r K L ft y TS 15 f TFS ST 3 J m TB His Career From Its Humble Beginning In a Small Town to the Presidency of the United States Long and honorable was the public career of William McKin ley It extended from the time when as a mere stripling he held sway in a log cabin country school to the tragic moment when as chief executive of the nation ho was felled by the assassins bullet During all that time his record suffered neither blot nor blemish lie was tested as a soldier as a lawyer as a politician as a states man as the head of the nation In each case he stood the test In private life he began by be ing a manlv bov a dutiful and obe dient son lie continued as a faithful and loving husband one whose example has had its good ef fect on the national character His life was typically American the life of an American of the best type And through it all he was a patriot Above personal ambi tion were ever in his mind his country and his countrys good William McKinley came from that dominant race that has furnished this nation with some McKinley as a Boy As a Husband of its greatest sol diers and states men II e w a s Scotch Irish by de scent and his an cestors immigrated y tQ tjjjs country ear ly enough to have sous who took a pa triotic part in the war of the Revolu tion The family removed from Pennsyl vania to Ohio in ISM and from that day has been identified with that state not in -a great public way but simply as faithful and devoted citi zens not striving for particular emi nence but notable for sturdiness of character and integrity It was among such people and of them that William McKinley was born at Niles in Trumbull county O Feb 20 1S 14 A younger son he was destined by his father after whom he was named for the bar He was educated at the public schools and later entered llKTXLEY AS A BREVET 3IAJOB ghany college at Meadville Pa teach ing school to pay his tuition fees Scarcely was he matriculated when the civil Avar came ou He was but a stripling of nineteen when he entered os a private McKinley as those who remember him as a boy in Poland O declare was a real boy full of fun loving ath letic sports fond of horses and hunt ing and fishing and all outdoor exer cise and yet at 1G we find him taking upon himself a serious view of life The church records show that in 1S3S when he was hardly 10 he united with the Methodist Episcopal church of Po land McKinleys father was an Iron manu facturer and a pioueer in that business William was his third son the eldest being David the second James and the youngest Abner McKinleys mother was alert and vig orous mentally and physically up to the time of her death which occurred when she was nearly ninety years of age Major McKinleys home life was very happy despite the fact that his wife was an invalid C o Mrs McKinley was Miss Ida Sax ton daughter of James and Mary Saxton of Canton O She received an excellent edu cation when a girl spnt some time abroad and became her fathers assist ant in his bank where it was said that her fair face attracted bouquets and bank notes to the window She must b trained oafd her father to buy her own bread if necessary and not to sell herself to matrimony She hud many J iltors but Major Mc Kinley then a j islng young lawyer vanquished all I Alllry removed the young woman from the cashiers win dow and won from honest James Sax ton these words when the hand of the daughter v gained You are the only man 1 have ever known to whom I would Intrust my daughter Mrs McKinley always assisted her husband In politics Her ill health in nowise deterred her from enjoying the political honors he won nor did it pre vent her from being a wise counselor Her presence time and again served as an Inspiration to her husband When political preferment first came to Mc Kinley It was ids wife who convinced him that lie should accept She believ ed implicitly in his taleuts and that his service would be for the good of the state she Was certain She never wav ered In her faith In her husbands con victions Mrs McKinley had confidence In her husband not only as a public official i MKINIiEY AT HEGDiXnfG OF HIS TjEGAIi CAREER but as a man Her illness was often overcome by her affection and she traveled thousands of miles when she was weak in body merely that she might be near him She encouraged him by word look and presence and he in knightly style returned the fa vors and reciprocated the sacred affec tion Her home life was short for out of the thirty years of married life more than twenty four were passed by her husband in the public service Mrs McKinley for years has spent much of her leisure in crocheting those dainty little slippers which have so many times brought sunshine into gloomy hospital wards in various parts of the country It is said that she lias knitted over 3000 pairs of these slip pers in her twenty six years of invalid life In appearance Mrs McKinley is of medium height with brown hair and large deep blue eyes Although an invalid she was fond of making and receiving calls and often went on shop ping tours Mrs McKinley never cared much for dress although her toilets have always been in excellent taste For many years Mrs McKinleys face has betrayed a faint languor sugges tive of the invalid but it is fair and bears a stamp of beauty in spite of the fifty five years she carries Her ill health dates from girlhood As a student she with difficulty undertook the studies of the course by reason of this condi tion but with constant care and fre quent medical attention she overcame all trouble sufficiently to enjoy life and to taste of its pleasures Her actual invalidism dates from the birth of her second child in 1S7I This child died in its infancy and was followed