Publication information |
Source: Iowa State Register Source type: newspaper Document type: article Document title: “King Edward’s Sympathy” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Des Moines, Iowa Date of publication: 8 September 1901 Volume number: 46 Issue number: 211 Pagination: 1 |
Citation |
“King Edward’s Sympathy.” Iowa State Register 8 Sept. 1901 v46n211: p. 1. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (international response); Edward VII; Joseph H. Choate (telegrams); Frederick Sleigh Roberts (messages). |
Named persons |
Joseph H. Choate; Edward VII; Ida McKinley; William McKinley; Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice [identified as Lord Lansdowne below]; Frederick Sleigh Roberts. |
Document |
King Edward’s Sympathy
London, Sept. 7.—King Edward has directed the
British charge d’affaires at Washington to express “his majesty’s deepest sympathy
at this dastardly attempt, and to inquire after President McKinley’s condition.”
This message has also been communicated to the United States embassy here. Lord
Lansdowne sent a similar message to the United States government, in behalf
of the British government, and King Edward has telegraphed a direct, personal
message to President McKinley. The dean of Canterbury will offer special prayers
tomorrow for the recovery of President McKinley. All the newspapers comment
on the anarchist’s crime. The greatest sympathy and good will is expressed for
the United States. A most striking tribute to President McKinley is paid by
the Globe, and it is all the more notable, as the paper is not celebrated for
its friendliness to America. The continental newspapers all comment on the crime
in the same sympathetic strain. The Neues Wiener Journal, of Vienna, says: “President
McKinley has perhaps fallen a victim to the gigantic trusts which have developed
so vastly under his aegis, for these trusts have deprived a number of workmen
of their means of subsistence.”
United States Ambassador Choate wired King Edward
at Copenhagen as follows: “I have been much touched by your majesty’s kind message
of deepest sympathy at the dastardly attempt upon the president’s life and will
keep your majesty advised of his condition. The latest accounts are favorable.”
Lord Roberts today sent the following message
to United States Ambassador Choate: “Please convey to President and Mrs. McKinley
on behalf of myself and the British army our profound regret at what has occurred
and our earnest hope that the president’s valuable life might be spared.”