Daniel shays rebellion cartoons

Daniel shays rebellion cartoons Boston: D. By the early s, scholarship has suggested that Shays's role in the protests was significantly and strategically exaggerated by Massachusetts elites, who had a political interest in shifting blame for bad economic conditions away from themselves. Merchants began to demand the same from their local business partners, including those operating in the market towns in the state's interior. JSTOR

The Looking Glass of

Picture
Date:
Creator:Possibly Amos Doolittle
About this artifact

This Connecticut cartoon appeared in at the height of the ratification debates over the proposed Federal Constitution. In Connecticut, as elsewhere, those favoring ratification were called Federalists; their opponents were referred to as Antifederalists.

The artist of this cartoon, who is possibly Amos Doolittle, favored ratification. Connecticut is represented by a wagon sinking into the mud under its heavy load of debts and paper money as the two faction pull the wagon in opposite directions. The man in the wagon states "Gentlemen this Machine is deep in the mire and you are divided as to its releaf." To the left, under a sunny sky, are the five Federalist councilors.

On the right, under a stormy sky issuing lightning bolts, are six of the seven Antifederalist councilors, one of whom says "Success to Shays." The seventh Antifederalist councilor is below and identified as "Agricola" which was the pseudonym William Williams used. He is saying, "I fear & dread the Ides of MAY." May 15 was Election Day for the Connecticut upper house.

Daniel shays rebellion cartoons for kids Search the history of over billion web pages on the Internet. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society. The state ratified the constitution by a vote of to Szatmary, David P.

The character identified as "S?H?P" is Williams' enemy, Samuel Holden Parsons. Parsons was the president of the Connecticut Society of the Cincinnati, a hereditary military order open only to officers of the Continental Army and their male desecndents. The smaller cartoon within the cartoon at the lower left has the caption "Tweedles Studdy as I sit plodding by my taper," a reference to a satirical poem in the New-Haven Gazette.

A copy of this poem, titled, i"Poem in the New Haven Gazette", appears on this site.



Courtesy Library of Congress, Washington, DC Prints and Photographs Division

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