Publication information |
Source: Camden Daily Courier Source type: newspaper Document type: article Document title: “‘M’Kinley Still Is President’” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Camden, New Jersey Date of publication: 19 September 1901 Volume number: 20 Issue number: 95 Pagination: 1 |
Citation |
“‘M’Kinley Still Is President.’” Camden Daily Courier 19 Sept. 1901 v20n95: p. 1. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
William McKinley (death: personal response); Theodore Roosevelt; Theodore Roosevelt (at Canton, OH); Theodore Roosevelt (protection); Harter residence; Secret Service (protecting Roosevelt); George F. Foster. |
Named persons |
George B. Cortelyou; George F. Foster; William McKinley; Theodore Roosevelt; Elihu Root. |
Document |
“M’Kinley Still Is President”
So Spoke Theodore Roosevelt to the Officer of His Guard.
Canton, O., Sept. 19.—“In the hearts of those
of us who loved him, Wm. McKinley is still President of the United States. Until
he is laid to rest, I wish none of the Presidential honors to be paid to me.”
So spoke President Roosevelt to the officer of his guard, who had brought his
detail to a present arms as the new President approached. His voice choked with
emotion as he talked and his lips trembled.
It would be hard for the President to move ten
feet without stumbling upon at least one soldier, and he has not moved a foot
on this trip that a secret service officer has not been at his heels. As soon
as he arrived in Canton yesterday he notified the reception committee that he
desired to remain in comparative seclusion during his stay. So when the body
had been placed in state, he was driven to the Harter home, a brick mansion
resting away back in a shaded grove. He had scarcely entered the house when
a detail of eighty men from the First regiment came up the street on the double
quick. They were deployed, counted off, and in charge of sergeants and corporals,
sent flying in different directions around the house. In ten minutes four different
lines of sentries were pacing swiftly up and down around the Harter house. The
ugly looking sword bayonette [sic] glistened on the end of their rifles, and
in each man’s belt were twenty business-like ball cartridges.
Outside the soldiers might be noticed a score
or more quiet, inoffensive looking men, who walked carelessly around mingled
with the crowd and appeared to be mere curiosity seekers, but let anyone at
all suspicious in clothes or manner come near and the quiet citizen began to
get busy, and the center of their attraction seemed to be the suspicious looking
man. They were with Secretary Cortelyou.
In the afternoon Mr. Roosevelt went for a stroll
around the grounds and he went at such a pace that big secret service officer
Foster was well heated trying to keep pace with him. It was on this stroll that
an officer turned out the guard and Roosevelt objected. The President dined
with Secretary Root and others at 8 p. m., and retired early to be prepared
for the trying ordeal to-day.