Publication information |
Source: State Source type: newspaper Document type: editorial Document title: “The Shooting of the President” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Columbia, South Carolina Date of publication: 7 September 1901 Volume number: none Issue number: none Pagination: [4] |
Citation |
“The Shooting of the President.” State 7 Sept. 1901: p. [4]. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (personal response); Theodore Roosevelt (criticism); Theodore Roosevelt (assumption of presidency: personal response); Roosevelt presidency (predictions, expectations, etc.); William McKinley (criticism); McKinley presidency (criticism); William McKinley (presidential policies: criticism); William McKinley (political character); William McKinley (recovery: personal response). |
Named persons |
William McKinley; Theodore Roosevelt. |
Notes |
In the original source the page containing the editorial (below) is erroneously designated page 5. This same printing error occurs across several issues of the newspaper. |
Document |
The Shooting of the President
We add our voice to the common chorus of denunciation
which follows the deed of an assassin in attempting the life of President McKinley,
and we deplore the possibility that the wounds received by the chief executive
may prove fatal. Yet we do this more from a constitutional abhorrence of cowardly
and cruel deeds and of a normal human sympathy for the suffering than because
we believe that the person of a president is more sacred than that of any other
man or that the death of William McKinley would be an irreparable loss to his
country.
It is true that if the president should die his
successor would be a man more distinguished for spectacular posturing and reckless
violence of speech than for the qualities which go to make a safe administration—yet
history records many instances wherein the sense of a new and great responsibility
has sobered men as violent of manner as Theodore Roosevelt, and our own national
life reveals various cases in which the most unpromising vice presidents have
secured acceptably the unexpired terms of their fallen chiefs. If President
McKinley should die Roosevelt would succeed him with a realization of the public
distrust of his mental poise, and this of itself should be sufficient to steady
him if he be not irreclaimably “strenuous.” He would probably carry out McKinley’s
policies with greater vigor and less suavity. From this his country might suffer
less than his party.
As a journal of sincere convictions The State
cannot now reverse, even in the presence of the calamity which has befallen
him, the opinions it has expressed of the executive policy of William McKinley.
It has believed, and still believes, that he has done more injury to the cause
and the good name of the great republic than any of the men who preceded him
in the presidential office. His very personal virtues have enabled him the more
effectively to commit what we consider national crimes. His sweetness and suppleness
of disposition have made possible the success of measures which cruelly destroy
American ideals and are stamped upon weaker lands with blood and fire. Under
his administration the United States has become an unclassable government, a
republic-empire, a Janus among nations, wearing two faces. We cannot forget
this even in our indignation at the treacherous blow which has prostrated him
and our sympathy for a sorely stricken man.
It will be a gratification to the country to know
that the attempted assassination was not the work of an American nor prompted
by any difference as to our national policies. That would have been a special
calamity. The deed was done by an anarchist of foreign birth—one of those
mad dogs of civilization that range two worlds with hell in their hearts, a
blind, venomous rage against all rule, an insane aspiration to abolish government
by destroying the heads of government.
The later bulletins up to midnight hold out a
fair prospect of President McKinley’s recovery. There can be no political enemy
who will not, for reasons apart from questions of national policy and national
destiny, hope that this expectation may be realized.