by the first chMd a daughter of three years a short time afterward Mrs Saxton Mrs McKinleys mother also died about this time These sorrows were more than she could bear and she never re covered A little story of McKinleys home acts while governor may be of interest O j As a Son k McKinley as a Soldier No less than his at tention to his wife his thought and care for his moth er particularly since his fathers death in 1S92 have attracted comment It had been his custom while at home in Canton to take his mother to church each Sunday morning When he went to Columbus as governor he determin ed to keep up the practice as much as possible and unless the press of public business was very great he always slipped quietly over to Canton from the state capital on Sunday mornings and walked to church with his mother on his arm The next train would carry him to Columbus where his wife awaited his coming Naturally the mother looked with pride on such a sou and she followed with keen inter est the progress of his first presidential canvass Young McKinley had been a keen ob server so far as his opportunities went of the political events that culmi nated in the firing on Fort Sumter The call of the pres ident for troops found a quick re- sponse in his breast and when the drums and fifes aroused the echoes of the quiet streets of Po land among the first applicants for en listment was William McKinley Jr It was a new experience and a new school that the eighteen-year-old boy entered this school of war but he had wonderful teachers It was his good fortune that assigned him to the Twenty-third Ohio The recruits that com posed it were in June 18G1 mustered and formed into a regiment Its first colonel was William S Rosecrans aft erward major general commanding the department of the Cumberland Sec ond in command was Stanley Mat thews who was a splendid soldier but won his greatest honors In civil life by mmtaMMaaatBwmmtatmaamtammimmmsmmmnmmHsammBHimMmnmamaumammmmaamimimmnmrvmmmm His Rise From Schoolteacher to President Sketch of the Career of the Third Chief Executive of the United States to Fall Victim to the Assassins Bullet ITnnnBa THE LATE WILLIAM MKINLEY MES MKINLEY h MKINLEYS BIRTHPLACE becoming Uultcd States senator and justice of the United States supreme court and Rutherford 15 Hayes after ward governor of Ohio and president of the United States These are a few of the Illustrious men who were borne on the roll of officers of the gallant regiment in which marched Private William McKinley Jr He carried the musket for fourteen months then he was promoted Hut he won his promotion honestly Ills comrades of the rank and file bear tes timony to the fact that he was a good Soulier that he performed every duty devolving upon him with fidelity and intelligence aud without complaint They congratulated him therefore when he was made commissary ser geant of the rcguueut Later after Antietam he was made a second lieu tenant and the Mahoning county boy had risen from the ranks lie was now to all intents and pur poses a trained veteran He had had his baptism In blood at Carnifex Fer ry He had gone through the West Virginia campaign and become a part of the magnificent Army of the Poto mac under McClellan South fountain and Antietam had been made immor tal by the blood of heroes and the shoulder straps were worn with a due but not exaggerated realization of the responsibilities they Implied He be came a second lieutenant on Sept 21 1SU2 lie was promoted to first lieu tenant Feb 7 103 His commission as captain bears date July 23 ISO I The brevet rank of major was con ferred by President Lincoln for gal lant and meritorious services at the battles of Opequan Fishers Creek and Cedar Hill He was with Sheridan in the Shenandoah campaign was at Winchester Cedar Creek Fishers Hill Opequan Kernstown Floyd Mountain and Berryville where his horse was shot under him and In all the battles in which the Twenty third participated He served on the staffs of Generals Hayes Crook Hancock and Carroll He was mustered out with the regiment July 20 1SU3 after more than four years continuous serv ice When the war closed McKinley was just twenty two He was full of youth- ful enthusiasm and q McKinley as a Lawyer ardor and lie re turned to his home in Ohio fully ex pecting to accept the flattering offer made him of a v commission in the regular army Put to this his parents offered strong opposition They point ed out the small rewards that come to the soldier in time of peace At length lie yielded to their persuasions and re luctantly gave up his dreams of mar tial glory and bent his mind upon the pursuits of peace The war had ended all thought of a collegiate career He cast about for a profession and natu rally considering the bent of his mind he chose the law lie became a student in the offices of Charles E Glidden and David Wilson then leaders of the Mahoning county bar He supplement ed his reading by taking the course at the Albany Law school and hi 1SG7 was admitted to the bar He located at Canton where lie formed a partner ship with Judge Eelden He was an excellent advocate even in those early days and made some of the best jury arguments ever heard at the Stark county bar At the time lie was first elected to congress lie enjoyed one of the best general practices in the county As a lawyer Mr McKinley was al ways thorough and careful in the prep aration of cases He had the confidence of everybody aud soon became particu larly prominent as an advocate He prepared himself by thorough courses of reading for his public career He re sembled Garfield much in this respect and possessed elements of strength by reason of his thorough study of polit ical subjects He seems