It’s funny how a name from the past will pop up in the
news from time to time.
Take William McKinley, for example.
I hadn’t thought of him in years. In fact, I haven’t
thought of him at all.
But there he was this past week, grabbing headlines
from coast to coast.
It seems our 25th President has had his
name stripped from the tallest mountain in the U.S., located in Alaska. It will
now be known as Denali, which it was called for thousands of years before a
prospector attached McKinley’s name to it in 1896.
The prospector was a gold miner and McKinley was a
staunch supporter of the Gold Standard. You can draw your own conclusions.
The change came with the blessings of President Obama
who just so happened to visiting Alaska at the time. That's a good way to draw an appreciative crowd.
It seems the natives have been restless for years
about having their 20,237 foot peak named after a man who never laid eyes on it
or set foot in Alaska.
Indeed, Alaskans has been seeking the name change
since 1975, but Ohio politicians who count McKinley as a native son and kindred
spirit blocked every attempt.
So Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell announced
that the mountain would be renamed under authority of federal law which permits
her to name geographic features if the Board of Geographic Names does not act
within a "reasonable" period of time.
Jewell cited
the board's failure to act on the state's four-decade-old request, saying
"I think any of us would think that 40 years is an unreasonable amount of
time.”
Ohioans were outraged. To hear tell, they rank
McKinley up there with Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, Moses, Caesar and
Hammurabi as great leaders.
They found voice in House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio
whose primary job seems to be uttering knee-jerk criticisms of President Obama.
Boehner said he was "disappointed" in the
decision. "There is a reason President McKinley’s name has served atop the
highest peak in North America for more than 100 years, and that is because it
is a testament to his great legacy," he said in a statement.
Not to be outdone, Donald Trump tweeted, “President
Obama wants to change the name of Mt. McKinley to Denali after more than 100
years. Great insult to Ohio. I will change back!"
He apparently failed to check in with his close
personal friend Sarah Palin who, as governor of Alaska, referred to the
mountain as Denali.
Putting all the political rhetoric aside, what about
McKinley’s legacy? If we remember him at
all, it was because he was assassinated by a crazed anarchist and replaced with
the truly memorable Teddy Roosevelt.
Check the rankings of American presidents by historians
or political scientists and he comes out above average, even underrated,
but not top tier. A composite of recent presidential
rankings found that McKinley came in at 19th among the 43 men who have
held the office, according to the Washington Post.
"He tends to be stuck in the middle—not
great but not terrible," said Brandon Rottinghaus,
a political science professor at the University of Houston who did his
own ranking last year.
"The problem is this is where presidential
legacies go to be forgotten," he said. The ones whose tenures
were lukewarm are taught less often in schools and chronicled by
fewer historians. "He's kind of victim to this sort of zone of forgotten
presidents."
Interestingly enough, McKinley broke with many
precedents, according to the Post article. In the past, presidents didn't speak directly
with the public on policy issues and didn't campaign on behalf of their fellow
party members or themselves.
McKinley did both. He was talking about leaving
the continental United States to visit Hawaii and Puerto Rico before his death,
something no president had done in office before. And he held press briefings,
leaked news to reporters, and used mailings and printed propaganda.
So it seems right and proper that he should have something named after
him. It has been pointed out that there is no city in Ohio named McKinley. Given that fact, renaming Cleveland might be
as good idea. It’s a bit of a comedown from a massive mountain but if there was
ever a city that could use an image upgrade….
McKinley is not forgotten, however. There is a
memorial library and museum in Niles, Ohio, that would do Washington, D.C.
proud.
He is even remembered in Southern California. He was
beloved in Redlands because he kept foreign oranges out of America and made the
city wealthy.
In 1903, President Roosevelt, came to town to unveil a memorial
bust of McKinley atop a granite pedestal, engraved "Patriot, Statesman,
Martyr." The head was sheltered beneath a fancy stone canopy supported by
columns.
The canopy and columns have since disappeared -- as
has Redlands' orange supremacy -- but McKinley's head remains.
Robert Rector is a veteran of 50 years in
print journalism. He has worked at the San Francisco Examiner, Los Angeles
Herald Examiner, Valley News, Los Angeles Times and Pasadena Star-News. His
columns can be found at Robert-Rector@Blogspot.Com.
Follow him on Twitter at @robertrector 1.
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