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THOMAS NAST BOX 5 CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS FILE
28. (?) “Two Great Questions.” 19 August 1871. Tweed Ring.
29. “Mr. Bergh to the Rescue.” 19 August 1871.
30. “Too Much of a Good Thing.” 19 August 1871.
31. “All Cut and Dried.” 26 August 1871. Tweed.
32. “The Tammany Lords and Their Constituents.” 2 September 1871. Tweed.
33. “The Usual Irish Way of Doing Things.” 2 September 1871. Irish Immigrants.
34. “United Italy.” 9 September 1871.
THOMAS NAST BOX 6
1. “Our Constant Traveling Companion.” 16 September 1871. Railroads.
2. “Wholesale and Retail.” 16 September 1871. Tweed.
3. “A Group of Vultures Waiting for the Storm to ‘Blow Over.’” 23 September
1871. Tweed.
4. “What the German Democrats Have Done About It.” 23 September 1871.
5. “The American River Ganges.” 30 September 1871. Catholic Church
6. “Too Thin!” 30 September 1871. Tweed Ring.
7. “International Four-Oared Boat-Race on Saratoga Lake, September 11, 1871.”
30 September 1871.
8. “Which Nobody Can Deny.” 30 September 1871. Democratic Party.
9. “Shakespeare’s Voyage of Life.” 7 October 1871.
9a. “My Mother.” 7 October 1871.
10. “Stop Thief.” 7 October 1871. Tweed Ring.
11. “That’s What’s The Matter.” 7 October 1871. Tweed Ring, Elections, Ballot
Stuffing, Political corruption.
12. “Our Rising Generation.” 14 October 1871.
13. “The City Treasury.” 14 October 1871. Fraud, Tweed Ring.
14. “The Brains.” 21 October 1871. Tweed.
15. “The Only Thing They Respect or Fear.” 21 October 1871. Tweed Ring.
16. “Our Mare Still Lives.” 28 October 1871. A. Oakley Hall, Tweed Ring.
17. “The Boss Still Has the Reins.” 4 November 1871. Tweed Ring.
18. “The Good-For-Nothing in Miss Columbia’s Public School.” 4 November
1871. Public education.
19. “Going Through the Form of Universal Suffrage.” 11 November 1871. Tweed,
political corruption.
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20. “Next!.” 11 November 1871. Tweed Ring, fraud.
21. “The Tammany Tiger Loose—What are you Going to Do About It?” 11
November 1871. Tweed Ring.
22. “The Wearing of the Green.” 11 November 1871. Tweed
22a. “For this Relief, Much Thanks!” 11 November 1871. Tweed
23. “A Dog Returneth to His Vomit.” 18 November 1871. Supreme court,
corruption, Tweed.
24. “Killing the Goose That Laid the Golden Egg.” 18 November 1871.
25. “The Arrest of ‘Boss’ Tweed—Another Good Joke.” 18 November 1871.
Tweed.
26. “What Are You Laughing At? To the Victor Belong the Spoils.” 25 November
1871. Tweed’s arrest.
27. “Heep—Of Sands.” 25 November 1871.
28. “Something That Did Blow Over—November 7, 1871.” 25 November 1871.
Tweed Ring.
29. “The Political Suicide of Peter ‘Brains’ Sweeny.” 25 November 1871. Tweed
Ring.
30. “An Apology to the Public.” 2 December 1871. Tweed Ring.
31. “To Whom It May Concern.” 2 December 1871. Tweed Ring, political
corruption.
32. “What the People Must Do About It.” 2 December 1871. Tweed Ring.
33. “An Awful Dose.” 9 December 1871. A. Oakley Hall.
34. “H.G. Diogenes Has Found the Honest Man.” 9 December 1871. Horace
Greeley, A. Oakley Hall
35. “Grab All.” 16 December 1871. Catholic church.
36. “Let the Good Work (House Cleaning) Go On.” 16 December 1871. postTweed, political cleansing.
37. “The Rivals.” 16 December 1871. Newspapers.
THOMAS NAST BOX 7
1. ”Don’t Believe in That.” 23 December 1871. Catholic Church, Irish-Americans.
2. “The Dead Beat.” 23 December 1871. Tweed Ring, Political corruption.
3. “A Roman Catholic Mission to the ‘Heathens’ of America.” 30 December 1871.
Reconstruction, Catholic Church, African-Americans.
4. “Honest Haul As Richard III.” 30 December 1871.
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5. “Santa Claus’s Mail.” 30 December 1871. Christmas, Santa Claus, Children’s
cartoons.
6. “A ‘Liberal’ Surrender—Anything to Beat Grant.” Horace Greeley, Carl
Schurz, KKK, Tammany Ring, James G. Blaine, Democratic Party, Republican
Party.
