Ohio History Journal

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The McKinley Monument

The McKinley Monument.              229

 

 

ADDRESS OF PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT.

We have gathered together to-day to pay our meed of re-

spect and affection to the memory of William McKinley, who

as President won a place in the

hearts of the American people

such as but three or four of all

the Presidents of this country

have ever won. He was of sin-

gular uprightness and purity of

character, alike in public and in

private life; a citizen who loved

peace, he did his duty faithfully

and well for four years of war

when the honor of the nation

called him to arms. As Con-

gressman, as Governor of his

State, and finally as President,

he rose to the foremost place

among our statesmen, reaching a

position which would satisfy the

keenest ambition; but he never lost that simple and thoughtful

kindness toward every human being, great or small, lofty or

humble, with whom he was brought in contact, which so en-

deared him to our people. He had to grapple with more serious

and complex problems than any President since Lincoln, and

yet, while meeting every demand of statesmanship, he continued

to live a beautiful and touching family life, a life very healthy

for this nation to see in its foremost citizen; and now the woman

who walked in the shadow ever after his death, the wife to whom

his loss was a calamity more crushing than it could be to any

other human being, lies beside him here in the same sepulchre.

There is a singular appropriateness in the inscription on his

monument. Mr. Cortelyou, whose relations with him were of

such close intimacy, gives me the following information about

it: On the President's trip to the Pacific slope in the spring of

19O1 President Wheeler, of the University of California, con-

ferred the degree of LL. D. upon him in words so well chosen