Winfield Scott's controversial performance as commander in the War of 1812 battle at Lundy's Lane turned to account by the artist in this parody of the general's candidacy in 1852. The battle of Lundy's Lane against the British in Canada in 1814, considered by Scott a personal triumph, was in fact a questionable victory in which the wisdom of Scott's strategy and tactics had been disputed. Here, Scott's abolitionist supporters for the Whig presidential nomination, William Seward (holding Scott by the tails) and Horace Greeley (kneeling at far right), hesitate to let Scott join the "Whig Chorus" on the left, knowing the general's well-known propensity for "faux pas" and imprudent remarks. The general's managers did in fact try to preserve h...