Publication information |
Source: Buffalo Enquirer Source type: newspaper Document type: article Document title: “People Try Schemes to Gain Entrance” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Buffalo, New York Date of publication: 23 September 1901 Volume number: 58 Issue number: 46 Pagination: 8 |
Citation |
“People Try Schemes to Gain Entrance.” Buffalo Enquirer 23 Sept. 1901 v58n46: p. 8. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
Buffalo, NY (City Hall); Leon Czolgosz (trial: government response); Leon Czolgosz (trial: preparations, plans, etc.); Leon Czolgosz (trial: attendees); Leon Czolgosz (trial: compared with Haymarket trial); Buffalo, NY (City Hall: curiosity seekers); Leon Czolgosz. |
Named persons |
William S. Bull; Leon Czolgosz; Michael Donovan; William F. Fisher; John J. Geary; Patrick H. Kilroy; Michael Regan; John W. Ryan; Albert Solomon; Willard H. Ticknor. |
Document |
People Try Schemes to Gain Entrance
Many Persons Attempt to Fool Police in Order to Reach Court Room.
Never in the history of the City and County Hall,
with the exception of the Sunday on which the dead President lay in state in
that uilding [sic], has the official building of the city and county been so
hedged about and gaurded [sic] by such numbers of patrolmen as it is today.
There are about eighty policemen on duty at the
Hall under the personal command of Inspector Donovan, and city officials, newspapermen,
jurors and lawyers have to run a gauntlet, in which they are challenged three
times before they finally reach the inside of the building.
Ropes are stretched across the walk at each end
of the hall on the Franklin Street side where the first challenge is made. At
the street entrance in front another challenge is exacted and another at the
front entrance of the Hall itself. Outside on the Eagle Street side a half dozen
of the mounted police division, dismounted and with horses tethered within easy
reaching distance, are resting and waiting for orders in case of emergencies.
Police Form Lines.
Inside the building the police form a line stretching
across the hall to the Delaware Avenue entrance, which today is closed and barred.
At the head of the stairs leading from the basement and at the door, which is
the outlet from the tunnel which Czolgosz will have to traverse on his way to
the court room, are groups of patrolmen. The second floor is simply flooded
with police officers.
Signs on the elevators state that no stops will
be made at the second floor, and this morning even the District Attorney had
to walk up to his office on that floor.
City officials had to be identified to gain entrance
and other people who stated that they had business were accompanied by a policeman
to the office designated and as soon as the business was transacted accompanied
back and quietly dismissed into the outer world again.
Some Wanted to Argue Legality.
There were several citizens who were inclined
to put up an argument on the legality of the police shutting the public out
of a public building such as the City Hall, but they got little satisfaction.
One gentleman, well dressed, presented himself
for admission to the building, stating that he wished to make a payment of interest
on a mortgage. He finally had to go to Supt. Bull’s office to get a permit to
pay his interest. Many similar cases were reported, and even J. W. Ryan of the
Corporation Counsel’s office, and Assistant District Attorney Ticknor had their
troubles.
An official who attended the trial of the Anarchists
at Chicago some years ago says that the arrangements for the present trial far
surpass those at Chicago, both in the placing of the police and also in arranging
for the comfort of and convenience of the newspaper men [sic] and spectators.
While many people tried to gain admission in the
early hours of the day the crowd was not as large as might be expected, probably
on account of the announcement made by the papers that none but those having
a permit would be admitted.
Policeman in Basement.
By 10 o’clock the lower floor of the City Hall
was well crowded by clerks and citizens anxious to catch a glimpse of the assassin
as he was led from the basement of the hall to the court room. About 10:15 o’clock
Capt. Regan, Capt. Kilroy and a posse of police disappeared into the basement,
the police shoved the crowds back into either end of the hall, and a minute
after, those below reappeared amid whispered announcements of “Here he comes.”
The criminal was handcuffed to Detectives Solomon
and Geary and was surrounded by policemen. He wore a white soft felt hat and
with his clean shave was hardly recognizable by those who had seen him in court
during his arraignment. He walked with a careless swagger that might denote
abandonment. He did not hold his head erect but he gave no intimation that he
feared the police or the curious crowd that watched him with bated breath. There
was no hissing as had been the case when he was led out from his arraignment.
Police Vigilance Never Relaxed.
Even after the prisoner had been deposited in
the court room by his guards the vigilance of the police on the lower floor
was not relaxed.
The outer door leading to the basement from Church
Street was still locked and the City Hall clerks who have been accustomed to
storing their wheels there sent up a loud wail of protest to Supt. Fisher.
The first paper filed in the County Clerk’s office
this morning was the motice [sic] and order of transfer of Czolgosz’s case from
the County Court to the Supreme Court.