President McKinley - Assassination
A SHOOTING IN BUFFALOIn September, 1901, the President and Mrs. McKinley decided to visit the Pan-American Exhibition in Buffalo, New York. It would be their last trip together.
Leon Czolgosz, a 28-year-old anarchist follower of Emma Goldman who believed government (and its leaders) prevented "complete individual liberty," also traveled to Buffalo for the Exhibition. But Czolgosz (pronounced cholgosh) had a different reason for being there. He planned to kill the popular President. McKinley had given a speech at the Expo on September 5. The next day, shortly after 4 p.m., on September 6, he was meeting people at the Temple of Music. Ostensibly in line to shake McKinley's hand, Czolgosz pulled out a .32 caliber short-barreled Johnson revolver and shot the President twice. One shot caused only a non-penetrating flesh wound. The other ripped through the President's stomach. A quick-thinking waiter, James Benjamin ("Big Jim") Parker who worked at one of the Expo's restaurants, jumped Czolgosz. His heroic actions prevented a third shot. Freely confessing what he did, the assassin told the police what happened. The local newspaper quoted the District Attorney: Gravely wounded, but ever mindful of his wife, McKinley told his secretary, George B. Courtelyou:
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