An animated comic scene ridiculing the Democratic and American party candidates. In the foreground is a somewhat rickety wooden "Democratic Platform," into which presidential candidate James Buchanan has just run, knocking his mount (running mate John C. Breckinridge, in the form of a buck) unconscious. Buchanan (center, dressed as a jockey) holds his right shin and curses a ragged black youth who stands laughing on the platform, "You infernal Black Scoundrel, if it had not been for you and that cursed Slavery Plank that Scared and upset my Buck, I should have won this race certain." The black youth jeers, "Ya! Ya! Ya! Why Massa Buck. Dis is de Democratic Platform, I tink I misunderstand you to Say dat you like dis Plank [. . .] in fac dat...
The familiar metaphor of the presidential contest as a boxing match is invoked once again. (For an e...
Lincoln's support of abolition is portrayed here as a liability in his race to the White House again...
A pro-Breckinridge satire on the 1860 presidential contest. Republican candidate Abraham Lincoln (ri...
Democratic candidate James Buchanan, as a buck deer, crosses the finish line of a racecourse ahead o...
Rival presidential nominees Lincoln and Douglas are matched in a footrace, in which Lincoln's long s...
Presidential candidates John C. Frémont and Millard Fillmore try unsuccessfully to stop James "Buck"...
A figurative portrayal of the presidential race of 1824. A crowd of cheering citizens watch as candi...
The Free Soil sympathies of the cartoonist are evident in his portrayal of the 1848 presidential con...
A comic scene ridiculing the Tammany Democrats of New York City. Tammany headquarters, known as the ...
The print is a reproduction of a political cartoon satirizing the 1860 United States Presidential El...
A pro-Buchanan satire, critical of the divisive or sectionalist appeal of the other two presidential...
The facsimile features a reproduction of an 1860 cartoon featuring caricatured images of political a...
Again, the race motif is used to parody election-year rivalries. (See "Footrace, Pensylvania Avenue,...
A cynical view of party competition for the working man's vote in the presidential campaign of 1852....
The strongly racist character of the Democratic presidential campaign of 1868 is displayed full-blow...
The familiar metaphor of the presidential contest as a boxing match is invoked once again. (For an e...
Lincoln's support of abolition is portrayed here as a liability in his race to the White House again...
A pro-Breckinridge satire on the 1860 presidential contest. Republican candidate Abraham Lincoln (ri...
Democratic candidate James Buchanan, as a buck deer, crosses the finish line of a racecourse ahead o...
Rival presidential nominees Lincoln and Douglas are matched in a footrace, in which Lincoln's long s...
Presidential candidates John C. Frémont and Millard Fillmore try unsuccessfully to stop James "Buck"...
A figurative portrayal of the presidential race of 1824. A crowd of cheering citizens watch as candi...
The Free Soil sympathies of the cartoonist are evident in his portrayal of the 1848 presidential con...
A comic scene ridiculing the Tammany Democrats of New York City. Tammany headquarters, known as the ...
The print is a reproduction of a political cartoon satirizing the 1860 United States Presidential El...
A pro-Buchanan satire, critical of the divisive or sectionalist appeal of the other two presidential...
The facsimile features a reproduction of an 1860 cartoon featuring caricatured images of political a...
Again, the race motif is used to parody election-year rivalries. (See "Footrace, Pensylvania Avenue,...
A cynical view of party competition for the working man's vote in the presidential campaign of 1852....
The strongly racist character of the Democratic presidential campaign of 1868 is displayed full-blow...
The familiar metaphor of the presidential contest as a boxing match is invoked once again. (For an e...
Lincoln's support of abolition is portrayed here as a liability in his race to the White House again...
A pro-Breckinridge satire on the 1860 presidential contest. Republican candidate Abraham Lincoln (ri...