Publication information |
Source: Bridgeport Herald Source type: newspaper Document type: article Document title: “Misery and Poverty Must Have Caused Tragedy” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Bridgeport, Connecticut Date of publication: 8 September 1901 Volume number: 9 Issue number: 570 Pagination: 1 |
Citation |
“Misery and Poverty Must Have Caused Tragedy.” Bridgeport Herald 8 Sept. 1901 v9n570: p. 1. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (personal response: socialists); Eugene V. Debs (public statements); McKinley assassination (opinions, theories, etc.); society (impact on Czolgosz); society (criticism); Theodore Roosevelt (assassination attempts). |
Named persons |
Eugene V. Debs; Ulysses S. Grant; Ida McKinley; William McKinley; Theodore Roosevelt. |
Notes |
In the original source the article is accompanied, at its outset, with an illustration of a skull. |
Document |
Misery and Poverty Must Have Caused Tragedy
This Is the Opinion of Socialist Eugene V. Debs. Says Anarchist
Did Not
Shoot McKinley Because He Was McKinley, but for the Purpose
of Furnishing Solace to His Own Aching Heart.
ROOSEVELT WOULD NOT BE ASSASSINATED
(Special to the Herald.)
TERRE HAUTE, IND., Sept. 7.—EUGENE
V. DEBS, the socialist, was profoundly grieved when he learned of the attempt
to assassinate President McKinley. “I cannot imagine anything so deplorable,”
said Mr. Debs. “I cannot conceive the motive for an attack on a man so universally
admired as President McKinley. Misery and poverty must have caused it. The deed
was not that of a madman. The method he pursued shows that the method was coolly
and deliberately planned. It is one of the periodical outbreaks of a festering
society. One cannot imagine the mental status of a man so mean, so cowardly,
so brutal as to join in the throng of humanity that was pressing forward to
greet the president and have the murder of the one whose hand he sought to grasp
in his heart. Under pretense of greeting him as an admirer he shot down the
president to give to the world the definition of his own misery. He did not
shoot Mr. McKinley because he was McKinley, it was because he represented the
great American people as their executive and he thought by ending the president’s
life he would give solace to his own aching heart. It is just a chapter in life’s
story. The poor miner is born to his cabin in the throes of death. His wife
falls at his side with the same grief as that felt by Mrs. McKinley, one of
the noblest and best woman [sic] that ever lived. The miner dies and the world
knows nothing of it. The sorrow does not go beyond the circle of his own household
and friends. The world would feel President McKinley’s loss. Yet the sorrow
of his own family could not be more profound than that of the poor miner’s.
“This is an echo of Lattimer and Homestead. Men
are being driven into desperate straits and they cannot fail to make an outcry
to offend the higher realms of society. Ground to a merciless poverty there
cannot fail to be an uprising. That spirit of love for justice cannot be suppressed.
The lower walks of life must and will cry out. Then men who fought for a principlie
[sic] are shot down because they dare to assert their rights, the mutterings
of those oppressed will break into an outcry and destructive action. The oppressed
must have redress and it is just such deplorable outbreaks as this attack on
the president that cowardly seekers after vengeance find solace in. As long
as the world lasts there will be this disgruntled, festering, degrading class
of peace disturbers who believe justice can be obtained only by such acts as
that of yesterday.
“Vice President Roosevelt would not be assassinated.
Strange to say anarchy does not assert itself against a military man, it is
always the man from civic walks that is attacked. True McKinley had a civil
war record but that is forgotten since the Spanish-American war is added to
history. Grant went without bodyguards and was not molested. He was worshipped
as a military hero. Roosevelt could do the same thing without being molested.
“As long as this lasts, however, there will be
mutterings from those who are oppressed, or think they are oppressed and such
murderous attacks as the one on President McKinley would be made by demons who
could find revenge only in blood.”