On February 15, 1933, 17 days before
his inauguration, Roosevelt was giving an impromptu speech at night from the back of an
open car in the
Bayfront Park area of Miami,
Florida, where Zangara was working the occasional odd job and living off his savings. Zangara, armed with a
.32-caliber US Revolver Company revolver he had bought for $8 () at a local pawn shop, joined the crowd of spectators, but as he was only tall, he was unable to see over other people and had to stand on a wobbly bench, where Mrs. Lillian Cross was already standing for a better view. Zangara got on the bench to get a clear aim at his target from 25 feet away. He placed his gun near Mrs. Cross's right shoulder (she was only about 4 inches taller than he and weighed 105 pounds). Lillian Cross saw Zangara's pistol, quickly transferred her purse from right to left hand, and then pushed up and twisted Zangara's shooting arm. As he fired shots, Mrs. Cross reported that Zangara continually attempted to force her arm back down but she "wouldn't let go." Five people were hit: Mrs. Joseph H. Gill (seriously wounded in the abdomen); Miss Margaret Kruis of
Newark, New Jersey, (minor wound in hand and a scalp wound); New York detective/bodyguard
William Sinnott (superficial head wound); Russell Caldwell of Miami (flesh wound on the forehead); and
Chicago mayor
Anton Cermak, who was standing on the running board of the car next to Roosevelt. Mrs. Cross had powder burns on her right cheek. A
Secret Service agent, Bob Clark, had a grazed hand, possibly caused by the bullet that struck Cermak. The intended target, Roosevelt, was unharmed. Roosevelt cradled the mortally wounded Cermak in his arms as the car rushed to the hospital; after arriving there, Cermak spoke to Roosevelt and, before he died 19 days later, allegedly uttered the line that is engraved on his tomb: "I'm glad it was me, not you." The
Chicago Tribune reported the quote without attributing it to a witness, and most scholars doubt it was ever said. ==Perpetrator==