Publication information |
Source: Evening Times Source type: newspaper Document type: editorial Document title: “The Penalty Paid—Czolgosz Is No More” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Cumberland, Maryland Date of publication: 29 October 1901 Volume number: 38 Issue number: 256 Pagination: 4 |
Citation |
“The Penalty Paid—Czolgosz Is No More.” Evening Times [Cumberland] 29 Oct. 1901 v38n256: p. 4. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
Leon Czolgosz (execution: personal response); Leon Czolgosz (disposal of remains); Leon Czolgosz; McKinley assassination (personal response). |
Named persons |
Leon Czolgosz; William McKinley. |
Document |
The Penalty Paid—Czolgosz Is No More
Leon Czolgosz, the assassin of President William
McKinley, is no more. As the sun hovered over the horizon this morning the deadly
electric current coursed through his miserable body, his soul sped to eternity
and his eyes forever closed to the scenes of this world.
Thus terminates the career of one of the most
ruthless and cold-blooded murderers in the annals of American history.
Whether a place for his immortal spirit has been
prepared—whether his soul has found forgiveness or whether it has been doomed
to perpetual punishment by the Almighty, is not for us to say or know. The high
law of God and man has taken its course sustaining the passage “who sheds man’s
blood through man shall his blood be shed.”
It is fitting that the body of the universally
detested murderer be quicklimed and that his clothes and letters be burned,
thus closing the door upon the horde of morbid relic hunters, leaving no earthly
vestige of the man who usurped Heaven’s authority and plunged the whole nation
into a state of mourning and grief.
The case of Czolgosz is as sad as is [sic] it
is revolting. Here was a man flushing with the blood of youth, enjoying ing
[sic] the benefits of an American education—with the world before him in which
to carve a successful career, becoming madly imbued with the principle of anarchism,
sallies forth and in the heat of the spirit that he was “doing his duty” attacked
and foully murdered the head of the nation, tearing from an effectionate [sic]
wife a devoted husband and from the country a man beloved by the people.
Little did the watchful father or the caring mother
dream of the wretched termination of their fondled offspring and little did
they dream of the disgrace this son brought upon himself and his innocent family.
He passes out of existence ignoble, detested, unpitied and unlamented; the memory
o, [sic] his deed only will stand a [sic] warning to the followers of the red
flag, under which his brand came.