7. “All Smoke.” 11 May 1872.
8. “Liberal Gratitude.” Ulysses S. Grant, Horace Greeley, Carl Schurz.
9. “Drop ‘Em.” 8 June 1872. Horace Greeley, Ulysses S. Grant.
10. “The New Organ- (we beg the “Tribune’s” pardon)- ization on its “New
Departure.”—Anything to Get Votes.” 8 June 1872. Democratic Party, Horace
Greeley, Presidential election of 1872.
11. “Anything to Beat Grant!” 6 July 1872. Horace Greeley, Carl Schurz.
12. “Our President Puts His Foot Down, and the British Lion Will Have to
Wriggle Out.” 6 July 1872. Ulysses S. Grant, Foreign Policy, Alabama Claims.
13. “Shylock, We Would Have Moneys and Votes.” 6 July 1872. Horace Greeley.
14. “Bringing the Thing Home.” 13 July 1872. Horace Greeley.
15. “Red Hot!” 13 July 1872. Horace Greeley.
16. “Romish Ingratitude.” 13 July 1872. Public education, Irish-Catholics.
17. “What H.G. Knows About Threshing.” 13 July 1872. Horace Greeley.
18. “Carl is ‘Disgusted With American Politics’.” 24 August 1872. Carl Schurz.
19. “It Is Only a Truce to Regain Power.” 24 August 1872. African-Americans,
Horace Greeley.
20. “What the Honest ‘N.Y. Tribune,’ Which Is Not An Organ, Does To
Democrats.” 24 August 1872. Democratic Party, Newspapers.
21. “The Fox and the Grapes.” 31 August 1872. Tammany Hall, Political
corruption.
22. “The New Democratic Party Whip—Whipping Into Line.” 31 August 1872.
Horace Greeley.
23. “What Are You Going to Do About It, If ‘Old Honesty’ Lets Him Loose
Again.” 31 August 1872. Tammany Hall, Horace Greeley.
24. “Another Fall, My Countrymen! Next!” 7 Sept 1872.
25. “Mr. Carl Schurz and His Victims.” 7 Sept 1872.
26. “The Same Tunes By Another Fiddle Will Sound As Sweet.” 7 Sept 1872.
Democratic Party, Newspapers.
27. “The Whited Sepulchre.” 7 September 1872. Horace Greeley, Political
corruption.
28. “Comedy of Errors.” 14 September 1872. Horace Greeley.
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29. “The Next In Order—Any Thing! Oh, Any Thing!” 14 September 1872.
Horace Greeley, John Wilkes Booth.
30. “The Wolf In Sheep’s Clothing.” 14 September 1872. Horace Greeley,
Democrats.
31. “General Orders.” 21 September 1872. Horace Greeley, William Tweed.
32. “Good-by! My poor Brain Demands Rest.” 21 September 1872. Charles
Sumner, Horace Greeley, Carl Schurz.
33. “Let Us Clasp Hands Over The Bloody Chasm.” 21 September 1872. Horace
Greeley.
34. “Circumstances Alter Cases.” 28 September 1872. Horace Greeley, Ulysses S.
Grant.
35. “Dr. U. Sam. ‘Young Man, your Poor Brain Needs Rest too!’ 28 September
1872. Horace Greeley, Uncle Sam.
36. “The Key-Note of the Campaign.” 28 September 1872. Horace Greeley,
William Tweed, Carl Schurz, Democratic Party.
THOMAS NAST BOX 8
1. “Let Us Clasp Hands Over (what might have been) A Bloody Chasm.” 5
October 1872. Uncle Sam, Alabama Claims, Civil War.
2. “ ‘Old Honesty’ Among the Ruins of Tammany.” 5 Oct 1872. Horace Greeley,
Tammany Hall, William Tweed.
3. “The Apple of Discord at the Geneva Tribunal.” 5 Oct 1872. Alabama Claims,
Foreign policy.
4. “Home-Stretched.” 9 November 1872. Horace Greeley, Ulysses S. Grant.
5. “Out, Damned Spot! Out, I Say!.” 9 November 1872. Tammany Hall, Horace
Greeley, Political corruption.
6. “The Man With the (Carpet) Bags.” 9 November 1872. Carl Schurz.
7. “The Pirates, Under False Colors—Can They Capture the Ship of State?” 9
November 1872. Horace Greeley
8. “A Fields of Action.” 30 November 1872. Tammany Hall, Political corruption.
9. “Columbia Lays Aside Her Laurels To Mourn At The Burning Of Her BirthPlace.” 30 November 1872.
