William McKinley was born January 29,
1843 in Niles, Ohio. Following his service in the Union Army during
the Civil War under Rutherford Hayes, he was drawn to service in the
Republican Party. William McKinley was born January 29, 1843, in
Niles, Ohio. As a young man, he briefly attended Allegheny College
before taking a post as a country schoolteacher. When the Civil War
broke out in 1861, McKinley enlisted in the Union Army; he eventually
earned the rank of brevet major of volunteers. Returning to Ohio after the war, McKinley studied law, opened his
own practice in Canton, Ohio, and married Ida Saxton, the daughter of
a local banker.After the deaths, in quick succession, of her mother
and her two young daughters early in their marriage, Ida's health
rapidly deteriorated, and she spent the rest of her life as a chronic
invalid. McKinley patiently catered to his wife throughout his
burgeoning political career, winning praise from the public for his
loving devotion to her. McKinley entered Ohio politics in 1869 and
rose through the ranks as a Republican, winning election to the U.S.
Congress in 1876. Over nearly 14 years in Congress, he served as
chair of the House Ways and Means Committee and became known as a
proponent of economic protectionism, in the form of high tariffs on
imported goods. After a tariff measure bearing his name passed in
1890, voters rejected McKinley and other Republicans due to rising
consumer prices and he returned to Ohio. The following year, he ran
for governor, winning by a narrow margin; he would serve two terms in
that post. After the so-called Panic of 1893 led to a crippling
economic depression in the United States, McKinley and his fellow
Republicans regained the political advantage over the Democrats.
McKinley won the Republican presidential nomination in 1896 thanks to
his congressional and gubernatorial experience, his longtime support
of protectionism and the skilled maneuvering of his chief supporter,
the wealthy Ohio industrialist Marcus Alonzo Hanna. In the general
election, McKinley faced William Jennings Bryan, who ran on a
platform attacking the gold standard and supporting the coinage of
silver as well as gold.Touted by Hanna as the "advance agent of
prosperity" and the protector of America's financial interests
in contrast to Bryan's radical policies, McKinley won the popular
vote by a margin of some 600,000, the largest victory in 25 years; he
also won more than a third more electoral votes than Bryan. Soon
after taking office, McKinley called a special session of Congress in
order to raise customs duties, an effort he believed would reduce
other taxes and encourage the growth of domestic industry and
employment for American workers. The result was the Dingley Tariff
Act (sponsored by the Maine congressman Nelson Dingley), the highest
protective tariff in American history. McKinley's support for the
Dingley Tariff strengthened his position with organized labor, while
his generally business-friendly administration allowed industrial
combinations or "trusts" to develop at an unprecedented
rate. (Cool Fact William McKinley was the 25th president)
Andrea,
ReplyDeletePresident McKinley's birthday is the day after mine. You did not meet your 500 word requirement. brevet major is a proper noun. You did not tell about the last part of his life. What happened to him? That would have gotten you over your word requirement.
word count: 493
score 19/25
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