Destiny of the Republic - By Candice Millard Page 0,139

sick or injured person”: Gaw, A Time to Heal, 8.

17 “Patients, no matter how critical”: Ibid.

18 The structure had been built into sloping ground: Seale, The President’s House, 536.

19 “packed with vermin”: Clark, The Murder of James A. Garfield, 80.

20 “sanitary requirements of a safe dwelling”: “Condition of the White House,” New York Times, September 7, 1881.

21 The plumbing system had been built: Seale, The President’s House, 536.

22 “pest house”: Feis, Mollie Garfield in the White House, 74.

23 “The old White House is unfit”: Quoted in Clark, The Murder of James A. Garfield, 80.

24 “notoriously unhealthy”: Hoogenboom, Rutherford B. Hayes, 469.

25 “greatly influenced by the miasma”: Reyburn, Clinical History of the Case of President James Abram Garfield, 578.

26 Four servants in the White House: Mackenzie, Alexander Graham Bell, 236.

27 In a desperate effort to ward off malaria : Paulson, “Death of a President and His Assassin,” 83; Deppisch, “Homeopathic Medicine and Presidential Health,” 3.

28 “You can’t imagine anything so vile”: Harriet S. Blaine and Beale, Letters of Mrs. James G. Blaine, 229.

29 “Scarcely a breath of air”: “Another Weary Night Watch,” New York Times, July 6, 1881.

30 “Sitting to day on my piazza”: Stephen Upson to Lucretia Garfield, July 3, 1881.

31 Others suggested hanging sheets: Letters to Lucretia Garfield, Library of Congress, Garfield papers.

32 Finally, a corps of engineers: Reports of Officers of the Navy: Ventilating and Cooling of Executive Mansion, 4. Nine years later, Willis Haviland Carrier designed the first system for controlling not only temperature, but also humidity.

33 In the president’s office: Telegram from Joseph Stanley Brown to R. J. Jennings, the owner of a company in Baltimore that had a cooling device, quoted in Clark, The Murder of James A. Garfield, 83.

34 Although the system worked: Seale, The President’s House, 523–24. “They found some kind of compressed air machine,” Garfield’s fourteen-year-old daughter, Mollie, complained in her diary, “& it made a horrible noise when it became full of air.” James A. Garfield Papers, Library of Congress.

35 “cool, dry, and ample”: Seale, The President’s House, 524.

36 “wonderfully patient sufferer”: Paulson, “Death of a President and His Assassin,” 79.

37 “never approached him”: Bliss, “The Story of President Garfield’s Illness,” 301.

38 “Thank you, gentlemen”: Rockwell, “From Mentor to Elberon,” Century Magazine, 437.

39 “witty, and quick at repartee”: Ibid.

40 “The vein of his conversation”: “A Great Nation in Grief,” New York Times, July 3, 1881.

41 “I do not believe that”: “At the Patient’s Bedside,” New York Times, July 5, 1881.

42 Although Garfield rarely mentioned: Rockwell, “From Mentor to Elberon,” Century Magazine.

43 “What motive do you think”: “A Great Nation in Grief,” New York Times, July 3, 1881.

Chapter 17: One Nation

1 “You were not made free merely”: “Colored Men Visit Garfield,” New York Times, October 21, 1880.

2 “the high privilege and sacred duty”: Garfield, Inaugural Address, March 4, 1881.

3 “give the South, as rapidly as possible”: De Santis, “President Garfield and the ‘Solid South,’ ” 449.

4 “felt, as they had not felt before”: “Southern Sympathy,” New York Times, July 20, 1881.

5 “united, as if by magic”: Bundy, The Nation’s Hero, in Memoriam, 242–43.

6 “the whole Nation kin”: “Jefferson Davis on Guiteau’s Crime,” New York Times, July 16, 1881.

7 “I felt lighthearted and merry”: United States v. Guiteau, 601.

8 “His vanity is literally nauseating”: Hayes and Hayes, A Complete History, 405–6.

9 “He spoke with deliberation”: Ibid.

10 “He objected strenuously”: Ibid., 406.

11 “I want you to be sure”: Ibid., 499.

12 “I don’t want to appear strained”: Quoted in Ackerman, Dark Horse, 406.

13 Before returning to his cell: Clark, The Murder of James A. Garfield, 65.

14 He believed that he would be released: Rosenberg, The Trial of the Assassin Guiteau, p. 46.

15 “by the hundreds”: Clark, The Murder of James A. Garfield, 91.

16 “a conviction would shock the public”: United States v. Guiteau, 2246.

17 So carefree was Guiteau: Rosenberg, The Trial of the Assassin Guiteau, 45.

18 “I am looking for a wife”: Hayes and Hayes, A Complete History, 451.

19 “For twenty years, I have had an idea”: Hayes and Hayes, A Complete History, 452.

20 He was in contact with everyone: Mackenzie, Alexander Graham Bell, 235.

21 “Alec says he telegraphed”: Mabel Bell to her mother, July 20, 1881, Bell Family Papers.

22 At this point in his experiments: Bell, Upon the Electrical Experiments, 15.

23 He had adjusted the coils’ size: Ibid., 8–11.

24 Most important, he had decided to borrow: Ibid., 5.

25 Bell and Tainter had already begun testing: Mackenzie, Alexander Graham Bell, 236.

26 Seven years earlier, while working: Bruce, Alexander Graham Bell and the Conquest of Solitude,

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