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| Term 1897-1901 |
Party Republican |
Born January 29, 1843, in Niles, Ohio |
Died September 14, 1901, after being shot by an anarchist in Buffalo, New York |
| Vice President Garrett A. Hobart, Theodore Roosevelt |
First Lady Ida Saxton McKinley (Wife) |
Previous Occupation Teacher, Lawyer |
States in Union 45 |
| Family
McKinley’s parents were William and Nancy Allison McKinley. McKinley married Ida Saxton in 1871. They had two daughters: Katherine and Ida. |
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Legacy McKinley’s administration ushered in a new world viewthat of the U.S. as a dominant global power. As Americans became aware of the plight of Cuban revolutionaries fighting against the Spanish to gain their freedom, the public pressured a reluctant McKinley and Congress to act. The U.S. thus declared war to liberate Cuba. In the 100-day Spanish-American war, the U.S. destroyed the Spanish fleet, seized Manila in the Philippines, and occupied Puerto Rico, thereby ending Spain’s empire in the Americas and the Pacific. McKinley succumbed to the increasingly American imperialist sentiment and annexed the Philippines, Guam, Puerto Rico, and Hawaii. The U.S. also divided Samoa with Germany. McKinley was elected to a second term, but was assassinated within a year, which made him the third president to be assassinated. He was shot twice by the anarchist Leon Czolgosz while greeting people during the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York, and died of his wounds about a week later. |
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Quotes McKinley had grown up with the dream of becoming president one day. Some time after realizing that goal he commented, “I have never been in doubt since I was old enough to think intelligently that I would someday be made President.” | |||
| At This Time 1898: The U.S. declares war on Spain over Cuba • H. G. Wells writes The War of the Worlds • The German Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin builds the airship • 1900: Sigmund Freud publishes The Interpretation of Dreams • Paul Cezanne paints Still Life with Onions, and John Singer Sargent paints The Sitwell Family • Max Planck formulates quantum theory • American scientist R. A. Fessenden transmits human speech via radio waves |
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| Did You Know? McKinley employed a unique handshake that became known as the “McKinley grip” to help him easily greet the multitudes of people at public receptions without overstraining his right hand. He would smile at each greeter, then take his or her right hand and squeeze it warmly before his own hand was caught in a hard grip, hold the guest’s elbow with his left hand, and then quickly move the guest along so he could greet the next person in line. |
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| Learn More At: www.mckinley.lib.oh.us/McKinley/biography.htm (Information about McKinley’s life, as well as birthplace and museum in Niles, Ohio.) |
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| Field Trips for William McKinley
William McKinley Presidential Library and Museum |
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