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Murdering McKinley: The Making of Theodore Roosevelt's America
 
 
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Murdering McKinley: The Making of Theodore Roosevelt's America [Hardcover]

Eric Rauchway (Author)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0809071703 978-0809071708 September 3, 2003 1
How an assassin, a dead President, and Theodore Roosevelt defined the Progressive Era.

When President McKinley was murdered at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York on September 6, 1901, Americans were bereaved and frightened. Rumor ran rampant: A wild-eyed foreign anarchist with an unpronounceable name had killed the Commander-in-Chief. Eric Rauchway's brilliant Murdering McKinley re-creates Leon Czolgosz's hastily conducted trial and then traverses America as Dr. Vernon Briggs, a Boston alienist, sets out to discover why Czolgosz rose up to kill his President. While uncovering the answer that eluded Briggs and setting the historical record straight about Czolgosz, Rauchway also provides the finest portrait yet of Theodore Roosevelt at the moment of his sudden ascension to the White House.

For Czolgosz was neither a foreigner nor much of an anarchist. Born in Detroit, he was an American-made assassin of such inchoate political beliefs that Emma Goldman dismissed him as a police informant. Indeed, Brigg's search for answers---in the records of the Auburn New York State penitentiary where Czolgosz was electrocuted, in Cleveland where Leon's remaining family lived---only increased the mystery. Roosevelt, however, cared most for the meanings he could fix to this "crime against free government all over the world." For Roosevelt was every inch the calculating politician, his supposed boyish impulsiveness more feint than fact. At one moment encouraging the belief that Czolgosz's was a political crime, at the next that it was a deranged one, Roosevelt used the specter of McKinley's death to usher in Progressive Era America.

So why did Czolgosz do it? Only Rauchway's careful sifting of long-ignored evidence provides an answer: heart-broken, recently radicalized, and thinking he had only months to live, Leon decided to take the most powerful man in America with him.
Eric Rauchway has written for the Financial Times and the Los Angeles Times. He teaches at the University of California, Davis, and is the author of The Refuge of Affections. He lives in Northern California.
After President William McKinley was fatally shot at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York, on September 6, 1901, Americans were bereaved and frightened. Rumor ran rampant: a wild-eyed foreign anarchist with an unpronounceable name had killed the Commander-in-Chief. Eric Rauchway's brilliant Murdering McKinley re-creates Leon Czolgosz's hastily conducted trial and then traverses America as Dr. Vernon Briggs, a Boston alienist, sets out to discover why Czolgosz rose up to kill his President. While uncovering the answer that eluded Briggs and setting the historical record straight about Czolgosz, Rauchway also provides the finest portrait yet of Theodore Roosevelt at the moment of his sudden ascension to the White House.

Czolgosz was neither a foreigner nor much of an anarchist. Born in Detroit, he was an American-made assassin of such inchoate political belief that Emma Goldman dismissed him as a police informant. Indeed, Briggs's search for answers—in the records of Auburn State Prison, the New York penitentiary where Czolgosz was electrocuted; in Cleveland, where Leon's remaining family lived—only increased the mystery. Roosevelt, however, was quick to affix meanings to this crime "against free government all over the world." For Roosevelt was every inch the calculating politician, his supposed boyish impulsiveness more feint than fact. At one moment encouraging the belief that Czolgosz's was a political crime, at the next that it was a deranged one, Roosevelt used the specter of McKinley's murder to usher in the Progressive Era.

So why did Czolgosz do it? Only Rauchway's careful sifting of long-ignored evidence provides an answer: heartbroken, recently radicalized, and thinking he had only months to live, Czolgosz decided to take the most powerful man in America with him.
"Rauchway's Murdering McKinley ingeniously weaves together the microhistory of a murder and a boldly innovative account of the origins of the Progressive era. Once a mere footnote in American history, the assassination of McKinley in 1901 emerges as an event as pregnant with historical significance as the assassinations of Lincoln and Kennedy. What is so marvellous about this book is that it is not only first-class history. It is also an enthralling whodunit."—Niall Ferguson, author of The Cash Nexus: Money and Power in the Modern World, 1700-2000
"A fascinating trip through late-19th-century America, guided by a historian who not only knows his material but knows how to write . . . A compact masterpiece that explains more about the late 19th century than most historians know, and yet [this book is also] readable . . . An accurate, comprehensive, cutting-edge history of the period [and] a rip-roaring tale . . . Illuminating the society that inspired a cold-blooded murder, Murdering McKinley [is] brilliant."—Heather Cox Richardson, Chicago Tribune

