A cynical view of party competition for the working man's vote in the presidential campaign of 1852. In a polling place, four candidates struggle to force their own election ticket on a short, uncouth-looking character in a long coat. The latter holds a whip, suggesting that he is either a New York cabman or a farmer. The candidates are (left to right): Whig senator from Massachusetts Daniel Webster, Texas Democrat Sam Houston, Illinois Democrat Stephen A. Douglas, and Whig general Winfield Scott. The cartoon must have been produced before the June 5 nomination of dark-horse Franklin Pierce as the Democratic candidate, as Pierce is not shown. Webster: "My honest friend, these men are interested parties, I have no further interest in this m...
A satire on the Democrats' or "Loco Focos'" 1852 pursuit of Franklin Pierce for the presidential nom...
A particularly well-drawn satire on the three major presidential contenders for 1848, (left to right...
An imaginative and elaborate parody on the upcoming 1844 presidential campaign. The artist favors Wh...
A satire on the competition between Daniel Webster and Winfield Scott for the 1852 Whig nomination f...
The Free Soil sympathies of the cartoonist are evident in his portrayal of the 1848 presidential con...
The title plays on Franklin Pierce's last name, at the expense of Whig presidential hopefuls Millard...
A mild election-year cartoon portraying Whig presidential candidate Winfield Scott (left) as a turke...
A figurative portrayal of the 1844 presidential contest as a cock-fight, in which Whig candidate Hen...
Sharply critical of both the Democratic and Whig choice of presidential candidates in 1852, the arti...
A crudely drawn satire bitterly attacking Democratic presidential candidate Franklin Pierce and appe...
The artist satirizes the split in party loyalties between the Locofoco and Tammany factions of New Y...
A pro-Breckinridge satire on the 1860 presidential contest. Republican candidate Abraham Lincoln (ri...
Again, the race motif is used to parody election-year rivalries. (See "Footrace, Pensylvania Avenue,...
A figurative portrayal -- clearly sympathetic to the Whig party -- of the 1836 presidential election...
The 1852 Democratic victory under the standard of Franklin Pierce is foreseen as a debacle for the W...
A satire on the Democrats' or "Loco Focos'" 1852 pursuit of Franklin Pierce for the presidential nom...
A particularly well-drawn satire on the three major presidential contenders for 1848, (left to right...
An imaginative and elaborate parody on the upcoming 1844 presidential campaign. The artist favors Wh...
A satire on the competition between Daniel Webster and Winfield Scott for the 1852 Whig nomination f...
The Free Soil sympathies of the cartoonist are evident in his portrayal of the 1848 presidential con...
The title plays on Franklin Pierce's last name, at the expense of Whig presidential hopefuls Millard...
A mild election-year cartoon portraying Whig presidential candidate Winfield Scott (left) as a turke...
A figurative portrayal of the 1844 presidential contest as a cock-fight, in which Whig candidate Hen...
Sharply critical of both the Democratic and Whig choice of presidential candidates in 1852, the arti...
A crudely drawn satire bitterly attacking Democratic presidential candidate Franklin Pierce and appe...
The artist satirizes the split in party loyalties between the Locofoco and Tammany factions of New Y...
A pro-Breckinridge satire on the 1860 presidential contest. Republican candidate Abraham Lincoln (ri...
Again, the race motif is used to parody election-year rivalries. (See "Footrace, Pensylvania Avenue,...
A figurative portrayal -- clearly sympathetic to the Whig party -- of the 1836 presidential election...
The 1852 Democratic victory under the standard of Franklin Pierce is foreseen as a debacle for the W...
A satire on the Democrats' or "Loco Focos'" 1852 pursuit of Franklin Pierce for the presidential nom...
A particularly well-drawn satire on the three major presidential contenders for 1848, (left to right...
An imaginative and elaborate parody on the upcoming 1844 presidential campaign. The artist favors Wh...