Gaynor llapsed and died om a bullet that had been lodged his throat for three years - put there by an eventually succsful assass
Contents:
- AN ASSASS’S BULLET TOOK THREE YEARS TO KILL NYC MAYOR WILLIAM JAY GAYNOR
- WILLIAM JAY GAYNOR: LIBERTARIAN MAYOR OF NEW YORK
- WILLIAM J. GAYNOR
- GAYNOR, WILLIAM JAY, -1913
- THE SHORT BGRAPHY OF WILLIAM JAY GAYNOR
- MAYOR WILLIAM JAY GAYNOR
- WILLIAM JAY GAYNOR
- CATEGORY:WILLIAM JAY GAYNOR
AN ASSASS’S BULLET TOOK THREE YEARS TO KILL NYC MAYOR WILLIAM JAY GAYNOR
* william jay gaynor *
William Jay Gaynor.
WILLIAM JAY GAYNOR: LIBERTARIAN MAYOR OF NEW YORK
But none of the ndidat had a story as strange as William Jay Gaynor, an old New York Cy mayor whose ath happened to ci wh electn day this year. A hundred years ago yterday, Gaynor was travelg to Europe when he llapsed and died om a bullet that had been lodged his throat for three years, after an (eventually succsful) assass shot him. Gaynor was not New York when he was shot, and he was not New York when he fally succumbed to s effects years later.
Gaynor survived, but the bullet stayed his throat, slowly robbg him of the abily to speak. Gaynor ran anyway, announcg an pennt n for Mayor on the steps of Cy Hall.
His secretary had to make his speech for him, but, acrdg to the Bowery Boys, as the secretary explaed Gaynor’s plan to eradite graft, the mayor leaped up and cried, “Y, that is what we are gog to do — shovel all those miserable grafters to the mon dump!
WILLIAM J. GAYNOR
Gaynor received the Democratic nomatn for Mayor of New York Cy. (baptized Jam but later changed to Jay) Gaynor was probably born the village of Whboro, central New York State, and evince pots to the rrect date as beg 1848, the year John Qucy Adams died. Gaynor never said anythg he did not mean and, more remarkable, he never meant anythg he did not say.
" Gaynor was a public figure wh a "bent towards solu, study, sereny, ntemplatn, everythg he summed up the word ‘ntentment. Gaynor tried his hand at several thgs before settlg on the legal profsn where his keen md and boundls energy brought him great succs as one of the bit of Brooklyn lawyers. Gaynor dispatched the bs on hand wh such promptu that urt was adjourned at noon.
GAYNOR, WILLIAM JAY, -1913
"For Gaynor, law (though not necsarily the law) was dified mon sense. But Gaynor for all his bullyg of unsel and csts toward wns "kept one thg foremost his md—the terts of the ligant.
After servg a fourteen-year term, Gaynor was re-elected 1907 to a send term but he resigned 1909 to n for mayor of New York Cy. What mak Gaynor worth rememberg and knowg is not what he did, but what he was.
THE SHORT BGRAPHY OF WILLIAM JAY GAYNOR
The temptatn, when wrg about Gaynor, is to dwell on his dynamic personaly, his lorful speech and wrg.
MAYOR WILLIAM JAY GAYNOR
But is one thg to read about a strong character such as Gaynor, and que another to have personal ntact wh him. No, Gaynor was not a pleasant pann much of the time though wh the right pany he was a charmg per- son and brilliant nversatnalist. Gaynor is rather difficult to get along wh at tim and we are glad that we have no personal relatns wh him; but the firmi do not greatly ncern the public welfare.
The late Albert Jay Nock once remarked that William Jay Gaynor "imprsed me as by far the ablt man our public life. " Gaynor was, Nock’s opn, the last Amerin, "the last, at any rate, public life.
WILLIAM JAY GAYNOR
In 1912, the Supertennt of Public Instctn asked Gaynor for a msage to be read to all the schoolchildren of New York on the Fourth of July.
CATEGORY:WILLIAM JAY GAYNOR
On the duty of public men Gaynor had this to say a letter to a Philalphia supporter:. What sets Gaynor apart om most other public officials? " Or maybe Nock was right answerg that the poor people unrstood their own way that Mayor Gaynor, as an enemy of all jtice, was their iend.
Gaynor’s character and acplishments were unique.
Gaynor believed that ernment "was a nvenient and necsary vice for matag orr and jtice unr law but should be ltle more. Gaynor had ltle patience wh the many reformers who were always pterg him to "do somethg" about the people whose behavr they owned upon. But Gaynor objected to "addg to the multiplicy of laws" and to "puttg addnal power the hands of ernment.