Publication information |
Source: Wilshire’s Magazine Source type: magazine Document type: letter to the editor Document title: none Author(s): Stephens, George H. Date of publication: January 1902 Volume number: none Issue number: 42 Pagination: 52-53 |
Citation |
Stephens, George H. [untitled]. Wilshire’s Magazine Jan. 1902 n42: pp. 52-53. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
George H. Stephens; socialists; socialism; anarchism (personal response); McKinley assassination (sympathizers). |
Named persons |
Leon Czolgosz; William McKinley; George H. Stephens; H. Gaylord Wilshire. |
Notes |
Challenge (see below) is the predecessor to Wilshire’s Magazine,
both being published by H. Gaylord Wilshire. Challenge’s final
issue was published 12 October 1901.
Click here to view H. Gaylord Wilshires’s response to news reports of his being mobbed (as described below). |
Document |
[untitled]
E
P , P ., Oct.
14, 1901.
You will be amused to learn how T
Then came the assassination. When I enentered
[sic] the office that morning all three were looking over the ledger. Parallel
with the startling news stood another flaring column: “Effects upon stock market,”
“Money still firm,” etc. The glaring commercialism of the thing drew from me
the remark that money greed is robbing us of all decency, that we watch the
pulse of the money market with even greater interest than we do the sufferers:
that, in fact, we are not above the level of the London merchants, who, between
their sobs for their beloved Queen, petitioned Parliament to shorten the period
of official mourning lest it injure the sale of colored goods.
Whereupon our ex-banker, who got away with only
$109,000 of the people’s savings, forcibly classified me, the editor of T
C , and “all the lot of you” as anarchists,
as much to blame for the assassination as for the steel strike. To the latter,
of course, I assented. But the meaning of his comprehensive ebullition became
clearer when I learned that a quiet “pull” was being “worked” upon McKinley
for a pardon. To escape half [52][53] his sentence,
to dig up his buried loot, to go into business under his son’s name as one of
the “respectability,” who but an envious anarchist inspired by T
C and its ilk could frustrate such a laudable
ambition as that?
Next came the Record, containing a dispatch
from York, Pa., that H. Gaylord Wilshire, editor of T
C , had attempted to speak there against the
government and was confoundedly mobbed. This was such an unlikely lie (and you
have since shown that you were 500 miles away), I thought I would cut it out
and send it to you as a capitalistic sample of free advertisement, when, lo!
I found it already gone. Never mind, I am only sorry you didn’t get it instead
of the officials here; I might not then have been called up to show cause why
I should not be locked back in my cell as a sympathizer with Czolgosz. Yes,
verily! Of course, I tried to explain that I abominated the anarchists and all
their doings. But it was of no use. In such times nothing explains. It was sufficient
that I confessed myself a convert to that political party which alone can ever
reduce anarchy and crime. So the bars were put up. Capitalism can turn its key
upon us, but never upon justice, our long-deferred but eternal hope. Sincerely,
G
. H. S .