practically
by education. It showed how the recent anarchy is all opposed
to violence. That was a great point in the lecture.” I don’t
know Czolgosz at all. I probably saw him the night of July 12,
when I was leaving Chicago. We were having a little supper at
Isaak’s house that evening, when some one came to the door and
asked for Isaak. He was not in, and I was called to the door.
I told the man that we were going to meet Isaak at the railway
station, and that he could go down with us. At the depot I asked
him how he got Isaak’s name. He said he was a subscriber to
Free Society, and that he also knew me. I asked how he knew
me, and he said he had heard me lecture at Cleveland. When Isaak
came I pointed him out to the man, and had no further talk with
him. I did not talk to him five minutes altogether. He did not
go East with me. “I have never seen him since, that I know of.
Certainly I have never talked to him or recognized him again.
I don’t know whether I like his crime or not, for I know nothing
of his psychology—whether he is crazy or not. I have never talked
with him. I can’t say whether he is an anarchist or not. He
may call himself an anarchist, but that does not mean necessarily
that he understands anarchy.”
Interrupted by a detective with the declaration that “anarchy
and murder are all the same,” Miss Goldman vehemently retorted:
“That’s not true. Acts of violence
have nothing to do with the philosophy of anarchy. Violence
is the product of governmental conditions. Government is wholesale
murder. It is not strange that some individuals murder, even
though they are anarchists. . . . The anarchist is a man. If
he is in despair and subject to the conditions that lead to
murder, he will kill and slay, but he does it as a man, not
as an anarchist. The very fact that Czolgosz approached us asking
for help for violence and asking about secret societies, as
Isaak tells us, indicates he was no true anarchist. Anarchists
have no such societies. They have no secrets. They educate.”
Asked if Czolgosz’s crime and its effects meant “the death of
anarchy in this country,” she replied:
“No, no; you can kill all the
anarchists, but you can’t kill their idea. The police are making
anarchists by their acts toward me and the other prisoners.
I was made an anarchist by the treatment of the Haymarket case.
Thousands will be made anarchists by this treatment of us. They
will make more anarchists than all of the lectures of the anarchists
in the country can make. Facts convince.”
To the question, “Was the assassination a good thing?” she answered:
I don’t know whether it was
or not. That is for the man himself to decide.
And specifically asked if she had ever advocated assassination
her response was—
Never. How could I say: “Go and
kill,” when anarchism will not tolerate it, has no secret organizations
and is opposed to murder and violence?
She disclaimed all acquaintance with any of the Buffalo anarchists
whose names have been mentioned in connection with Czolgosz’s crime;
and while telling of having lectured in Paterson, N. J., said she
did not know that group well, as she is ignorant of Italian. Miss
Goldman is 35 years of age. She was born in Russia, the daughter
of a tailor, and came to the United States at the age of 16. She
lectures extensively, but makes her living as the representative
of a supply house the identity of which she refuses to disclose.
Seven years ago she served a term of imprisonment in the Blackwell’s
island penitentiary, New York, on conviction of inciting a riot.
While there she studied medicine and became a trained nurse. The
hearing in Miss Goldman’s case is set for the 19th.
——————————
As a result of Czolgosz’s crime,
some extraordinary doctrines of violence have been preached, and
revolutionary demands for change in the fundamental laws and principles
of republican government have been made. The Philadelphia Press
would apply to anarchists the “rigorous treatment practiced abroad.”
The presiding elder of the Methodist churches of Washington, preaching
in President McKinley’s church on the 8th, said in his sermon that
the crime had almost converted him into “an advocate of lynch law;”
while Dr. T. DeWitt Talmage, preaching on the same day at Ocean
Grove, N. J., [361][362] called forth
applause from 10,000 church goers by saying in his sermon:
I wish the police at Buffalo
who arrested the scoundrel who shot our adored president had
taken the butt of the weapon and dashed the man’s brains out
on the spot.
From Washington on the 8th, Walter Wellman reported that the president’s
cabinet had agreed upon decisive action, which contemplates the
drafting of a bill by the attorney general for submission to congress
next winter making assaults upon the president as near like the
monarchical crime of “lese majesty” as our constitution and form
of government will permit. Congressman Schirm, of Maryland, proposes
a constitutional amendment including conspiracies against the life
of a president in the category of treason; and in this revolutionary
proposal he is seconded by Senator Scott, of West Virginia, Gen.
Harrison Gray Otis, of California, and other prominent men besides
many newspapers.
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