Publication information |
Source: Commercial Tribune Source type: newspaper Document type: editorial Document title: “Emma Goldman and Cartoons” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Cincinnati, Ohio Date of publication: 12 September 1901 Volume number: 6 Issue number: 90 Pagination: 4 |
Citation |
“Emma Goldman and Cartoons.” Commercial Tribune 12 Sept. 1901 v6n90: p. 4. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
Emma Goldman (interrogation); Marcus Hanna; Emma Goldman; William McKinley (criticism); William McKinley (political character); McKinley assassination (personal response: anarchists); yellow journalism (role in the assassination); cartoons; McKinley assassination (personal response); Emma Goldman (impact on Czolgosz). |
Named persons |
Leon Czolgosz; Emma Goldman; Marcus Hanna; William McKinley. |
Document |
Emma Goldman and Cartoons
EMMA GOLDMAN, interviewed by the police authorities at Chicago, last Tuesday, said:
Mark Hanna has been the ruler of this country, not McKinley. McKinley has been the most insignificant ruler that this country has ever had. He has neither wit nor intelligence, but has been a tool in the hands of Mark Hanna. Other Presidents have had a heart, or something, but this poor fellow—God forgive him, since he knows nothing—is a tool in the hands of the wealthy, and it seems very remarkable for Mark Hanna to say that he was notified of a plot for his assassination. I think McKinley too insignificant for such a thing.
Precisely as Emma Goldman described her infamous
idea of President McKinley have the yellow journals described him in their political
cartoons day after day, until the predisposed minds and hearts of the anarchistic
crew that has found lodgment on American soil—a foul and slimy thing crawling
upon the bosom of a fair land—have been so wrought up to belief in the tyranny
and unworthiness of the President that lots were drawn for his murder and the
lot fell upon Czolgosz.
There can be no mistaking the source of inspiration
of Emma Goldman—and there can be no mistaking the source of inspiration of Czolgosz.
That she drew hers from the political cartoon is manifest from her statements
to the Chicago police. That Czolgosz drew his from her is manifest by his own
admissions at Buffalo. The attempted murder of President McKinley is directly
traceable through Emma Goldman and Leon Czolgosz to the incendiary political
cartoons, first, in the paper which conceived them, and, second, in the papers
which reproduced them.
Anarchy has no place in America, and neither has
the cartoon which incites the anarchist to murder.