"[A] thorough new history of the assassination . . . [Rauchway has] blown the dust from forgotten documents and discovered therein some troubling truths about the economic and political aspects of American justice."—Daniel Dyer, The Cleveland Plain Dealer

"[A] broad social history . . . Fascinating . . . Mr. Rauchway [mixes] the tragedy of a presidential assassination and the lonely life and death of his assassin to weave a compelling tale."—Gerald J. Russello, The New York Sun

"Rauchway's Murdering McKinley ingeniously weaves together the microhistory of a murder and a boldly innovative account of the origins of the Progressive era. Once a mere footnote in American history, the assassination of McKinley in 1901 emerges as an event as pregnant with historical significance as the assassinations of Lincoln and Kennedy. What is so marvellous about this book is that it is not only first-class history. It is also an enthralling whodunnit."—Niall Ferguson, author of The Cash Nexus: Money and Power in the Modern World, 1700-2000

"Rauchway is that rare historian who is also a first-rate storyteller. Murdering McKinley is almost as impressive a literary feat as it is a scholarly one; a
cf0fascinating window on a turbulent time in our untold history and a damn good read to boot."—Eric Alterman, author of What Liberal Media? The Truth About Bias and the News

"Rauchway's fascinating book deftly weaves together social, cultural, and political history. This is truly a pathbreaking work, and a wonderful read for all of us who are intrigued by the emergence of the radically new progressive era."—Elizabeth Sanders, Cornell University

"With a 'You Are There' style that makes us practically smell people we usually see in static photos and flickering silent film clips, Murdering McKinley places an anonymous oddball assassinating a non-entity of a President at the center of the cataclysmic events roiling America at turn-of-century. Erudition harnessed to an addictive tale told in butter-smooth prose—history writing at its best."—John H. McWhorter, author of Losing the Race: Self-Sabotage in Black America

"A gripping detective story, Murdering McKinley packs an astonishing amount of history—about law, medicine, technology, race, immigration, and political reform—into its tale of why Leon Czolgosz, professed anarchist and suspected lunatic, murdered his president. One could not ask for a m


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

This ambitious book paints a fresh picture of American culture a century ago and finds there the confused stirrings of our own age. Rauchway's lens opens on the 1901 assassination of President William McKinley by Leon Czolgosz and keeps that event in focus throughout. The author's aim is to get us to understand in new ways the dawning 20th century, when so many of our present political and social struggles took form and solutions were proposed. For instance, the involvement in Czolgosz's case of "alienists" and criminologists provides Rauchway (The Refuge of Affections) with openings into such varied issues as nativism, racism, industrial conditions and social work. As for politics, he deals skillfully with now mostly forgotten issues-such as tariffs and currency policy-that rarely appeal to readers, but which here gain clarity through Rauchway's deft brevity. Most important, he shows how the nation's culture, and Theodore Roosevelt, who gained the presidency on McKinley's death, got caught up in a debate about the reasons for the murder. Was Czolgosz spurred by his psychological state or by anarchist ideology? Did the murder's origins lie within the assassin or in the social conditions that produce desperate people? These are issues that continue to divide Americans. And the book shines in dealing with them, making an important contribution to historical understanding. Rauchway's explanation for Roosevelt's 1912 loss as "Bull Moose" candidate of the Progressive Party-that he was caught between opposing interpretations of the roots of the nation's ills-is especially provocative. That alone should make the book controversial.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Justice moved swiftly in 1901, dispatching the assassin of William McKinley a few short weeks after the crime. Rauchway wonders if the motives of the killer, self-proclaimed anarchist Leon Czolgosz, were sufficiently investigated. For factual backbone, Rauchway relies on evidence gathered by one Vernon Briggs, a psychologist who interviewed the Czolgosz family and was sensitive to explaining aberrant behavior in terms of social conditions. And there was much to be sensitive about in late 1890s America, whether one was a stand-pat capitalist or a protesting proletarian: Rauchway works the fears and demands of both archetypes into his interpretation of the politics of the Progressive Era. Czolgosz serves as the author's vehicle for taking his narrative in many directions, such as immigration, industrialization and poverty, concepts of race as enunciated by Theodore Roosevelt, and more. Ultimately offering a theory of Czolgosz's motive, Rauchway presents an interpretive narrative best suited to readers with at least a TR biography under their belts. Gilbert Taylor
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 250 pages
  • Publisher: Hill and Wang; 1 edition (September 3, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0809071703
  • ISBN-13: 978-0809071708
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.3 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #603,583 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
5 star:
 (6)
4 star:
 (5)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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26 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Forgotten Assasination, July 30, 2004
By 
Kevin Wang (Princeton, NJ USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Murdering McKinley: The Making of Theodore Roosevelt's America (Hardcover)
While President McKinley's assasination (and as Rauchway would argue, even his legacy) is much forgotten today, this book reminds the reader that its impact on American politics is no less dramatic than the assasinations of Lincoln and Kennedy. Czolgosz (the assasin), by murdering McKinley, directly paved the way for Theodore Roosevelt's entrance into the White House, and from there the first modern progressive president was born.

