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Anarchist Assassination: William McKinley 3 | US History

As foreign intervention, corporate control, and executive overreach became normalized, McKinley faced a growing wave of criticism—setting the stage for his fateful encounter at the 1901 Pan-American Exposition.

Did we get something wrong in our "President William McKinley" series? Is there a particular character you want to hear more about? Feel free to ask our Extra History writer, Rob, HERE and get a shout-out in our Extra History Lies Episode! 

Did you miss an Episode in our Mutiny on the Bounty Series?

Part 1 - The Tariff King | Part 2 - Imperial President Part 3 - Anarchist ASsassination | Lies - Release Date: 8/29

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Anarchist Assassination: William McKinley 3 | US History Anarchist Assassination: William McKinley 3 | US History Anarchist Assassination: William McKinley 3 | US History Anarchist Assassination: William McKinley 3 | US History Anarchist Assassination: William McKinley 3 | US History

Comments

"Who'd want to hurt me?" Well, Mr. McKinley, first lesson of security: assume EVERYONE is a suspect.

Martin Verran

I think that it is ironic that despite all that it took decades for that corrupt tamminy hall establishment to finally come undone. It shows that American citizens don't have nearly as much power as they'd like to believe.

Beau Carey

Two things that jump out in this one. I would like the source of William Jennings Bryan criticize McKinley for not replacing his Vice President. Because until the Twenty-Fifth Amendment (1967) there was no mechanism to fill the vacancy of the office and there had been a lot of vacancies of the office of Vice President since the Constitution was implemented, like every time a President died and the VP took over come to mind. Honestly it doesn't seem like something Bryan would say because it would make him look like a fool given over a 100 years of history. Second, Tammany Hall was a Democratic political machine not Republican. However its reputation for corruption was so bad that both Democrats (Tilden, Cleveland, FDR, Koch) and Republicans (Teddy, Dewey, Javitis) would gain national attention for opposing them thanks to the New York press.

Matt Ries


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