Tragedy As It Was Seen by Debutante Singer
Miss Greenwood Waiting to Begin in Temple of Music
When Shooting Began.
(Special to the Eagle.)
Hornellsville, N. Y., August [sic]
9—The elusiveness of fate is typified in the experience of Miss
Bessie Greenwood, a young singer of this city, who was to have made
her first public appearance of note last Friday in the Temple of
Music at the Pan-American Exposition and who was just preparing
to sing, when Leon Czolgosz shot the President. The chance that
she had looked forward to for so long slipped from her just as she
was about to take it.
In speaking of the scene at the shooting,
Miss Greenwood says:
“I was only six feet away from the
President, and was just about to sing as the people came up to shake
hands with Mr. McKinley.
“The organ had just played my prelude
when I saw a man with a handkerchief over his hand crowd up to the
President, where he was standing at the lower step leading to the
approach of the organ. This man seemed to crouch down a little and
then I saw the smoke and heard the reports of the revolver. The
President did not fall back, as has been stated, but sat down in
a chair that was near him.”
La Frone Merriman, also of this city,
under whom Miss Greenwood studied and who was to conduct the music
when she was to sing in the Temple of Music, said:
“The reports of the revolver came
together and quicker than you can clasp your hands, much quicker
than I ever before heard the reports of a gun or revolver.”
The people who were to shake hands
with the President came in one door, passed by the organ and went
out another door, so that there would be no stationary crowd.
“After the report of the revolver,
I shall never forget the sight as long as I live. The President
deathly white, sitting in a chair and the dense crowd, which seemed
to surge in from all over, became uncontrollable for a time and
seemed to have lost their heads.”
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