Natl Archives -- Stephen Hess and Sandy Northrop ("American Political Cartoons"):
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Description of Pictures: American Political Cartoons: The Evolution of a National Identity 1754–2010
From Benjamin Franklin’s drawing in 1754 to contemporary cartoons, editorial cartoons have always been a part of American journalism and politics, despite the discomfort of the cartoons’ targets—and to the delight of their readers. In this illustrated lecture, Stephen Hess, senior fellow emeritus at the Brookings Institution, and Sandy Northrop, award-winning PBS television producer and political cartoon expert, discuss their book, American Political Cartoons. A book signing will follow the program.
The speakers were introduced by David Ferriero, Archivist of the United States.
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Copyrights: All pictures were taken by amateur photographer Bruce Guthrie (me!) who retains copyright on them. Free for non-commercial use with attribution. See the [Creative Commons] definition of what this means. "Photos (c) Bruce Guthrie" is fine for attribution. (Commercial use folks including AI scrapers can of course contact me.) Feel free to use in publications and pages with attribution but you don't have permission to sell the photos themselves. A free copy of any printed publication using any photographs is requested. Descriptive text, if any, is from a mixture of sources, quite frequently from signs at the location or from official web sites; copyrights, if any, are retained by their original owners.
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Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
PCART1_110413_018.JPG: David Ferriero
PCART1_110413_079.JPG: Sandy Northrop
PCART1_110413_084.JPG: Stephen Hess
PCART1_110413_244.JPG: Mike Rhode's in the middle there
PCART1_110413_246.JPG: Matt Wuerker is next to Mike Rhode
PCART1_110413_251.JPG: Matt Wuerker
PCART1_110413_252.JPG: Marty Tolchin and his wife Susan.
Marty Tolchin has flunked retirement yet again. Tolchin capped a 40-year career with The New York Times by founding The Hill, a newspaper that reports on Congress. Three years after retiring from The Hill, he is helping launch Politico. Tolchin's many journalism awards include the Everett M. Dirksen Prize for Distinguished Reporting of Congress. With his wife, Susan, a professor of public policy, Tolchin has written seven books, including "To The Victor: Political Patronage from the Clubhouse to the White House," which has been cited in four U.S. Supreme Court decisions. Their most recent book is "A World Ignited: How Apostles of Ethnic, Religious and Racial Hatred Torch the Globe."
The above is from http://www.politico.com/reporters/MartinTolchin.html
PCART1_110413_254.JPG: Stephen Hess
PCART1_110413_259.JPG: Stephen Hess, Sandy Northrop
PCART1_110413_261.JPG: Matt Wuerker, Mike Rhode
PCART1_110413_265.JPG: Mike Rhode, Donna Lewis
PCART1_110413_266.JPG: Stephen Hess, Sandy Northrop, Matt Wuerker
PCART1_110413_285.JPG: Stephen Hess, Sandy Northrop
PCART1_110413_288.JPG: Stephen Hess, Mike Rhode
PCART1_110413_294.JPG: Stephen Hess, Matt Wuerker, Donna Lewis
PCART1_110413_302.JPG: Matt Wuerker, Stephen Hess, Mike Rhode, Donna Lewis
PCART1_110413_312.JPG: Stephen Hess, Matt Wuerker
PCART2_110413_006.JPG: Thomas Nast, Harper's Weekly 8/19/1871
"Who stole the people's money?"
PCART2_110413_010.JPG: Thomas Nast, Harper's Weekly 11/25/1871
"The Power of the Press"
PCART2_110413_015.JPG: "What are you laughing at? To the victor belong the spoils."
PCART2_110413_018.JPG: Thomas Nast, Harper's Weekly 11/7/1871
PCART2_110413_029.JPG: Our Artist's Occupation Gone [celebrating defeat of Tammany Hall]
PCART2_110413_030.JPG: 1902
"Volcanoes Cannot Stop Thomas Nast"
PCART2_110413_034.JPG: Thomas Nast, Harper's Weekly, 11/7/1874
"Local and Domestic Politics"
PCART2_110413_036.JPG: Thomas Nast, Harper's Weekly
PCART2_110413_040.JPG: Anonymous, 1837
PCART2_110413_041.JPG: American Symbols
PCART2_110413_043.JPG: Benjamin Franklin, Pennsylvania Gazette, 5/9/1754 (???)
"Join, or Die"
PCART2_110413_045.JPG: Ye sons of Sedition, how comes it to pass, that America's typed by a snake-in-the-grass?
