Lincoln
  • 1860 Election
  •   - Harpweek
      - "Uncle Sam" making new arrangements
      - The Political Eclipse of 1860
      - Honest old Abe on the Stump. Springfield 1858. Honest old Abe on the Stump, at the ratification Meeting of Presidential Nominations. Springfield 1860.
      - Too many Cooks Spoil the broth
      - A Western Luminary: A Link on (A. Lincoln) the Lighthouse at Chicago
      - The rail candidate
      - An heir to the throne, or the next Republication candidate
      - When Washington was the Sole Standard
      - Wonderful Surgical Operation
      - A Cartoon that Foreshadowed Events
      - Columbia and Her Suitors
      - The National Game, Three Outs and One Run
      - "The impending crisis"-Or caught in the act
      - The great exhibition of 1860
      - "The irrepressible confict" Or the Republican barge in danger
      - The Republican Party going to the right House
      - The Split-Tail Democracy
      - The Last Rail Split by ‘Honest Old Abe’
      - Candidates and Platforms
      - A Political Race
      - Coming ‘Round
      - Dividing the National Map
      - Dogberry’s Last Charge
      - Letting the cat out of the bag!
      - Lincoln, Douglas and the Rail-Fence Handicap
      - Storming the Castle
      - The Great Exhibition of 1860
      - Political Quadrille Music by Dred Scott
      - Three to One You Don’t Get It, [Variation on the Popular Interpretation of the Meaning of the Pawnbroker’s Sons]
      - The Power of the Rail
      - Lincoln shows Douglas the Right Road to the White House
      - Honest Abe taking them on the half shell
      - Progressive democracy – prospect of a smash up
      - Shaky
      - Sich a gittin’ Upstairs (A Quarrel lin the Household)
      - The Political Gymnasium
      - Political Blondins Crossing Salt River
      - Coming Man’s Presidential Career
      - Et Tu Greeley
      - ‘Taking the stump’ or Stephen in search of his mother
      - A Phenomenon of Portraiture
      - Honest Old Abe and the Little Boy in Search of His Mother – A Sensation Story
      - Old Abe and His Electors
      - The Humors of the Presidential Canvass
      - The New President of the United States. From a Fugitive Sketch
      - The Perilous Voyage to the White House
      - The Presidential Pot-Pie
      - The Successful and Unsuccessful Candidates at Breakfast the Morning After
      - Castle Lincoln – No Surrender: Fort Davis – in Ruins
      - Great and astonishing trick of Old Abe, the Western juggler
      - Great Fight for the Championship
      - How Abe Lincoln Escaped the Fire-Eaters of the South and the Flames of Secession
      -
      - The Generous Rivals
      - Abraham, Wait on this Gentleman to the Door
      - Getting at the Root of It
      - Unheeded Advice
      - Oh! Willie, We Have Missed You!
      - Republican Campaign Conflict between Seward and Lincoln, James Watson Webb is Featured on the Bow
      - The Great Match at Baltimore
      - The Great Political Political Race
      - The Sowers
      - The Tallest Ruler on the Globe
      - Good Gracious, Abraham Lincoln
      - Great Swimming Match to Come Off on the Fourth of November
      - How Abe Lincoln Escaped the Fire-Eaters of the South and the Flames of Secession
      - Honest old Abe on the Stump
      - The Undecided Political Prize
      - Abe, The Giant Killer
      - Abe Lincoln’s Last Card; or, Rouge et Noir
      - Unheeded Advice
      - Abraham, Wait on this Gentleman to the Door
      - To the Victors Belong the Spoils – Bunker
      - Honest Old Abe and the Little Boy in Search of His Mother – A Sensation Story
      - Leading, Following, Rebelling
      - Extremes Meet
      - The Smothering of the Democratic Princes
  • President Lincoln
  • Civil War
  • Cabinet and Patronage
  • Emancipation and Slavery
  • Black Soldiers
  • New York City
  • The Press
  • 1864 Election
  • Assassination & Funeral
  • Secession
  • Foreign Policy
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    Cartoon Corner
    An heir to the throne, or the next Republication candidate

    An heir to the throne, or the next Republication candidate

    Title: An heir to the throne, or the next Republication candidate

    Year: 1860

    Creator: Louis Maurer, Lithograph, Currier & Ives, October 1860

    Description: The Republicans' reported support of Negro rights is taken to an extreme here. Editor Horace Greeley (left) and candidate Abraham Lincoln (resting his elbow on a rail at right) stand on either side of a short black man holding a spear. The latter is the deformed African man recently featured at P.T. Barnum's Museum on Broadway as the "What-is-it." (A poster for this attraction appears on the wall behind.) Greeley says, "Gentlemen allow me to introduce to you, this illustrious individual in whom you will find combined, all the graces, and virtues of Black Republicanism, and whom we propose to run as our next Candidate for the Presidency." Lincoln muses, "How fortunate! that this intellectual and noble creature should have been discovered just at this time, to prove to the world the superiority of the Colored over the Anglo Saxon race, he will be a worthy successor to carry out the policy which I shall inaugurate." The black man wonders, "What, can dey be?" Shaw: Barnum’s Museum in New York was established in 1857, but it had been closed for some time and was reopening with great hullabaloo in 1860. Among its attractions was a strange creature whom the Great Showman had named ‘What Is It?’ The cartoon disparages Lincoln’s candidacy by suggesting that Barnum’s freak would be nominated by the Republicans four years later. Horace Greeley introduces the ‘illustrious individual’ as combining all the graces and virtues of Black Republicanism. Lincoln accepts the ‘intellectual and noble creature’ as his own worthy successor, who will provet o the world the ‘superiority of the Colored over the Anglo-Saxon race.”

    URL: http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3a05736

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