Publication information |
Source: Buffalo Sunday Times Source type: newspaper Document type: article Document title: “Police Didn’t Know the Great Men of Buffalo” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Buffalo, New York Date of publication: 29 September 1901 Volume number: 44 Issue number: 55 Part/Section: 2 Pagination: [15] |
Citation |
“Police Didn’t Know the Great Men of Buffalo.” Buffalo Sunday Times 29 Sept. 1901 v44n55: part 2, p. [15]. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
Buffalo, NY (police department); Buffalo, NY (City Hall); Leon Czolgosz (trial: preparations, plans, etc.); Henry A. Childs; Samuel Caldwell; Samuel M. Welch; John H. Cooper. |
Named persons |
Samuel Caldwell; Henry A. Childs; John H. Cooper; Leon Czolgosz; Samuel M. Welch. |
Notes |
In accordance with the original source the word “bluecoat” is spelled below two different ways. |
Document |
Police Didn’t Know the Great Men of Buffalo
NOTABLES HAD AS MUCH DIFFICULTY AS COMMON FOLK
IN PASSING CITY HALL CORDON.
JUSTICE CHILDS HELD UP THREE TIMES
SHERIFF CALDWELL, GENERAL WELCH AND EVEN
COMMISSIONER COOPER NEW FACES TO THE BLUE COATS.
There were many cases of the police
holding up persons trying to enter the City Hall during the days of the trial
of Czolgosz. Every step was taken to prevent violence against the body of the
assassin. The ropes and the police stopped all who had no business in the building,
and the ropes and the police stopped some who had business in the building.
Justice Childs arrived at the rear door of the
building after spending Sunday at his home in Medina. It was Monday forenoon.
He was told to go around to the front door. At the front of the building he
was held up by the watchful police. He finally got past the outer cordon and
was within the structure. There he was held up again. Explanations were made.
“Don’t you know that man, you blankety blank?
That’s Judge Childs,” and the officer collapsed.
In a few minutes the oldest justice on the Supreme
Court bench in the eighth district, was stopped in the corridor of one of the
upper floors of the building as he was going to the justices’ private room.
Well, justices are human after all, and Justice Childs arrived at his destination
with exclamation points on his face and tongue.
Sheriff Caldwell, Too.
Sheriff Caldwell was about the corridor
on the lower floor of the hall on the second day of the trial. It was at the
hour when Czolgosz was to be taken into the court rom [sic].
“I say, there, you can’t come here,” said a bluecoat.
“Why not?” asked the sheriff. “I guess I can.[”]
“No, orders are that we can let no one through
here.”
“I’m going to, anyway,” but the chief executive
of the county was held up and the officer grabbed him by the shoulder.
“Let him go,” said another officer. “Don’t you
know who that is?[”]
“No.”
“It’s the sheriff.”
“And [sic] the first officer nearly let his rosewood
club wilt in his hand.
Gen. Welch Next.
Gen. Samuel M. Welch, head of the
4th Brigade of the National Guard, wanted to fix up a matter of taxes amounting
to over $5,000 and started for the City Hall Tuesday morning with a bundle of
tax bills under his arm. I suppose it was his dark complexion and his fierce
moustache which made his well-known figure an object of suspicion as to possible
anarchism—though he don’t look a bit like Czolgosz. But he was held up promptly
by the police and his bundle of tax bills examined before he could enter the
building.
Police Commissioner John H. Cooper showed up one
day. And thereby hangs a tale—a tale of a policeman who has not been up on charges
before the commissioners, else he would have known Commissioner Cooper. But
he didn’t and Cooper was stopped to find out what business he had in the building.
It would be unfair to the officer to give publicity to his name. Let it rather
be remembered, after all, the work done so thoroughly during the trying times
following the shooting of the President, that there was one member of the magnificent
police force who had not been up on charges.