PCART2_110413_047.JPG: James Gillray, 4/12/1782
"The American Rattle Snake"
PCART2_110413_050.JPG: Elkaneh Tisdale, Boston Gazette, 3/26/1812
"The Gerry-mander"
PCART2_110413_057.JPG: James Montgomery Flagg, Leslie's Illustrated Weekly Newspaper, 4/16/1916
"I Want You for the US Army -- Enlist Now"
PCART2_110413_062.JPG: Amos Doolittle, 10/21/1813
"Brother Jonathan Administering a Salutary Cordial to John Bull"
PCART2_110413_064.JPG: "Lincoln's Two Difficulties"
PCART2_110413_067.JPG: John Tenniel, Punch, 8/23/1862
"Lincoln's Two Difficulties"
PCART2_110413_069.JPG: William Carson, The Granger Collection, 1898
"A Bigger Job than He Thought For"
PCART2_110413_073.JPG: James Blaine, Hamilton Spectator, 1964
"I Want Y'All"
PCART2_110413_076.JPG: Tony Auth, Philadelphia Inquirer, 10/4/1974
PCART2_110413_079.JPG: Jeff Danziger, Christian Science Monitor, 12/7/1987
"1987"
PCART2_110413_081.JPG: Michael Ramirez, Los Angeles Times, 11/29/2003
"Addicted"
PCART2_110413_085.JPG: Kevin "KAL" Kallaugher, The Economist, 2008
PCART2_110413_086.JPG: Jim Borgman, Cincinnati Inquirer, 9/12/1991
"You're ... taking... it ... all? ..."
PCART2_110413_089.JPG: Newspapers
PCART2_110413_094.JPG: Walt McDougall, New York World, 10/30/1884
"The Royal Feast of Belshazzar Blaine and the Money Kings"
PCART2_110413_095.JPG: Frederick Opper, New York Times, 10/1/1967
"Atlas Joe: or, the fearful responsibilities of a self-appointed manager of the universe"
PCART2_110413_100.JPG: W.A. Rogers, Harper's Weekly, 10/27/1906
"Only a Stepping-Stone"
PCART2_110413_104.JPG: Leon Barritt, Vim, 6/29/1898
"The big type war of the yellow kids"
PCART2_110413_107.JPG: RIchard Outcault, Library of Congress, 9/2/1896
"The Yellow Dugan Kid"
PCART2_110413_109.JPG: Richard Outcault, Hogan's Alley, 1896
PCART2_110413_116.JPG: Richard Outcault, self-caricature, 11/12/1905
PCART2_110413_119.JPG: Homer Davenport, self-caricature, circa 1900
PCART2_110413_124.JPG: Homer Davenport, New York Journal, 8/4/1896
"Wall Street Wishes a New Guardian of the Treasury
PCART2_110413_127.JPG: Homer Davenport, New York Journal, 11/8/1896
"Mark Hanna as he and as Davenport made him"
PCART2_110413_130.JPG: Homer Davenport, New York Journal, 1896
PCART2_110413_132.JPG: Moments in Time
PCART2_110413_134.JPG: John McCutcheon, Chicago Tribune, 10/10/1903
PCART2_110413_138.JPG: Leon Barritt, Vim, 1898
PCART2_110413_143.JPG: Robert Minor, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, circa 1912
"Why Women Want to Vote"
PCART2_110413_149.JPG: Laura Foster, Life, 10/10/1912
PCART2_110413_155.JPG: Mike Peters, Dayton Daily News, 6/29/1982
PCART2_110413_158.JPG: Doug Marlette, Charlotte Observer, 1981
PCART2_110413_162.JPG: Signe Wilkinson, Philadelphia Daily News, 1992
PCART2_110413_165.JPG: War!
PCART2_110413_169.JPG: Daniel Fitzpatrick, St Louis Post-Dispatch, 5/7/1945
"Down to bottomless perdition"
PCART2_110413_174.JPG: Bill Mauldin, Stars and Stripes, 11/2/1944
"I feel like a fugitive from th' law of averages."
PCART2_110413_180.JPG: Bill Mauldin, Stars and Stripes, 6/1/1944
"Joe, yesttidy ya saved my life an' I swore I'd pay ya back. Here's my last pair o' dry socks."
PCART2_110413_186.JPG: Bill Mauldin, Stars and Stripes, 11/2/1944
"Beautiful view. Is there one for the enlisted men?"
