Publication information |
Source: Buffalo Morning Express Source type: newspaper Document type: article Document title: “Saw the Assassin Die” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Buffalo, New York Date of publication: 30 October 1901 Volume number: 56 Issue number: 248 Pagination: 7 |
Citation |
“Saw the Assassin Die.” Buffalo Morning Express 30 Oct. 1901 v56n248: p. 7. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
Leon Czolgosz (execution: witnesses); Grosvenor R. Trowbridge; Charles R. Huntley; Samuel Caldwell; Grosvenor R. Trowbridge (public statements); Leon Czolgosz (execution: personal response); Leon Czolgosz (execution); Leon Czolgosz; Leon Czolgosz (last words); J. Warren Mead; Edwin F. Davis; Carlos F. MacDonald; John Gerin. |
Named persons |
Samuel Caldwell; Leon Czolgosz; Edwin F. Davis; Henry Oliver Ely; John Gerin; William A. Howe [identified as Hower below]; Charles R. Huntley; Carlos F. MacDonald; J. Warren Mead; Edward A. Spitzka [middle initial wrong below]; Grosvenor R. Trowbridge. |
Notes |
In accordance with the original source, the phrase “death chair” appears below both with and without a hyphen. |
Document |
Saw the Assassin Die
Dr. Trowbridge Describes the Electrocution Scene.
CZOLGOSZ FULL OF FEAR
PHYSICIAN HEARD LAST WORDS DISTINCTLY—DOES NOT
WISH TO SEE ANOTHER EXECUTION.
Dr. Grosvenor R. Trowbridge was one of the three
Buffalo men who were on the jury of witnesses to Czolgosz’s death. The others
were Charles R. Huntley, general manager of the Buffalo General Electric Company,
and Sheriff Samuel Caldwell. Dr. Trowbridge returned from Auburn at 6 o’clock
last evening. When seen at his home by an Express reporter and questioned as
to what he saw and the impressions he received, he said:
“I had never before seen an electrocution and
I never wish to see another. I would not care to; in fact, I would not witness
an execution where there was the slightest room for doubt as to the guilt of
the convicted man. I was cocksure that Czolgosz was guilty, so I had no compunction
on that score.
“As we were admitted to the death chamber ,there
[sic] was haste on the part of some of the witnesses to get back seats. There
were two rows of chairs facing the electric chair. The chairs were the space
of a chair apart, so that those who sat in the back row looked between those
who sat in front. My chair was in the front row, directly in front of the rubber
platform, which was, perhaps, six feet square, on which the death-chair stood.
“I would not say so positively, but it is my impression
that the assassin was full of fear when he was brought in. I could see his hands
tremble, and I verily believe that were it not for the support of the two big
guards who held him between them, his legs would have given way under him. He
stumbled in getting to the chair, one of his feet tripping on the edge of the
rubber platform. That may have been because he did not see the platform, or
his fear may have had something to do with it. He had a frightened, hunted expression
on his face.
“He said nothing until he was seated in the chair.
Then, while they were strapping him and applying the electrodes, he leaned forward
with his hands on the arms of the chair and, facing the witnesses in front of
him, made his last speech. It was very short. I listened intently and I am sure
of every word he said and the order in which he placed his words. These are
all the words he spoke, and just as he spoke them:
“‘I killed the President for the good of the laboring
people—the good people. I am not sorry for my crime, but I am sorry I can’t
see my father.’
“Then they put on the death mask. I believe had
they waited a moment he would have said more. I saw his lips move as if he had
more to say, just as the mask was put over his face. But I believe from what
I heard in the prison that it was not the desire of the officials to let him
talk at all. Warden Mead told me Czolgosz had ample opportunity to say all he
wanted to say. On Monday night he was asked if he wished to make any final remarks.
Czolgosz replied that he did not wish to speak at that time, but would do so
in the morning. The warden’s belief is that Czolgosz wanted to talk before a
crowd. But the prison officials evidently did not wish him to make a scene.
They did their work quickly and had he not taken advantage of the brief time
it took to strap him and apply the electrodes, he probably would not have had
the chance to say even the few words he said.
“The whole operation of fastening the straps,
puttng [sic] the electrodes in position and dropping the mask took but a few
seconds. Then the warden, stationed close to the doorway of the little room
in which was the switchboard, in which doorway State-Electrician Davis stood,
so that he could handle the switch and watch the man in the chair at the same
time, gave the signal to Mr. Davis and the current was turned on instantly.
Then came the violent convulsions of the muscles, accompanied by the sound of
the straining and creaking of the chair.
“The first current lasted, it seemed to me, but
a few seconds, surely less than half a minute. Then it was turned on again for
about the same length of time. Then Dr. Carlos MacDonald and Dr. Gerin, the
prison physician, who stood beside the chair, leaned over and listened to the
heart for a second or so and pronounced him dead. Then the current was turned
on for the third time. It lasted for about the same length of time as the two
previous currents. Then all physicians present were invited to step up and listen
at the dead man’s breast—for he was dead after the first stroke. Drs. MacDonald
and Gerin first listened, after which Dr. Ely of Binghamton, Dr. Hower of Phelps
and myself listened. The heart had stopped beating.
“I talked with Electrician Davis afterward, and
he explained that when he administered the first shock he put on the full current—some
1,700 or 1,800 volts—immediately and kept it on until the end of the first shock.
The second time he turned the full force at the start, then cut it down gradually.
The third time he started it low and gradually ran it up to the full force.
“It seemed to me that the whole business, from
the time the assassin was led into the death chamber to the time the last shock
was applied, was not much over one minute. The physicians present were invited
to remain and witness the autopsy, which was performed by Dr. MacDonald and
Dr. E. H. Spitzka of New York. I stayed only long enough to see the head measurements
taken. It was not a small head, it was very normal. Czolgosz did not, to me,
look like either a half-witted person or a criminal. I saw much worse looking
faces in the prison and I have seen much less intelligent looking faces right
in our own Polish district in East Buffalo. Though he was not overbright looking,
he appeared to be fairly intelligent.”
Charles R. Huntley was impressed that the doomed
man was quite calm, that what he said he had previously arranged to say, that
he manifested no spirit of bravado, but said the few things as if he felt it
his duty to say them.
Sheriff Caldwell considered that Czolgosz was
a man of great nerve. To him it appeared that the assassin gave no evidence
of fear as he was led to the death chair.
All three of the Buffalo witnesses agree that
the electrocution was perfectly arranged and executed without the slightest
hitch. “It was a credit to the State and the country,” said Dr. Trowbridge.