Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 New Found Land
- 2 A City on a Hill
- 3 The Cause of All Mankind
- 4 Self-Evident Truths
- 5 The Last, Best Hope of Earth
- 6 Westward the Course of Empire
- 7 A Promised Land
- 8 The Soldier's Faith
- 9 Beyond the Last Frontier
- 10 A Land in Transition
- 11 Armies of the Night
- Notes
- Guide to Further Reading
- Biographies
- Index
8 - The Soldier's Faith
Conflict and Conformity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 New Found Land
- 2 A City on a Hill
- 3 The Cause of All Mankind
- 4 Self-Evident Truths
- 5 The Last, Best Hope of Earth
- 6 Westward the Course of Empire
- 7 A Promised Land
- 8 The Soldier's Faith
- 9 Beyond the Last Frontier
- 10 A Land in Transition
- 11 Armies of the Night
- Notes
- Guide to Further Reading
- Biographies
- Index
Summary
The day of our country's life has but broadened into morning. Do not put uniforms by. Put the harness of the present on. Lift your eyes to the great tracts of life yet to be conquered in the interest of righteous peace, of that prosperity which lies in a people's hearts and outlasts all wars and errors of men.
(Woodrow Wilson, Address at Gettysburg, July 4, 1913)The shooting in New York, on September 6, 1901, of President William McKinley by the anarchist Leon Czolgosz marked the end of an era in the most tragic way possible. McKinley died on September 14, 1901, almost twenty years exactly since another president, James A. Garfield, had succumbed, on September 16, 1881, also as a result of an assassin's bullet. Beginning with the murder of Abraham Lincoln in 1865, McKinley became the third American president to be assassinated, and the last of a generation of American leaders whose lives had been shaped – and in Lincoln's case, abruptly terminated – by the Civil War. Garfield and McKinley were both Union veterans of the Civil War, as indeed every elected president had been since 1868. Garfield's Civil War record had been a distinguished one. He was promoted to major general before taking up political office at the end of 1863. McKinley, by contrast, was the only Republican president since Lincoln not to have been a general in the Civil War, but his public life had begun with that conflict. He had joined the Ohio Volunteer Infantry at just eighteen years of age, and ended the war as a brevet major.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- A Concise History of the United States of America , pp. 242 - 275Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012