Publication information |
Source: Philadelphia Record Source type: newspaper Document type: article Document title: “In M’Kinley’s Pockets” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Date of publication: 10 September 1901 Volume number: none Issue number: 10782 Pagination: 6 |
Citation |
“In M’Kinley’s Pockets.” Philadelphia Record 10 Sept. 1901 n10782: p. 6. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
William McKinley. |
Named persons |
Ulysses S. Grant. |
Document |
In M’Kinley’s Pockets
Three Knives, Some Money and No Clew to His Identity.
Buffalo, N. Y., Sept. 9.—The President’s clothes,
which were removed at the Exposition Hospital, have been sent to the Milburn
residence, where the pockets were emptied. In his right-hand trousers pocket
was $1.80 in currency. With these coins was a small silver nugget, well worn,
as if the President had carried it for a pocket-piece for a long time. Three
small penknives, pearl-handled, were in the pockets of his trousers. Evidently
they were gifts that he prized, and was in the habit of carrying all three of
them. They were simple knives, with no ornamentation. Another battered coin,
presumably a pocket-piece, was in the left-hand pocket.
The President’s wallet is a well-worn black leather
one, about four inches by five and a half inches in size. It was not marked
with his name or other identification. In this wallet were some bills, amounting
to $45. A number of cards, which evidently had rested in the wallet for some
time, were in one of the compartments. They were not examined.
In a vest pocket was a silver shell lead pencil.
Three cigars were found. They were not the black perfectos which the President
likes, but a short size, and were recognized as some that had been given to
him at Niagara Falls that day. On two of them he had chewed, much as General
Grant used a cigar. The other he had not touched. The President’s watch was
an open-faced gold-case American-made timekeeper. Attached to it was the gold
chain which the President always wore. No letters, telegrams or papers were
found. There was not on the President’s person a single clew to his identity,
unless it was to be found in the cards in his wallet.