Rauchway makes interesting obersvations about the social inequalities of the turn of the century, the moral decay in American cities, the rise of anarchism, the growing fusion of big businesses and politics, and an outdated legal system struggling to catch up with medical advancement.

Lastly, the book made me draw comparisions between the fear of anarchists that enveloped the nation after McKinley's assasination in September 1901, and the fear of terrorists after 9/11, exactly 100 years later. Overall, this is a great read for anyone interested in history, law or criminal psychology.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Murder of a President and the Rise of the Prog. Party, December 13, 2004
By 
Kevin M Quigg (Gettysburg, Pennsylvania United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Murdering McKinley: The Making of Theodore Roosevelt's America (Hardcover)
This is an interesting book just for the examination of the assassination of President McKinley. Rauchway details the shooting of McKinley and the aftermath. The aftermath was the trial and execution of Leon Czolgosz, the war on anarchism and the rise of the Progressives (Roosevelt and Wilson). During this short book, I read of the history of the social and political movement at the turn of the last century. The political legacy was of conservative Republicans allied with big business and capital, with an arch conservative judicial system.
McKinley's assassination caused the rise of a different force in the Republican Party. Roosevelt made the Progressives respectable and caused changes in the political process which modernized the political, social, and economic landscape. The final portion deals with the assassination attempt on Roosevelt in 1912 which was a reaction to all that Roosevelt accomplished. The assassination of McKinley focused negative press on the Anarchists, and the attempt in 1912 was a reaction to the Progressive policies of 1912.
This is a good read. The only criticism I have is that this book focuses much attention on the human element of one assassin.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Changing America, October 17, 2007
By 
The assassination of William McKinley is far less examined than those of Lincoln and Kennedy. If only for the relative obscurity of the topic alone, this deserves a look. While somewhat disappointing for a lack of focus, the book is quite informative.

The author's thesis seems to be that the assassination of McKinley was symbolic of America's discontent with conservativism and big business's hold on politics, bringing about the progressive movement and the emergence of Theodore Roosevelt. The title of the book would seem to imply a focus on the assassination of McKinley, which is not accurate. Make no mistake about it, the title of the book is deceiving. Rauchway goes for several pages at a time examining nothing but the rise of Roosevelt. In that respect, the author strays from delivering what the title of the book suggests and at times from supporting his apparent thesis.

One of the issues the book does a reasonable job of addressing is the story behind McKinley's assassin, Leon Czolgosz. Alienist Vernon Briggs investigated the life of Czolgosz only to find the powerful businesses that McKinley shielded were a key part of the environment that created the assassin. In the process of his investigation, Briggs brings the issue of the insanity defense to the attention of the American justice system. In this respect, Briggs's research had a major impact on the judicial system.

Without the significant digressions into the social changes brought about by the Roosevelt administration, this book would be much thinner. Perhaps that is why Rauchway chose to include it. Even with the digressions, the book is decidedly thin. I enjoyed the book even though I believe it could have been composed with a much better sense of focus.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
At or about four o'clock in the afternoon of September 6, 1901, President William McKinley arrived in an open carriage outside the Temple of Music at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York. Read the first page
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Leon Czolgosz, New York, United States, Theodore Roosevelt, Hull House, Republican Party, Emma Goldman, Jim Parker, Secret Service, Jane Addams, Mark Hanna, Cleveland Rolling Mill, Jacob Riis, White House, Mayor Harrison, Paul Czolgosz, Auburn State Prison, Temple of Music, Bull Moose, Chicago Tribune, New World, Progressive Party, Rogers City, Supreme Court, Walter Channing
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