Zachary Taylor and Lewis Cass engage in a bout of fisticuffs in their battle for the presidency in 1848. Taylor, clearly getting the better of his opponent, seizes Cass by the lapels saying, "A little more grape! Gen"al" Gas!" Cass pleads, "Enough! Enough! you've knocked all the breath out of my body--Carry me off Old Bullion!" His appeal for help is to conservative Democratic senator Thomas Hart Benton, who stands to the left wondering, "I didn't think old Gas would have funked so soon; these d--d Barnburners must have frightened his pluck out of him." One of the "Barnburners" (i.e., radical Democrats), former President Martin Van Buren (far left), comments, "If old Gas comes round in my neighborhood I'll give a poke that will soon s...
A figurative portrayal of the 1844 presidential contest as a cock-fight, in which Whig candidate Hen...
Returning to Kentucky in the spring of 1829 after four years as secretary of state in the administra...
A woodland fantasy satirizing the prominent figures of the 1844 election campaign. The artist again...
A particularly well-drawn satire on the three major presidential contenders for 1848, (left to right...
A pro-Democrat satire, pitting Democratic candidate Lewis Cass against Whig nominee Zachary Taylor i...
The Free Soil sympathies of the cartoonist are evident in his portrayal of the 1848 presidential con...
The artist predicts a decisive Whig victory in the presidential election of 1848, with Whig candidat...
The presidential campaign of 1836 viewed as a card game by a satirist in sympathy with the Whigs. O...
A severe split within the Whig ranks, between partisans of Henry Clay and those of Zachary Taylor, p...
A pro-Cass satire, predicting the Democratic nominee's victory over Whig Zachary Taylor and Free Soi...
An optimistic view of the presidential prospects of Martin Van Buren, nominated at the Free Soil Par...
Whig nominee Zachary Taylor's reluctance to clearly declare his political views was an issue eagerly...
In a race between the railroad and the telegraph the "telegraphic candidates," Lewis Cass and Willia...
Opposing candidates Martin Van Buren (Democrat) and William Henry Harrison (Whig) face each other ac...
The artist envisions public repudiation of Democratic hard-money policies, and the triumph of admini...
A figurative portrayal of the 1844 presidential contest as a cock-fight, in which Whig candidate Hen...
Returning to Kentucky in the spring of 1829 after four years as secretary of state in the administra...
A woodland fantasy satirizing the prominent figures of the 1844 election campaign. The artist again...
A particularly well-drawn satire on the three major presidential contenders for 1848, (left to right...
A pro-Democrat satire, pitting Democratic candidate Lewis Cass against Whig nominee Zachary Taylor i...
The Free Soil sympathies of the cartoonist are evident in his portrayal of the 1848 presidential con...
The artist predicts a decisive Whig victory in the presidential election of 1848, with Whig candidat...
The presidential campaign of 1836 viewed as a card game by a satirist in sympathy with the Whigs. O...
A severe split within the Whig ranks, between partisans of Henry Clay and those of Zachary Taylor, p...
A pro-Cass satire, predicting the Democratic nominee's victory over Whig Zachary Taylor and Free Soi...
An optimistic view of the presidential prospects of Martin Van Buren, nominated at the Free Soil Par...
Whig nominee Zachary Taylor's reluctance to clearly declare his political views was an issue eagerly...
In a race between the railroad and the telegraph the "telegraphic candidates," Lewis Cass and Willia...
Opposing candidates Martin Van Buren (Democrat) and William Henry Harrison (Whig) face each other ac...
The artist envisions public repudiation of Democratic hard-money policies, and the triumph of admini...
A figurative portrayal of the 1844 presidential contest as a cock-fight, in which Whig candidate Hen...
Returning to Kentucky in the spring of 1829 after four years as secretary of state in the administra...
A woodland fantasy satirizing the prominent figures of the 1844 election campaign. The artist again...