A commentary on the workings of the January 1839 congressional probe of the Treasury Department in the wake of the Swartwout embezzlement. (See "Price Current" and "Sub Treasurers Meeting in England," nos. 1838-21 and -20.) Led by administration opponent Henry A. Wise and chaired by James Harlan, the committee scrutinized procedures and irregularities in the reporting and handling of federal funds by Treasury Department officials. Here the artist seems unusually sympathetic to Treasury Secretary Levi Woodbury. The secretary sits strapped into a "Scrutiny chair" with its seat of nails, probed and drilled by various committee members including Wise, who bores into his skull at upper right, and Harlan, who sniffs Woodbury's palm saying, "I mu...
The major figures in American national politics in 1838 are gently satirized, each characterized as ...
The Senate's February 1847 resolution barring reporters and editors of the "Washington Union" from t...
A satire on the Van Buren administration challenged by Whig presidential candidate William Henry Har...
Representative Henry A. Wise, vociferous opponent of the Van Buren administration, is portrayed as a...
A satire on corruption among Tammany officeholders in New York, showing absconded former Collector o...
Another satire on the special committee of the House of Representatives investigating Van Buren's Tr...
Once more the House of Representatives investigation of Treasury practices under the Van Buren admin...
A satire on William M. Price, federal district attorney of New York who fled to Europe after embezzl...
A crudely drawn anti-Jackson satire, applauding Henry Clay's orchestration of Congressional resistan...
A parody of the often worthless fractional currencies or "shinplasters" issued by banks, businesses,...
A crude and unusually large woodcut, employing the metaphor of a mill to portray the spoils system u...
A swipe at President Van Buren's independent treasury system and his continuation of the monetary po...
A melodramatic portrayal of the plight of the tradesman during the Panic of 1837, whose financial di...
Whig nominee Zachary Taylor's reluctance to clearly declare his political views was an issue eagerly...
A satire directed against the United States Bank, showing the impact of Jackson's September 1833 ord...
The major figures in American national politics in 1838 are gently satirized, each characterized as ...
The Senate's February 1847 resolution barring reporters and editors of the "Washington Union" from t...
A satire on the Van Buren administration challenged by Whig presidential candidate William Henry Har...
Representative Henry A. Wise, vociferous opponent of the Van Buren administration, is portrayed as a...
A satire on corruption among Tammany officeholders in New York, showing absconded former Collector o...
Another satire on the special committee of the House of Representatives investigating Van Buren's Tr...
Once more the House of Representatives investigation of Treasury practices under the Van Buren admin...
A satire on William M. Price, federal district attorney of New York who fled to Europe after embezzl...
A crudely drawn anti-Jackson satire, applauding Henry Clay's orchestration of Congressional resistan...
A parody of the often worthless fractional currencies or "shinplasters" issued by banks, businesses,...
A crude and unusually large woodcut, employing the metaphor of a mill to portray the spoils system u...
A swipe at President Van Buren's independent treasury system and his continuation of the monetary po...
A melodramatic portrayal of the plight of the tradesman during the Panic of 1837, whose financial di...
Whig nominee Zachary Taylor's reluctance to clearly declare his political views was an issue eagerly...
A satire directed against the United States Bank, showing the impact of Jackson's September 1833 ord...
The major figures in American national politics in 1838 are gently satirized, each characterized as ...
The Senate's February 1847 resolution barring reporters and editors of the "Washington Union" from t...
A satire on the Van Buren administration challenged by Whig presidential candidate William Henry Har...