James Benjamin Parker

James Benjamin Parker

Parker pictured in 1901
Born July 31, 1857
Atlanta, Georgia
Known for intervening in the assassination of William McKinley
Height 6 ft 6 in (198 cm)

James Benjamin Parker (July 31, 1857 ?) was an American most noted for attempting to stop Leon Czolgosz from assassinating president of the United States William McKinley.

Early life

Born in Atlanta, Georgia in 1857 to enslaved parents, Parker worked a variety of jobs including as a newspaper salesman for the Southern Recorder and as a constable. He later moved to Chicago, Illinois, where he was employed as a waiter, before returning to Atlanta. This was followed by additional moves to Saratoga, New York, to New York, New York, and, finally, to Buffalo, New York where he took a job with a catering company at the Pan-American Exposition's Plaza Restaurant.[1][2]

McKinley assassination

Background

Parker had been laid-off from his job at the Plaza Restaurant prior to September 6, 1901, and used that day to visit the exposition's Hall of Music, where president William McKinley was receiving members of the public.[3]

The recent assassinations of European leaders by anarchists, and often virulent denouncements of McKinley in the newspapers of William Randolph Hearst, combined to concern McKinley's private secretary George B. Cortelyou that there might be an attempt on the president's life. Cortelyou arranged for tight security after the president twice refused to cancel his appearance. A contingent of up to 75 City of Buffalo police and exposition security guards monitored the doors to the Hall of Music and patrolled the queue waiting to see the president. Persons who made it far enough to approach McKinley finally had to pass through a cordon of U.S. Army soldiers who had been instructed to quickly surround anyone who appeared suspicious. Since the Spanish-American War, the United States Secret Service had been protecting McKinley and two special agents, backed by several Buffalo police detectives, stood near the president.[3][4]

Shooting

Parker, left, grabs Czolgosz in a drawing by T. Dart Walker depicting the assassination.

There was, at the time, a general rule that anyone approaching the president must do so with their hands open and empty. However, the heat of the day meant this custom was not being enforced as many people were carrying handkerchiefs with which to wipe away perspiration.[3] A long line of exposition attendees queued to meet the president. The man in front of Parker in the queue, Leon Czolgosz, used the heat to conceal a pistol underneath a handkerchief. As Czolgosz approached McKinley, he fired the weapon twice, hitting the president at point blank range. After the second shot, according to a later account by United States Secret Service special agent Samuel Ireland, Parker punched Czolgosz in the neck then tackled him to the ground. Parker was quickly joined by one of the soldiers and a Buffalo policeman in restraining Czolgosz who was badly pummeled by more soldiers, police, and bystanders before the mortally wounded McKinley could order the beating to stop.[5]

An unnamed witness cited in a Los Angeles Times story said that "with one quick shift of his clenched fist, he [Parker] knocked the pistol from the assassin's hand. With another, he spun the man around like a top and with a third, he broke Czolgosz's nose. A fourth split the assassin's lip and knocked out several teeth."[5]

In Parker's own account of the event, given in a newspaper interview a few days later, he said,

I heard the shots. I did what every citizen of this country should have done. I am told that I broke his nose—I wish it had been his neck. I am sorry I did not see him four seconds before. I don't say that I would have thrown myself before the bullets. But I do say that the life of the head of this country is worth more than that of an ordinary citizen and I should have caught the bullets in my body rather than the President should get them.

In a separate interview given to the New York Journal, Parker remarked "just think, Father Abe freed me, and now I saved his successor from death, provided that bullet he got into the president don't kill him."[6]

Aftermath

The headline of a story on Parker that ran in the Cincinnati Enquirer following the assassination reads "Modest as Well as Fearless is the Negro Waiter Parker."

After the shooting, Parker was approached with several commercial offers, including from one company who wanted to sell his photograph. He refused, stating in a newspaper interview that "I do not think that the American people would like me to make capital out of the unfortunate circumstances. I am glad that I was able to be of service to the country."[7] Prior to McKinley's death, when his outlook for recovery appeared promising, the Savannah Tribune, an African-American newspaper, trumpeted of Parker "the life of our chief magistrate was saved by a Negro. No other class of citizens is more loyal to this country than the Negro."[2]

Despite initial optimism that McKinley would recover, the president died about a week later of complications arising from his wound. Czolgosz was quickly tried and convicted in the Erie County Superior Court and, exactly 45 days after McKinley's death, executed, his body afterwards being dissolved in acid.[8] Parker was not called to testify, though his attempt to save the president was later lauded in a speech given by Booker T. Washington.[7]

Later life

After the assassination, Parker left Buffalo and went to work as a traveling salesman for the Gazetteer and Guide, an African-American interest magazine. Details on his later activities and death are unknown.[5]

References

  1. Moore, Christopher. Fighting for America: Black Soldiers-the Unsung Heroes of World War II. Random House. pp. 10–12. ISBN 0307415228.
  2. 1 2 Rauchway, Eric (2007). Murdering McKinley: The Making of Theodore Roosevelt's America. Macmillan. pp. 60–66. ISBN 0374707375.
  3. 1 2 3 McElroy, Richard (1996). William McKinley and Our America: A Pictorial History. Canton, Ohio: Stark County Historical Society. ISBN 978-0-9634712-1-5.
  4. "Images of President William McKinley at the Pan-American Exposition". University at Buffalo. Retrieved 29 January 2016.
  5. 1 2 3 Rasuli, Daryl. "James B. Parker Revisited". University at Buffalo. Retrieved 28 January 2016.
  6. "Negro Grabbed Assassin". Lawrence Daily Journal. 15 October 1901. Retrieved 29 January 2016 via newspapers.com.
  7. 1 2 Kachun, Mitch (January 2010). ""Big Jim" Parker and the Assassination of William McKinley: Patriotism, Nativism, Anarchism, and the Struggle for African American Citizenship". The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. 9 (1): 93–116. JSTOR 27821454.
  8. "The Execution of Leon Czolgosz". University at Buffalo. Retrieved 28 January 2016.
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