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Czolgosz was born in Alpena, Michigan in 1873,
one of eight children (six boys and two girls) of Mary (née Nowak)
and Paul Czolgosz, Polish Catholic immigrants from Prussia.
According to a different source, Czolgosz's
ancestors were immigrants from what is now Belarus. His father might
have emigrated to the US in the 1860s from Astravets near Hrodna. At
immigration he stated his ethnicity as Hungarian and changed his
surname from Zholhus (Жолгусь, Żołguś) to Czolgosz.
He left his family farm in Warrensville, Ohio, at
the age of ten to work at the American Steel and Wire Company with two
of his brothers. After the workers of his factory went on strike, he
and his brothers were fired. Czolgosz then returned to the family farm
in Warrensville. At the age of sixteen, he was sent to work in a glass
factory in Natrona, Pennsylvania for two years before moving back home.
Interest in anarchism
In 1898, after witnessing a series of similar
strikes (many ending in violence), Czolgosz again returned home
where he was constantly at odds with his stepmother and with his
family's Roman Catholic beliefs. It was later recounted that through
his life he had never shown any interest in friendship or romantic
relationships, and was bullied throughout his childhood by peers. He
became a recluse and spent much of his time alone reading Socialist
and anarchist newspapers while drinking milk in his mother's attic.
He was impressed after hearing a speech by the political radical
Emma Goldman, whom he met for the first time during one of her
lectures in Cleveland in 1901. After the lecture Czolgosz approached
the speakers' platform and asked for reading recommendations. A few
days later he visited her home in Chicago and introduced himself as
Nieman, but Goldman was on her way to the train station. He
only had enough time to explain to her about his disappointment in
Cleveland's socialists, and for Goldman to introduce him to her
anarchist friends who were at the train station. She later wrote a
piece in defense of Czolgosz.
The attention of the comrades is called to another spy. He is well
dressed, of medium height, rather narrow shoulders, blond and about
25 years of age. Up to the present he has made his appearance in
Chicago and Cleveland. In the former place he remained but a short
time, while in Cleveland he disappeared when the comrades had
confirmed themselves of his identity and were on the point of
exposing him. His demeanor is of the usual sort, pretending to be
greatly interested in the cause, asking for names or soliciting aid
for acts of contemplated violence. If this same individual makes his
appearance elsewhere the comrades are warned in advance, and can act
accordingly.
The assassination shocked and galvanized the
American anarchist movement, and Czolgosz is thought to have
consciously imitated Bresci. Joseph Petrosino's warnings were useless,
because McKinley ignored them.
Assassination of President McKinley
On August 31, 1901, Czolgosz moved to Buffalo,
New York. There, he rented a room near the site of the Pan-American
Exposition.
On September 6 he went to the exposition with a .32
caliber Iver-Johnson "Safety Automatic" revolver (serial #463344) he
claimed he had purchased on September 2 for $4.50. With the gun
wrapped in a handkerchief in his pocket, Czolgosz approached
McKinley's procession, the President having been standing in a
receiving line inside of the Temple of Music, greeting the public for
10 minutes. At 4:07 p.m. Czolgosz reached the front of the line.
McKinley extended his hand; Czolgosz slapped it aside and shot him in
the abdomen twice at point blank range.
Members of the crowd immediately subdued Czolgosz,
before the 4th Brigade, National Guard Signal Corps and police
intervened, and beat him so severely it was initially thought he might
not live to stand trial. Czolgosz was then briefly held in a cell at
Buffalo's 13th Precinct house at 346 Austin Street until he was moved
to the city's police headquarters downtown.
On September 13, the day before McKinley succumbed
to his wounds, Czolgosz was transferred from the police headquarters,
since the headquarters were undergoing repairs, to the Erie County
Women's Penitentiary. On the 16th he was taken to the Erie County Jail
before being arraigned before County Judge Emery. After the
arraignment, he was transferred to Auburn State Prison.
A grand jury indicted Czolgosz on September 16, who
spoke freely with his guards, yet refused all interaction with Robert
C. Titus and Lorin L. Lewis, the prominent judges-turned-attorneys
assigned to defend him, and with the expert psychiatrist sent to test
his sanity.
The district attorney at trial was Thomas Penney,
assisted by a Mr. Haller, whose performance was described as "flawless".