10. “No Surrender.” 7 December 1872. Ulysses S. Grant.
11. “Too Inflammatory.” 7 Dec. 1872. Irish-immigrants.
12. “The Unprotected Female at the Holy Seae Side.” 25 January 1872. Catholic
Church.
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Columbia Lays Aside Her Laurels To Mourn At The Burning Of Her BirthPlace.” 30 November 1872.
10. “No Surrender.” 7 December 1872. Ulysses S. Grant.
11. “Too Inflammatory.” 7 Dec. 1872. Irish-immigrants.
12. “The Unprotected Female at the Holy Seae Side.” 25 January 1872. Catholic
Church.
13. “Every Public Question With An Eye Only To The Public Good.” 15 March
1873. Schulyer Colfax, James A. Garfield.
14. “A Warning to the United States Senate.” 29 March 1873.
15. “The Game of Fox and Geese; Or, Legal Trials of the Period.” 29 March 1873.
16. “The Meeting of Nast and Watterson in Central Jersey.” 29 March 1873.
Thomas Nast, Henry Watterson.
17. “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” 4 October 1873. James Gordon Bennett Jr.
18. “Another Inflated Power Burst.” 4 October 1873.
19. “Keeping the Money Where It Will Do Most Good.” 11 Oct 1873. Ulysses S.
Grant.
20. “Out of the Ruins.” 18 October 1873. Ulysses S. Grant, Wall Street.
21. “The ‘Short’ Boys.” 18 October 1873. Wall Street.
22. “Tammany Hall Will Whip Creation This Fall.” 1 November 1873. John
Morrissey, Democratic Party, Tammany Hall.
23. “The Consoling Truth.” 15 November 1873. Political corruption.
24. “Andy Still Lives, And Is At His Old Tricks.” 15 November 1873. Andrew
Johnson.
24a. “The Missouri Papers Say This (Ex) Gratz Brown’s Objective Point Is
Understood To Be—.” 15 November 1873. Carl Schurz, Gratz Brown.
25. “If He Can’t Respect Our Flag, Send Him Where He Belongs.” 6 December
1873. Foreign Relations.
26. “Victory Sits on Our Helm.” 6 December 1873.
27. “Justice!” 13 December 1873. William Tweed.
28. “Let Us Think Twice Before We Let Loose The Dogs Of War.” 13 December
1873. Foreign relations.
29. “By Inflation You Will Burst—Let Well Enough Alone, And Don’t Make It
Worse.”
20 December 1873. Monetary policy.
30. “Obey The Law Of Necessity.” 10 January 1874. Foreign relations.
31. “The Secretary Of War Has Caught A Thief.” 10 January 1874. Freedman’s
Bureau.
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32. “The Emancipator Of Labor And The Honest Working People.” 7 February
1874. Communism.
33. “Fine-Ass Committee.” 14 February 1874. Inflation, Financial Crises.
34. “Parepa Rosa.” 14 February 1874.
THOMAS NAST BOX 9
1. “Something is Rotten in the State of Louisiana.” 21 February 1874.
2. “The New York Tribune’s ‘Disclosures’.” 28 February 1874.
3. “A Foreign and Poisonous Weed.” 7 March 1874. Communism.
4. “The Good and Bad Spirits At War.” 7 March 1874. Temperance.
5. “The Bar of Destruction.” 21 March 1874. Temperance.
6. “Bacchus Drowns More Than Neptune.” 28 March 1874.
7. “Between Two Evils.” 28 March 1874. Communism, Catholic Church.
8. “The Grand Occasion of the Century.” 25 April 1874.
9. “The Power of the Press.” 9 May 1874. Newspapers.
10. “A Dead Failure.” 13 June 1874. Democratic Party.
11. “Jewels Among Swine.” 13 June 1874. Temperance.
12. “Dog-Days.” 11 July 1874. Police corruption.
13. “Who Ought to Have the Cardinal’s Hat in America?” 22 August 1874.
Catholic Church.
14. “The Same Old Pirate Afloat Again.” 19 September 1874. Democratic Party.
15. “Worse Than Slavery.” 24 October 1874. Reconstruction, Ku Klux Klan,
African-Americans.
16. “The Third-Term Panic.” 7 November 1874. Political Parties.
17. “A Tammany Rat.” 7 November 1874. Samuel J. Tilden, Political corruption.
18. “The Trouble Has Commenced—A Tale of Anxiety.” 27 February 1875. John
Young Brown, Samuel S. Colfax, James G. Blaine.
19. “Whose Funeral Is It?” 20 March 1875. Carl Schurz.
20. “A Privilege?” 24 April 1875. African-Americans, Temperance.
