Skinner served in Congress with fellow Republican
William McKinley, who was later to be elected president in 1896 and 1900. On September 6, 1901, Skinner was attending the Pan-American Exposition in
Buffalo, New York to hear President McKinley give a speech about reciprocity. Skinner was a witness when after the President's speech,
Leon Czolgosz approached the President, and shot him twice. McKinley died of his wounds on September 14, 1901, becoming the third President to be assassinated after
Abraham Lincoln in 1865 and
James Garfield in 1881. Skinner previously lived in
Washington D.C. in 1882, and had been asked to attend the execution of Garfield's assassin,
Charles Guiteau, but was unable to attend due to the illness of his daughter. He was invited to Czolgosz's execution by the warden of
Auburn Prison, and attended as one of only twelve "official" witnesses to the execution as required by New York law. Less than two months after shooting McKinley, Czolgosz was executed on October 29, 1901, in Auburn Prison. Czolgosz was executed in the
electric chair, an early usage of this new form of execution.
Thomas Edison later re-enacted the execution in one of his earliest moving pictures. In 1919, Skinner wrote an account of his experiences with McKinley, and of the events which occurred on the day of the execution of Czolgosz. The account appeared in
State Service Magazine, and was entitled "Story of McKinley's Assassination". The article documents Czolgosz's last words: "The reason I killed the President was because he was an enemy of he good people-for the benefit of the working man. That's all there is about it – I'm awful sorry I couldn't see my father. I am not sorry for my crime." Skinner also was the author of the following books: • Skinner, Charles R. "How Congress Acted Forty Years Ago: Reminiscences of a Member From New York State".
State Service (N.Y.) 8 (December 1924): 104–10. • ———.
Manual of Patriotism, for Use in the Public Schools of the State of New York. [Albany, N.Y.: Brandow Printing Company], 1900. • ———.
Protection Patriotism Prosperity; A Safe Trinity. Washington: [Government Printing Office], 1884. • ———.
Speeches of Hon. Charles R. Skinner, of New York, in the House of Representatives. Washington: [Government Printing Office], 1884. • ———, comp.
The Bright Side: Little Excursions into the Field of Optimism. New York: F. D. Beattys & Co., [1909]. Reprint, Great Neck, N.Y.: Granger Book Co., 1979. • ———, comp.
Governors of New York from 1777 to 1920. Albany: J.B. Lyon Co., printers, 1919. • ———, ed.
Arbor Day Manual; An Aid in Preparing Programs for Arbor Day Exercises. Albany: Weed, Parsons and Company, 1890. Reprint, Freeport, N.Y.: Books for Libraries Press, [1971]. • ———, ed.
Watertown, N.Y. A History of its Settlement and Progress, with a Description of its Commercial Advantages, as a Manufacturing Point. Watertown, N.Y.: Watertown Manufacturers Aid Association, 1876. ==Sources==