Statue of President M’Kinley
Unveiled by Sister of the Martyred President, Miss
Helen McKinley, at Niles, Ohio
FORMER PRESIDENT TAFT PRINCIPAL SPEAKER
In His Tribute to the Departed President, Mr. Taft Told How McKinley
Would
Act Were He Alive Today—Told of Broad Vision—Declared That Our Present
Position in the World War Had Been Foreseen by McKinley and That
He Had
Made Preparations to Meet the Situation.
Niles, Ohio, Oct. 5.—“Were McKinley
alive today, how his patriotic heart, his broad vision, his vibrant
words would be united in supporting the government in its constructive
measures to carry on the great world struggle to victory.”
This was the pronouncement of Former
President William Howard Taft, speaking here today before a throng
of Ohians [sic] at the dedication of the McKinley birthplace
memorial building.
“With what firmness he would reject
all propositions to compromise by proposal of a patched-up peace,”
continued the former president. “The man who saw most clearly when
others were blind to it, the real position of the United States
in the world, would not fail to see that in the present issue no
peace is possible until secured by victory, that no solution is
worthy of our history but a defeat of militarism.
“It is better to fight Germany in
company with the allies than to fight her alone later,” Mr. Taft
declared. He said the United States cannot keep out of world politics.
“Had we been able to stay out of the war, we would have found ourselves
in continued friction with Germany until she thought the opportunity
had come for her to strike. It is better for us, united with England
and France and Russia and Italy, playing our proper part in this
league to force peace, now to defeat the military caste of Germany
that rules her military and foreign policy and end forever the recurring
danger to permanent peace, which power and control involve.”
“We could not keep out of world politics
if we would. That which affects the world affects us. The Monroe
Doctrine is becoming a more serious limitation upon European action
than ever before.”
This was the declaration of Former
President William H. Taft in the principal address here today at
the dedication of the big marble memorial building and monument
erected to the memory of the late President William McKinley, who
was born in this little northeastern Ohio town.
Ohio’s martyred president was given
credit by Ohio’s living ex-president for being “the man who saw
most clearly when others were blind to it, the real position of
the United States in the world.”
“Were McKinley alive today how his
patriotic heart, his broad vision and his vibrant words would be
united in supporting the government in its constructive measures
to carry on the great world struggle to victory,” said the speaker.
“With what firmness he would reject
all propositions to compromise by proposal of a patched-up peace.
He would not fail to see that in the present issue on peace is possible
until secured by victory—that no solution is worthy of our history
but a defeat of militarism.”
“Our present situation is a mere development
of the disclosure of our real situation in the world which McKinley
recognized and made preparation to meet,” continued Mr. Taft.
“McKinley began a new era in the life
of the United States. His successors in office followed him in this.
The contrast between the situation of the country in Washington’s
time, when the policy of isolation was adopted, and our present
position answers every objection to recognizing th epart [sic]
we must play in the family of nations.
“In Washington’s day we were but four
million [sic] of people on the eastern seaboard, five times as far
from Europe as we are today in speed of transportation. Now we have
instant communication of intelligence. We are a continent wide,
with a great Pacific coast. The day of isolation is past. This is
what McKinley saw. This is what has brought us into the war. This
is what has made it necessary for us to win the war as an ally of
the democracies of the world, to make, in President Wilson’s words,
‘the world safe for democracy.’ We encountered the conquering militaristic
spirit of Germany in the Philippines and we found there the English
sympathy which prevented a breach of our relations at that time.
“The itching of the military caste
for expansion by force has now involved all Europe in a vortex of
war and destruction. It has murdered American citizens on the high
seas where they had a right to be, in order to secure Germany the
unembarrassed use of the submarine as a means of conquering England
and France.
“The exigency of Germany and her disregard
of decency and honor and international law have entangled and involved
us, as might have been anticipated, in the war itself. It is well
that it is so, for with Germany successful in this war, had the
United States been able to stay out, we would have found ourselves
in continued friction with Germany until she thought the opportunity
had come for her to strike.”
Miss Helen McKinley, sister of the
martyred president, unveiled the 12-foot statue of President McKinley
which is set in the court of the memorial building. The dedicatory
exercises were in charge of the G. A. R.
Other speakers included Myron T. Herrick,
former ambassador to France; George B. Cortelyou, who was private
secretary to President McKinley; Rev. C. A. Manchester, who was
McKinley’s pastor; Joe Mitchell Chapple of Boston, and Joseph G.
Butler, Jr., Youngstown, steel manufacturer, and president of the
McKinley Birthplace Memorial Association.
Senators Harding and Pomerene and
Philander C. Knox, who had been invited to speak, could not attend
because of work incidental to the closing hours of congress.
|