PCART2_110413_191.JPG: Bill Mauldin, Stars and Stripes, 9/19/1944
"Oh, I likes officers. They make me want to live till the war's over."
PCART2_110413_194.JPG: Bill Mauldin
PCART2_110413_198.JPG: Bill Mauldin, United Features Syndicate, 1946
"Yer lucky it's cloth. Mine was paper an' it wore out."
PCART2_110413_201.JPG: Bill Mauldin, United Features Syndicate, 1946
"Major Wilson! Back in uniform, I see."
PCART2_110413_208.JPG: Bill Mauldin, United Features Syndicate, 1945
"How's it feel to be a free man again?"
PCART2_110413_214.JPG: Bill Mauldin, United Features Syndicate, 1946
"Bloodstains again!"
PCART2_110413_218.JPG: Bill Mauldin, United Features Syndicate, 1946
"Freedom's Brave Sentinels"
PCART2_110413_220.JPG: Bill Mauldin, United Features Syndicate, 1946
"Whar's that gol-darn sign painter?"
PCART2_110413_228.JPG: Herbert Block AKA "Herblock"
PCART2_110413_232.JPG: Herblock, Washington Post, 6/17/1949
"Fire!"
PCART2_110413_236.JPG: Herblock, Washington Post, 3/29/1950
"You mean I'm supposed to stand on that?"
PCART2_110413_242.JPG: Herblock, Washington Post, 5/7/1954
"I have here in my hand..."
PCART2_110413_246.JPG: Thomas Nast, Harper's Weekly, 12/9/1876
"The Ignorant Vote -- [???] are easy"
PCART2_110413_250.JPG: Thomas Nast, Harper's Weekly, March 1867
"The day we celebrate"
PCART2_110413_254.JPG: Thomas Nast, Harper's Weekly, 9/15/1879
PCART2_110413_255.JPG: "The Nigger Must Go" and "The Chinese Must Go"
"The Poor Barbarians Can't Understand that Civilized Republican Form of Government"
PCART2_110413_258.JPG: Frank Gratz, Puck, 3/29/1882
"The Anti-Chinese Wall. The American Wall Goes Up as the Chinese Original Goes Down"
PCART2_110413_261.JPG: Steve Benson, Arizona Republic, 4/18/2006
"If you build it, they will still come."
PCART2_110413_265.JPG: Lalo Alcaraz, La Cucaracha, 2000
PCART2_110413_270.JPG: Lalo Alcaraz, La Cucaracha, 2000
"Bienvenidos a Arizona"
PCART2_110413_272.JPG: Lalo Alcaraz, La Cucaracha, 1998
PCART2_110413_274.JPG: Lalo Alcaraz, Universal Press Syndicate, 2001
Family Headstone, 2001
PCART2_110413_279.JPG: Thomas Worth, Courier & Ives, 1893
PCART2_110413_283.JPG: Paul Conrad, Los Angeles Times, 1973
"Another US withdrawal"
PCART2_110413_287.JPG: Ollie Harrington, Bootsie, 1960
"Here, Brother Bootsie. Take this extra hammer I got here in case the gentlemens of the law decided that this demonstration is too peaceful!"
PCART2_110413_291.JPG: Bill Mauldin, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 3/2/1960
"Let that one go. He says he don't wanna be mah equal."
PCART2_110413_298.JPG: "See you in Church"
PCART2_110413_302.JPG: Jules Feiffer, Village Voice, 9/9/1963
PCART2_110413_304.JPG: "Pardon me, sir. Why are you following me?"
"I'm your sit in."
PCART2_110413_305.JPG: "You must have the wrong party. I'm not a lunch counter."
"I'm a social sit in, not a property sit in. We integrate people."
PCART2_110413_307.JPG: "Don't get me wrong. I understand what you're trying to do. But I can't take you to work with me."
"Have you ever taken a colored person to work with you?"
PCART2_110413_309.JPG: "Believe me, I would if I found one qualified. I'm on your side. You don't want me!"
"Wonderful... we can discuss it at work."
PCART2_110413_311.JPG: "Look, I do my bit ! Every day I deliberately sit next to one of you on the bus! Don't I get some time off for liberalism?"
"Have you ever taken a colored person home with you?"
PCART2_110413_314.JPG: "Hold on! I never mix my home life with my politics! How long do you expect to stay with me?"
"Whither you goest, baby, I goest."
