Publication information |
Source: St. John Daily Sun Source type: newspaper Document type: editorial Document title: “The President” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: St. John, Canada Date of publication: 14 September 1901 Volume number: 24 Issue number: 221 Pagination: 4 |
Citation |
“The President.” St. John Daily Sun 14 Sept. 1901 v24n221: p. 4. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (international response); William McKinley (medical care: international response); William McKinley (medical care: compared with other cases); William McKinley (presidential character); McKinley presidency. |
Named persons |
D. Willard Bliss; James A. Garfield; Charles J. Guiteau; Andrew Jackson; Thomas Jefferson; Abraham Lincoln; William McKinley; Presley M. Rixey; George Washington. |
Document |
The President
President McKinley, one of the best
loved of all who held that high office, is dead. Hopeful messages from the bedside,
cheerful, even confident, bulletins from the group of surgeons about him, were
all vain words. The man was dying when the people were rejoicing over his escape.
The nation which gave thanks that the assassin failed to kill has found after
a week of illusion that the wretched creature has done his work too well. If
the murderer in his cell has been told what his shot has accomplished this is
his day of triumph. All that the resources of the commonwealth, the love of
a devoted people, the best surgical skill in America could do; all that the
desires and prayers of good people throughout the world might effect; whatever
force there was in the strength, courage and determination of the President
himself, were matched against the achievement of one miserable man in one fatal
moment. The anarchist has won, and he will probably go to the chair of execution
exulting in his victory.
Some days ago this journal pointed out that the
bulletins sent out by Dr. Rixey and his associates bore a painfully exact resemblance
to those first issued by Dr. Bliss and his fellow surgeons from the sick room
of President Garfield. In this case the change and the end has [sic] come more
suddenly than in the other, and the shock will be the greater. No doubt there
will be criticism of the doctors, as there was of the surgeons who attended
Guiteau’s victim. By the critics it may perhaps be charged that the doctors
did too little to ascertain the nature and effect of the injury as before it
was charged that they did too much. But when the time for a just judgment comes
it will probably be found that these eminent surgeons followed the course that
with the information available was the best known to the science of which they
are among the masters. It is at least fair to assume that much now even with
the delusive bulletins before us.
Mr. McKinley may not be classed in history as
one of the great presidents. He has not been such an imposing personality as
George Washington, who was regarded with veneration rather than love. He had
not the keen and philosophical intellect of Jefferson, but neither had he the
Jeffersonian duplicity. The rude, half-barbaric force of Jackson would be foreign
to the last president. In the nature of things President McKinley cannot fill
so large a place in history as Lincoln, the war president, with his unique character
and singular appropriateness for the work he had to do. But if fortune has not
cast the lot of President McKinley amid such memorable events as those which
Washington and Lincoln saw, he was not chosen for an altogether unimportant
part. In his presidency the United States has entered upon a career of expansion
such as Washington or Lincoln never dreamed of, and the republic has for good
or evil taken her place among the great powers. No longer isolated, unconcerned
what the nations of the old world do, free from the restraints and amenities
which hamper the European powers, she has come out in company. She has given
hostages in the eastern seas, and on her own coasts. She has greatly extended
her assailable frontier. Accepting these international responsibilities and
comradeships, the president has sent his soldiers to fight beside European armies
in China and his plenipotentiaries to sit with European diplomatists in laying
down the law for Pekin. Under this last president the United States has become
the third or fourth naval power in the world, and before long she will be the
second. He organized a standing army several times larger than was ever known
before in time of peace. All this has been done, not without opposition at home,
but with little effective opposition. The president was a large part of these
developments, and yet he did not make himself personally conspicuous. He through
it all maintained in an extraordinary degree the respect of foreign countries,
and to a still more striking extent the affection of his own countrymen. His
popularity as president came from his skill and success, and from the belief
that he was sincere and upright. The personal hold he had on the people was
due to his own hearty, genuine, social nature and his exceeding amiability.
His domestic life presents an ideal picture, which appeals strongly to a people
essentially domestic and home loving.