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William Jennings Bryan and the Railroad |
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1896
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October 14
Marquette, MI (Excerpt)
Omaha World-Herald (Morning Edition), Omaha, NE, 15 October, 1896.
"Our opponents tell us that the success of our cause would mean great danger to this
country. We reply to them that twenty years of experience in their cause has been of incalculable
harm to our country. (Cheers.) They tell us that the free coinage of silver will bring trouble; we
tell them that the gold standard has brought trouble. [Unintelligible] place the experience of our
people against the prophecies which they make. They tell us that the free coinage of silver may not
be free from dangers, that it may not be a perfect system. [unintelligible] tell them all we try to
do is to [unintelligible] something better than we have [unintelligible] and it does not take a very
great [unintelligible] to be better than the one we [unintelligible]. (Great cheering.)
In a sense, our campaign is a defensive one: in another sense it is an aggressive
campaign. It is defensive because we are defending our homes and [unintelligible] from an enemy as
dangerous as ever attacked the welfare of the people. It is an aggressive warfare in that we demand
affirmative legislation: it is aggressive, in that we are after something and know what we are after
and how we are going to get it."
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© Nathan Sanderson, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 2008