PCART2_110413_316.JPG: "Civil rights used to be so much more tolerable before negroes got into it."
PCART2_110413_321.JPG: Jules Feiffer, Village Voice, 1/1/1967
PCART2_110413_323.JPG: "In this dance I have symbolized a nation in flux..."
PCART2_110413_324.JPG: "Establishing fresh approaches to the problems of -- poverty."
PCART2_110413_326.JPG: "Crime in the streets"
PCART2_110413_327.JPG: "And civil rights"
PCART2_110413_328.JPG: "A dance to 1967."
PCART2_110413_333.JPG: Pat Oliphant
PCART2_110413_335.JPG: Pat Oliphant, Denver Post, 7/27./1967
PCART2_110413_343.JPG: Pat Oliphant, Denver Post, 6/17/1968
"I forget Mayor Daley's orders -- are these 'shoot to kill' or 'main and cripple'?"
PCART2_110413_344.JPG: Pat Oliphant, Denver Post, 8/25/1970
"Do you ever feel a little lonely?"
PCART2_110413_346.JPG: Pat Oliphant, Denver Post, 8/2/1967
"White House -- Soul Brother"
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and I can email them to you, or, depending on the number of images, just repost the page again will the full-sized images.
2020_DC_Cave_200205 Natl Archives -- Academy Award Documentary Feature Nominee: "The Cave" (w/member reception)
2019_DC_Rubenstein_191216 Natl Archives -- David Rubenstein ("The American Story: Conversations with Master Historians") w/Taylor Branch, H.W. Brands, and Jay Winik
2019_DC_Leadership_191030 Natl Archives -- Panel -- Women in Leadership: Women on the U.S. Congress w/Shelley Moore Capito, Brenda Lawrence, Tammy Baldwin and Brooke Baldwin
2019_DC_Levin_190924 Natl Archives -- Kevin Levin ("Searching for Black Confederates")
2009_DC_Hess_090117 Newseum -- Inside Media w/Stephen Hess ("What Do We Do Now?")
2008_DC_NAROCP_080207 Natl Archives -- Panel -- Running for Office: Cartooning and Politics (w/Pat Oliphant, Ann Telnaes, Matt Davies, and Clay Bennett)
2012_DC_AAEC_Panel1_120914 DC -- GWU -- AAEC -- #!&% Cartoons! -- Panel 1: Welcome and Great American Political Cartoon
Rhode, Mike appears on:
2023_05_08D2_TelnaesR Library of Congress -- Ceremony: Herblock Prize (2023): Ann Telnaes -- Reception
2023_03_20E1_Tavares Politics & Prose @ Takoma Park Maryand Library -- Matt Tavares ("Hoops")
2023_DC_Brandon_Croft_230215 Loyalty Bookstore @ 843 Upshur St. -- Event: Barbara Brandon-Croft ("Where I'm Coming From!") w/Sharon Pendana
2023_DC_Bomb_230123 DC -- Cleveland Park Library -- Event: Steve Sheinkin & Nick Bertozzi ("Bomb Graphic Novel: The Race to Build - And Steal - The World's Most Dangerous Weapon")
2011 photos: Equipment this year: I mostly used the Fuji S100fs camera as well as two Nikon models -- the D90 and the new D7000. Mostly a toy, I also purchased a Fuji Real 3-D W3 camera, to try out 3-D photographs. I found it interesting although I don't see any real use for 3-D stills now. Given that many of the photos from the 1860s were in 3-D (including some of the more famous Civil War shots), it's odd to see it coming back.
Trips this year:
Civil War Trust conferences (Savannah, GA, Chattanooga, TN),
New Jersey over Memorial Day for my birthday (people never seem to visit New Jersey -- it's always just a pit stop on the way to New York. I thought I might as well spend a few days there. Despite some nice places, it still ended up a pit stop for me -- New York City was infinitely more interesting),
my 6th consecutive San Diego Comic-Con trip (including Las Vegas, Los Angeles, and San Francisco).
Ego strokes: Author photos that I took were used on two book jackets this year: Jason Emerson's book "The Dark Days of Abraham Lincoln's Widow As Revealed by Her Own Letters" and Dennis L. Noble's "The U.S. Coast Guard's War on Human Smuggling." I also had a photo of Jason Stelter published in the Washington Examiner and a picture of Miss DC, Ashley Boalch, published in the Washington Post.
Number of photos taken this year: just over 390,000.
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