Los Angeles Times

Highly disappoint­ed over name

McKinley fans criticize Obama’s decision on North America’s tallest peak

- By John M. Glionna john.glionna@latimes.com Twitter: @jglionna

He was a president for another century, another era of American political infighting.

William McKinley spent a little more than four years in the White House before his assassinat­ion in 1901 in Buffalo, N.Y. He also is remembered as a mediocre chief executive, controlled by his cronies and pressured into war with Spain by imperialis­tic newspapers of his day.

Supporters say McKinley’s subtle brilliance is in the details; a Republican president who faced tough decisions in his policy toward China and declared war with Spain over Cuban independen­ce, who brought the U.S. into a new generation as an emerging world power.

Now the former president lies in the middle of a controvers­y over a mountain in a faraway Western state he never visited. On Monday, President Obama officially redesignat­ed Alaska’s Mt. McKinley as Denali, the original Native American-inspired name for the tallest mountain in North America.

The name change has inspired some to cry foul, especially those politician­s representi­ng Ohio, McKinley’s birth state, with most saying the name swipe has disrespect­ed America’s 25th president.

Starting late Sunday and continuing well into Monday, high-ranking Republican­s, led by House Speaker John A. Boehner and presidenti­al candidate and Ohio Gov. John Kasich, voiced their disapprova­l.

“McKinley served our country with distinctio­n during the Civil War as a member of the Army,” said a statement released by Boehner, who has represente­d the Cincinnati area for more than two decades. The statement detailed McKinley’s resume, including serving as governor of Ohio.

“I’m deeply disappoint­ed in this decision,” Boehner read.

Denali is a native Koyukon Athabaskan word for “the Great One” or “the High One.” In 1975, Alaska officially recognized Denali as the name of the peak. Five years later, Congress changed the name of Mt. McKinley National Park, where the mountain sits, to Denali National Park and Preserve.

Lisa Murkowski, the GOP senator for Alaska who campaigned for the name change, tweeted Monday that she was “honored” to recognize the mountain as Denali.

For others, the move was tantamount to robbing Gen. George Washington of his obelisk-shaped monument in the nation’s capital, or having workers with drills and sandblaste­rs scaling Mt. Rushmore to efface the memory of one of the four great men memorializ­ed there.

Rep. Bob Gibbs, another Ohio Republican, said of McKinley’s mountain namesake: “This landmark is a testament to his countless years of service to our country.”

The outcry even breached party lines, with Ohio Democratic Rep. Tim Ryan, whose district includes McKinley’s hometown of Niles, insisting, “We must retain this national landmark’s name to honor the legacy of this great president and patriot.”

On social media, the reaction was a bit more mixed, with many users posting that they don’t care what the mountain is called. “Does it matter what it’s called,” wrote one on the Denali National Park and Preserve’s Facebook page, “just as long as it’s protected and not exploited.”

Added another: “I wonder how many Ohioans have even seen Denali.” And another: “This took too long. I was in grad school when this started and now I’m one year away from getting Medicare.”

Alaska has attempted to change the name to Denali for decades, an effort that had been blocked on a federal level by a stubborn and vigilant contingent from Ohio.

On Monday, Ohio Sen. Rob Portman, a Republican, urged Obama to find another way to preserve McKinley’s legacy in the national park where Denali sits.

McKinley scholars feel caught in the middle.

Kim Kenney, curator of the McKinley Museum and Presidenti­al Library in Canton, Ohio, said the man is bigger than any debate about the name of a mountain.

McKinley does not get enough credit for his time in office. “He’s very overshadow­ed by Teddy Roosevelt, who is larger than life,” Kenney said.

On some lists of great American presidents, McKinley ranks in the middle.

“He was responsibl­e, through the Spanish-American War, for transformi­ng America’s view of foreign policy from that of isolationi­sm to becoming a legitimate world power,” Kenney said.

She acknowledg­ed, however, that McKinley never set foot in Alaska and that the then-territory did not factor in his presidency.

“His legacy stands no matter what the mountain is called,” Kenney said. “The silver lining in all of this is that people are talking about William McKinley today. He doesn’t get discussed very often — not these days.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT McKinley, Mt. McKinley’s namesake, never set foot in the territory of Alaska.
Associated Press PRESIDENT McKinley, Mt. McKinley’s namesake, never set foot in the territory of Alaska.

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