to have had in view from the beginning the devotion of his life to public service During all his early professional years lie was an active participant in Republican cam paigns and early gave evidence of the power he later developed as a public speaker and orator The plan of his political speaking was always the same He first thoroughly mastered the sub- jec t in hand and then presented it forci bly Major McKinley was but thirty three years old when he was elected by the people of his dis As a Statesman trict to represent them in congress There he soon made his mark and was returned at each subsequentelection until that of 1890 in which year a change in the bounda ries of his district defeated him by a majority of only 302 While in congress he served on the committee en revision of laws the rw sTs YCfllEifftrt XSSv r k 1 IMHSft VXiN V Vte Nss tsXJKCa xNWTOSSS S J ZXc V - T 3m 31KCTLZrS PATHEE diciary committee the committee on expenditures in the postoffice depart ment and the committee on rules When General Garfield received the nomina tion for the presidency Mr McKinley was assigned to the vacancy on the committee en and means He served ou the last mentioned committee until the expiration of his last term aa representative While chairman of this committee lie framed the McKinley bill which afterward became a law McKinley was a protege of Hayes and up to the time of the hitters death he recognized the ox president as his adviser and counselor He was in General Hayes regiment during the civil Avar General Ilnyen knew him and ills father well and saw In the dashing young cavalier the germ of greatness He needed a counselor an udvlser a friend and General Hayes watched over him with the filial love devotion and pride of a father The war ended McKinley still re mained an object of hope of Interest and pride to General Hayes McKin ley became a candidate for congress and was elected Wlieu Hayes was president McKinley was In the house of representatives The major was a frequent welcome visitor ut the White House One day the president gave McKinley advice which made McKin ley the foremost champion of a pro tective tariff President Hayes thua spoke to the young representative To achieve success and fame you must pursue a special line You must not make a speech on every motion offered or bill Introduced You must confine yourself to one particular thing Become a specialist Take up some branch of legislation and make that your study Why not take up the subject of tariff Being a subject that will not lie settled for years to come it offers a great Held for study and a chance for ultimate fame With these words ringing in Ills ears McKinley began studying the tariff and soon became the foremost author ity on the subject The day upon which the McKinley tariff bill was passed in the house must always stand as the supreme mo ment of McKinleys congressional ca reer The bill by adroit parliamentary generalship which had prevented it from being weighed down with amend ments not approved by the committee had been brought under the operation of the previous question It stood com plete ready to go forth for good or evil Upon McKinley devolved the task of smoothing its path and speeding it upon its way The occasion thoroughly advertised attracted to the capitol an immense e- The McKinley Bill throng The gal leries were one mass of humanity and the anticipa tion of the vote had compelled the attendance of ev ery member As usual McKinley spoke without notes His voice penetrating but not harsh filled the chamber Eery sentence was distinctly heard Never was an orator more free from the ordinary a5sgTigt JHSfB Ml 31KIXIiEyS MOTIIEK claptrap than McKinley So true is this that the incident when lie sudden ly drew from beneath his desk the suit of clothes which he purchased for 10 at the establishment of a fellow repre sentative in Boston In order to demon strate the cheapness of wearing ap parel stands out with vivid distinct ness It was this earnestness and self con viction that made McKinleys address in the house and on the stump so effec tive Indeed the occasion is still re called when he held an audience of Georgia people for two hours at a Chautauqua assembly near Atlanta while he preached to them the glories of the protective tariff system It was only by the greatest self control said the late Henry W Grady speak ing of this event afterward that 7 restrained myself from rising as Mc Kinley concluded his wonderful speech and declaring myself henceforth ready to follow him as a disciple James G Blaine in his Twenty Years of Congress reviewed the Forty-fifth congress in which McKinley first sat as follows William McKin ley Jr entered from the Canton dis trict He enlisted in an Ohio regiment when but 17 years old and Avon the rank of major by meritorious service The interest of his constituency and his own bent of mind led him to the study of industrial questions and he was soon recognized in the house as one of the most thorough statisticians and one of the ablest defenders of the doctrine of protection At a great mass meeting in Indian apolis several years ago the late ex President Harrison was presiding offi cer McKinley was one of the speak ers and Harrison introduced him as follows He has endeared himself to all by his record as a gallant young soldier battling for the Hag He has honored himself his state and the country by his conspicuous services in high legis lative and executive places No man more than he is familiar with the ques tions that now engage public thought No man is mora able than he lucidly to set them before the people I do not need to invoke your attention to what he shall say He will command it K i A l v km tf A