Although Czolgosz answered that he was pleading "Guilty", the
presiding Judge Truman C. White overruled him and entered a "Not
Guilty" plea on his behalf.
In the nine days from McKinley's death on September
14, to Czolgosz's trial on September 23, Czolgosz's lawyers were
unable to prepare a defense since Czolgosz refused to speak to either
one of them. As a result, Lorin Lewis argued at the trial that
Czolgosz could not be found guilty for the murder of the president
because he was insane at the time (similar to the defense that was
used in the Charles J. Guiteau trial back in 1881, after the shooting
of President James A. Garfield).
On September 23 and 24 prosecution testimony was
presented, consisting of the doctors who treated McKinley and various
eyewitnesses to the shooting. Lewis did not call any defense witnesses.
Czolgosz himself refused to testify on his own defense, nor did he
ever speak at all in court. In his statement to the jury, Lewis noted
Czolgosz's refusal to talk to his lawyers or cooperate with them,
admitted his client's guilt, and said that "the only question that can
be discussed or considered in this case is... whether that act was
that of a sane person. If it was, then the defendant is guilty of the
murder... If it was the act of an insane man, then he is not guilty of
murder but should be acquitted of that charge and would then be
confined in a lunatic asylum."
At Thomas Penney's request, White closed the trial
with instructions to the jury that supported the prosecution's
argument that (a): Czolgosz was not insane, and that (b): he knew
clearly what he was doing. After this, any chance that remained of
acquitting Czolgosz on the basis of insanity was gone, since the
defense offered no evidence that he couldn't understand the wrongness
of his crime.
Czolgosz was convicted on September 24, 1901 after
the jury deliberated for only one hour. On September 26, the jury
recommended the death penalty. Upon returning to Auburn Prison,
Czolgosz asked the warden if this meant he would be transferred to
Sing Sing to be electrocuted, and seemed surprised to learn that
Auburn had its own electric chair.
Czolgosz was electrocuted by three jolts, each of
1800 volts, in Auburn Prison on October 29, 1901. His brother, Waldek,
and his brother-in-law, Frank Bandowski, were in attendance. When
Waldek asked the Warden for his brother's body to be taken for proper
burial, he was informed that he "would never be able to take it away"
and that crowds of people would mob him.
His last words were "I killed the President because
he was the enemy of the good people – the good working people. I am
not sorry for my crime." As the prison guards strapped him into the
chair, however, he did say through clenched teeth, "I am sorry I could
not see my father."
Czolgosz was autopsied by John T. Gerin; his brain
was autopsied by Edward Anthony Spitzka. The body was buried on prison
grounds following the autopsy. Prison authorities originally planned
to inter the body with quicklime to hasten its decomposition, but they
became dissatisfied with this option after testing quicklime on a
sample of meat. After determining that they were not legally limited
to the use of quicklime for the process, sulfuric acid was poured into
Czolgosz's coffin so that his body would be completely disfigured. The
warden estimated the acid caused the body to disintegrate within 12
hours.
Legacy
Emma Goldman was arrested on suspicion of being
involved in the assassination, but was released, due to insufficient
evidence. She later incurred a great deal of negative publicity when
she published "The Tragedy at Buffalo". In the article, she compared
Czolgosz to Marcus Junius Brutus, the killer of Julius Caesar, and
called McKinley the "president of the money kings and trust magnates."
Other anarchists and radicals were unwilling to support Goldman's
effort to aid Czolgosz, believing that he had harmed the movement.
The scene of the crime, the Temple of Music, was
demolished in November 1901, along with the rest of the Exposition
grounds. A stone marker in the middle of Fordham Drive, a residential
street in Buffalo, marks the approximate spot where the shooting
occurred . Czolgosz's revolver is on display in the Pan-American
Exposition exhibit at the Buffalo and Erie County Historical Society
in Buffalo. In 1921 Lloyd Vernon Briggs, Director of the Massachusetts
Department for Mental Hygiene, reviewed the Czolgosz case and the
cases of Clarence Richeson and Bertram G. Spencer. Contrary to views
almost universally expressed at the time of the assassination, Briggs
concluded that Czolgosz was "a diseased man, a man who had been
suffering from some form of mental disease for years. He was not
medically responsible and in the light of present-day psychiatry and
of modern surgical procedure, there is a great question whether he was
even legally responsible for the death of our President."