Sharply critical of both the Democratic and Whig choice of presidential candidates in 1852, the artist laments the nomination of two soldiers, Winfield Scott (center) and Franklin Pierce (far right), in preference to several more "capable" statesmen who appear at left. The latter are (left to right): Samuel Houston, John J. Crittenden, Thomas Hart Benton, Millard Fillmore, John Bell, Lewis Cass, Stephen A. Douglas, and Daniel Webster. Most prominent in the group are Fillmore, Cass, and Webster, who also sought the presidential nomination in 1852. Fillmore: "I have sought more anxiously to do what was right; than what would please, and feel no disappointment, at finding that my Conduct has, rendered me an unavailable candidate." Cass: "W...
George Hunt Pendleton (July 19, 1825- November 24, 1889) is a significant but neglected figure in th...
In the year 18614., after Abraham Lincoln was nominated for the presidency at a Republican conventio...
The artist envisions public repudiation of Democratic hard-money policies, and the triumph of admini...
A cynical view of party competition for the working man's vote in the presidential campaign of 1852....
The title plays on Franklin Pierce's last name, at the expense of Whig presidential hopefuls Millard...
A satire on the competition between Daniel Webster and Winfield Scott for the 1852 Whig nomination f...
A fond yet sardonic tribute to the aging Massachusetts statesman Daniel Webster, whose final bid for...
A crudely drawn satire bitterly attacking Democratic presidential candidate Franklin Pierce and appe...
Whig nominee Zachary Taylor's reluctance to clearly declare his political views was an issue eagerly...
The 1852 Democratic victory under the standard of Franklin Pierce is foreseen as a debacle for the W...
The Free Soil sympathies of the cartoonist are evident in his portrayal of the 1848 presidential con...
In a race between the railroad and the telegraph the "telegraphic candidates," Lewis Cass and Willia...
Zachary Taylor's stubborn resistance to declaring his views on the major political issues during his...
Several prospective Democratic presidential candidates travel along a canal in the "Salt River Barge...
The weather that January evening, 132 years ago, complicated the old man\u27s plans, but failed to k...
George Hunt Pendleton (July 19, 1825- November 24, 1889) is a significant but neglected figure in th...
In the year 18614., after Abraham Lincoln was nominated for the presidency at a Republican conventio...
The artist envisions public repudiation of Democratic hard-money policies, and the triumph of admini...
A cynical view of party competition for the working man's vote in the presidential campaign of 1852....
The title plays on Franklin Pierce's last name, at the expense of Whig presidential hopefuls Millard...
A satire on the competition between Daniel Webster and Winfield Scott for the 1852 Whig nomination f...
A fond yet sardonic tribute to the aging Massachusetts statesman Daniel Webster, whose final bid for...
A crudely drawn satire bitterly attacking Democratic presidential candidate Franklin Pierce and appe...
Whig nominee Zachary Taylor's reluctance to clearly declare his political views was an issue eagerly...
The 1852 Democratic victory under the standard of Franklin Pierce is foreseen as a debacle for the W...
The Free Soil sympathies of the cartoonist are evident in his portrayal of the 1848 presidential con...
In a race between the railroad and the telegraph the "telegraphic candidates," Lewis Cass and Willia...
Zachary Taylor's stubborn resistance to declaring his views on the major political issues during his...
Several prospective Democratic presidential candidates travel along a canal in the "Salt River Barge...
The weather that January evening, 132 years ago, complicated the old man\u27s plans, but failed to k...
George Hunt Pendleton (July 19, 1825- November 24, 1889) is a significant but neglected figure in th...
In the year 18614., after Abraham Lincoln was nominated for the presidency at a Republican conventio...
The artist envisions public repudiation of Democratic hard-money policies, and the triumph of admini...