Publication information |
Source: Pensacola Journal Source type: newspaper Document type: article Document title: “Man Who Tried to Save McKinley” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Pensacola, Florida Date of publication: 26 March 1907 Volume number: 10 Issue number: 73 Pagination: 1 |
Citation |
“Man Who Tried to Save McKinley.” Pensacola Journal 26 Mar. 1907 v10n73: p. 1. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
James B. Parker (mental health); James B. Parker; McKinley assassination. |
Named persons |
Leon Czolgosz; William McKinley; James B. Parker. |
Document |
Man Who Tried to Save McKinley
Atlanta Negro, Who Jumped into Limelight, Is Now a Lunatic.
James Parker, the negro who tried to save President
McKinley’s life when Czolgosz fired his deadly shot at Buffalo, has gone raving
crazy, according to a dispatch from Atlantic City to the Atlanta Journal, and
is now in jail at that place. The giant physique of Parker—he is seven feet
tall—made it almost impossible for the police to overpower him at Atlantic City
when his madness began. He will be committed to an asylum, says the dispatch.
Before going to Buffalo, where he almost prevented
the president’s assassination, James Parker lived in Atlanta. For several years
he held a job in the postoffice [sic] and was also a waiter at restaurants.
His chief distinction was his Titanic size. He was broad and muscular in proportion
to his height and of a dark, copper color. Once when he was arrested at Marietta
for having been [in?] a fight, it was necessary to place him in a baggage car
guarded by ten policemen to bring him to Atlanta, so near resistless were his
efforts to escape.
Leaving Atlanta Parker went first to Chicago,
then to Washington, to New York and finally to Buffalo, at the time of the exposition.
On the day of McKinley’s appearance Parker was in line waiting to shake hands
with the president and was only a foot or two away from the president just as
Czolgosz stepped from the crowd and fired. Parker sprang upon the assassin before
the secret service men realized what had happened, and held him fast, despite
the foreigner’s struggle to escape, until officers arrived.
Though Parker never got credit for this work he
afterwards went over the country delivering lectures on the incident and was
heard by big negro audiences. Whether his insanity is permanent the dispatch
from Atlantic City does not state.