The Herod of the Nineteenth Century
Title
The Herod of the Nineteenth Century
Subject
Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865
Slavery -- United States -- 19th century
Slaves -- Emancipation -- United States
United States. President (1861-1865 : Lincoln). Emancipation Proclamation
Slavery -- United States -- 19th century
Slaves -- Emancipation -- United States
United States. President (1861-1865 : Lincoln). Emancipation Proclamation
Description
A depiction of Abraham Lincoln as a king holding a glass labeled "power". This cartoon is charging Lincoln for being complacent with the border slave states. The figure to left holds a slave in one hand and a pitcher labelled "tobacco" in the other. Her shirt says "cotton" and her dress "union with slavery" while her legs have "avarice" (greediness) and "prejudice. She is asking for the head of Liberty, who is locked in a cell pondering "Who'll protect me know?" Though Lincoln did announce the Emancipation Proclamation he still exhibited a hesitancy to free slaves in areas controlled by the Union. He had rebutted the emancipation proclamations of both John C. Fremont and David Hunter prior to his own proclamation. In the cartoon Lincoln is reaching for a jug labelled "expediency" inferring that he was willing to undertake the easiest course regardless of issues like slavery.
Source
Special Collections, Gettysburg College
Publisher
Special Collections, Gettysburg College
Contributor
Gross, Matthew R.
Rights
Digital images copyright Special Collections, Musselman Library, Gettysburg College.
Format
JPEG
Language
English
Type
Image
Collection
Citation
“ The Herod of the Nineteenth Century ,” Digital Exhibits, accessed November 22, 2024, http://752800.40daj.group/items/show/5528.