Tells His Story in a Modest Way
“I Only Did What Was My Duty,” Says James B. Parker—
“I Leave It All to the Fair Minds of the People.”
Rochester, Sept. 23.—“Big Jim” Parker,
the colored man who was near President McKinley at the time of the
shooting and who is credit [sic] by some with striking Czolgosz
and preventing the third shot, and by others robbed of the credit
for the act, made a speech in Fitzhugh Hall yesterday. It was a
McKinley memorial meeting and everybody wanted to hear “Big Jim.”
He wore a broad band of black on his left sleeve. He was introduced
as “James B. Parker, of Atlanta, Ga.”
Parker spoke rather modestly and in
a low tone. He could not be heard readily at first, but regained
his composure after he had said a few sentences. The big fellow
had on black trousers and a check sack coat and vest. The top button
of his vest was missing. This, the man who introduced him said,
had been sold for $5.00. Besides the proceeds from the sale of this
button, it was said that the only money Parker had received was
$2 from a Democrat in St. Louis. Parker said:
“Not being a speech-maker, I hardly
know how to begin. If I make any bad breaks, forget them. I have
been told that what a colored man does is not appreciated, but I
believe that is not so. I only did what was my duty. I don’t care
for the credit of knocking down the man who killed the President.
I leave it all to the fair minds of the public. If I had not been
there, somebody else would.
“There was such a terrible crowd about
him that it was hard for him to see that there was anybody there
to do him harm. I was jostled along with the rest. While I was in
line the thought came to me that suppose somebody did try to kill
him. I was thinking of Garfield and Harrison (this was a slip on
Parker’s part that he did not rectify), who had been killed. I was
more than anxious to get back to my work, but at the same time I
was crazy to shake his hand. I noticed the man who was to be his
murderer in front of me and tried to get ahead of him, but guards
shoved me back. He knew the President would stop to speak to the
little girl in front of him, and that this opportunity would come.
The President patted the little girl on the head, and the murderer
stepped up. The President saw that the man’s right hand was bandaged,
and he reached for the man’s left hand. Then came two shots just
about like one.
“I jumped forward and struck the man
a terrible lick with my right fist on the nose. He went down. Then
I grabbed for the gun, but missed, and got him by the neck. He tried
to fire again, but a Secret-Service man seized the pistol. I bore
the murderer to the ground. An Exposition guard tore the gun from
the Secret-Service man. I heard somebody shout: ‘I’m not the man;
there’s the man over there.’ That meant that the Exposition guard
had the gun.
“Two Exposition policemen seized the
murderer. He raised himself and a special officer struck him with
his fist in the face and knocked him down again. That is all I remember.”
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