The first of two prints formerly thought to be anti-Jackson satires, but actually dealing with the sensational trial of Methodist minister Ephraim K. Avery in May 1833 for the murder of Sarah Maria Cornell. (See also "A Minister Extraordinary...," no. 1833-14). Miss Cornell, a young and pregnant factory girl, was beaten and strangled, and left tied to a post on a remote Massachusetts farm in December 1832. Avery was tried in May 1833 and despite considerable evidence against him (reported at length in the press) was acquitted on June 5. The artist's portrayal here appears to be based on published testimony from the trial. Avery, wearing green spectacles, is shown in the act of tying the young woman by the neck to a post before a haystack....
February 1916 edition of Jim Jam Jems. This issue includes a satirical article on germs and covers a...
An imaginative portrayal of the violent suppression of abolitionist propagandizing and insurrectioni...
During the summer of 1936, Helen Clevenger, an honor student at New York University, accompanied her...
The second of two prints surrounding the scandalous trial of Methodist minister Ephraim K. Avery for...
Date supplied in pencil.Avery was tried in the Supreme judicial court of Rhode Island at Newport, Ma...
1 sheet (1 unnumbered page) : illustrations ; 43 x 20 cm. On December 21, 1832, the body of Sarah ...
A cryptic and anonymous satire probably referring to the 1834 "decapitation" of the wooden figure-he...
William Corder murdered Maria Marten on 18th May 1827 at Polstead in Suffolk in what became known as...
19, [1] p.First-person narrative, prepared by David Daggett (cf. Dexter's Yale graduates) and signed...
A prediction of dire consequences to follow from Jackson's withdrawal of federal funds from the Bank...
person to be executed under Michigan law. The events that lead up to the hanging, the players involv...
Another in the series of "Spoodlyks's" satires on the Glentworth affair. (See also nos. 1840-60, -61...
A satire on the Van Buren administration's involvement in New York State politics. Although the prec...
The print shows evangelical Methodist minister Geroge Whitefield preaching at Moorsfield, London.. H...
This photograph from the Ohio Penitentiary in Columbus is of Ralph Brown, a 32-year-old shipyard wor...
February 1916 edition of Jim Jam Jems. This issue includes a satirical article on germs and covers a...
An imaginative portrayal of the violent suppression of abolitionist propagandizing and insurrectioni...
During the summer of 1936, Helen Clevenger, an honor student at New York University, accompanied her...
The second of two prints surrounding the scandalous trial of Methodist minister Ephraim K. Avery for...
Date supplied in pencil.Avery was tried in the Supreme judicial court of Rhode Island at Newport, Ma...
1 sheet (1 unnumbered page) : illustrations ; 43 x 20 cm. On December 21, 1832, the body of Sarah ...
A cryptic and anonymous satire probably referring to the 1834 "decapitation" of the wooden figure-he...
William Corder murdered Maria Marten on 18th May 1827 at Polstead in Suffolk in what became known as...
19, [1] p.First-person narrative, prepared by David Daggett (cf. Dexter's Yale graduates) and signed...
A prediction of dire consequences to follow from Jackson's withdrawal of federal funds from the Bank...
person to be executed under Michigan law. The events that lead up to the hanging, the players involv...
Another in the series of "Spoodlyks's" satires on the Glentworth affair. (See also nos. 1840-60, -61...
A satire on the Van Buren administration's involvement in New York State politics. Although the prec...
The print shows evangelical Methodist minister Geroge Whitefield preaching at Moorsfield, London.. H...
This photograph from the Ohio Penitentiary in Columbus is of Ralph Brown, a 32-year-old shipyard wor...
February 1916 edition of Jim Jam Jems. This issue includes a satirical article on germs and covers a...
An imaginative portrayal of the violent suppression of abolitionist propagandizing and insurrectioni...
During the summer of 1936, Helen Clevenger, an honor student at New York University, accompanied her...