What the Public Might Think [excerpt]
LESS than five months ago the city was full of bustle and excitement
on account of the expected visit of President McKinley. Nothing
in the way of former receptions, accorded distinguished visitors,
was to be even a prelude to the extent and magnificence of the honors
to be paid him. The sudden and severe illness of his beloved wife
changed the entire programme, and Worcester had to give up all the
prospects of visit, reception and accompanying glories, though each
and every one confidently expected that ere his administration was
ended, his well-known friendship for Senator Hoar would eventuate
in a journey hither at some date, possibly in 1902, but one [100][101]
moment, a sad one in our national history, changed it all, and we
shall never meet McKinley here.
INSTEAD, a vast audience gathered on the 19th inst. to hear words
of eulogy pronounced in Mechanics Hall. While the city mourned sincerely
the deaths of Lincoln and Gerfield, seemingly there had not been
in the past such a universal turning to solemn reflections as when
we learned that our president was dead. While pulpit and platform
rang with praises of the dead and denunciations of his slayer, it
was not till the final day that the culmination was reached. In
the light of experience, it is easy to see how the management might
have been very much better. Ten thousand people wished admittance
to Mechanics Hall, four times the number that could be accommodated.
An imposing array of speakers was listed for the occasion, hence
the intense anxiety for admission. For hours before the opening
of the doors a dense mass of humanity surged about the main entrance,
filling the streets and occasioning intense suffering to many in
the throng. Women fainted, and those who did not bore away with
them in rent garments and bruised bodies lasting memorials of the
day. Then the exercises themselves were too long. Not till five
o’clock were they ended. Suppose that every hall in the centre of
the city, viz., Washburn, Horticultural and Association, had been
opened, that Senator Hoar, Dr. Conaty, President Hall and John R.
Thayer had been distributed, or, better, had the latter addressed
the thousands who would have gathered around the bandstand on the
Common, all might have listened; there would have been no unseemly
spectacle of pushing, crowding and shouting, which lent everything
but impressiveness to the occasion. However, in the suspension of
business, in the decorating of windows, in the evident sorrow of
our people, Worcester placed herself in the very van of those who
believe in right, decency and order; law and fair play, the golden
rule and God.
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