21. “A Few Sketches.” 24 April 1875. Samuel J. Tilden
21a. “Democratic Companions (?) in Arms.” 24 April 1875. Tammany Hall,
Democratic Party.
21b. “Another Mysterious Disappearance.” 24 April 1875. Political Parties.
21c. “These Few Precepts in Thy Memory.” 24 April 1875. African-Americans.
22. “News in Washington.” 19 June 1875. Ulysses S. Grant, Native Americans.
23. “The ‘Third Term’ Trap.” 26 June 1875. Ulysses S. Grant.
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24. “Pricip-als, Not Men—A Lawyer Reading For His ‘Client’.” 7 August 1875.
Tweed Ring Trials.
25. “Amnesty; Or, The End of the Peaceful Democratic Tiger.” 5 February 1876.
Democratic Party.
26. “Caesarism—Third-Termism Vanished.” 15 July 1876. Presidential Elections,
Ulysses S. Grant.
27. “One Touch of Nature Makes the Whole World Kin.” 15 July 1876.
28. “Tilden and –” 22 July 1876. Samuel J. Tilden
28a. ”The Democratic (deformed) Tiger ‘Fixed’.” 22 July 1876. Democratic Party,
Tilden, Thomas A. Hendricks.
29. “The Latest Fashion.” 29 July 1876. Democratic Party.
29a. “The New Alliance.” 29 July 1876. Native Americans
30. “The Lion and the Lamb.” 11 November 1876. Election of 1876.
31. “A Terrible Blow North.” 11 November 1876. Southern claims.
32. “The Political Lottery.” 11 November 1876.
32a. “The Solid South.” Democratic Party, Southern claims.
33. “The Prospect in New York.” 11 November 1876. Samuel J. Tilden,
Immigration.
34. “The Indifference of Uncle Sam.” 9 December 1876.
35. “The Ignorant Vote—Honors are Easy.” 9 December 1876. African Americans,
Irish-Americans, suffrage.
35a. “4—00,000 more.” 19 December 1876.
35b. “Uncle Sam put in his ‘bier’.” 19 December 1876. Foreign Policy.
36. “Twas the Night Before Christmas.” 30 December 1876. Christmas, Children’s
cartoons.
THOMAS NAST BOX 10
1. “No—No More Chestnuts For Me.” 6 January 1877. Democratic Party.
1a. “History Repeats Itself.” 6 January 1877.
2. “A ‘Mexican’ Scarecrow.” 13 January 1877.
3. “Justice Brings Peace.” 13 January 1877.
3a. “The Bottom Out.” 13 Jan 1877
3b. “Cronin ‘organized himself’.” 13 Jan 1877
4. “The Best of Friends Must Part.” 10 February 1877. William Tweed.
4a. “Whoa.” 10 Feb. 1877
5. “Uncle Sam’s Position.” 10 February 1877. Domestic policy.
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6. “From Tower to Tower—The Suspension Bridge Over the East River—View
From the Brooklyn Tower.” 14 April 1877. Brooklyn Bridge—Construction.
7. “Reform Is Necessary in the Foreign Line.” 14 April 1877. Irish-Americans,
German-Americans.
8. “The ‘silver lunatic’ Not Quite Loose Yet.” 1878??? 5 other cartoons pasted in,
most dealing with the Silver Question.
9. “Dance to Your Daddy.” 2 March 1878. Silver question (5 other cartoons
pasted in)
10. “Earn More Than You Spend.” 13 April 1878. silver question.
11. “Manhood and Honor Should Have Hare Hearts.” 13 April 1878. Sherman,
W. Jennings Bryan, silver question.
12. “In the Name of Liberty, Why Don’t U.S. Uniform the Tax-Collectors?” 11
May 1878. Fiscal policy, taxation.
13. “Another Step Toward Civilization.” 31 May 1879. Vicksburg Convention,
African-Americans, Democratic Party.
14. “Relieving (Bayonet) Guard.” 31 May 1879. Suffrage, Racism, Ku Klux Klan.
15. “Not a Bad Idea.” 5 June 1880. Samuel J. Tilden
16. “The Plumed Knight.” 5 June 1880. James G. Blaine.
17. “Boom!!!—So Near, and Yet So Far.” 10 July 1880. Samuel J. Tilden.
18. “Foul Whisperings Are Abroad.” 24 July 1880. Winfield Scott Hancock,
Samuel J. Tilden, John Kelly.
19. “A Tail Praising Its Head.” 21 August 1880. Winfield Scott Hancock, James G.
Blaine.
20. “Women Will Never Be Statesmen.” 16 October 1880.
21. “General Make-Up.” 27 November 1880.
22. “The Citizen Soldier At the Inauguration of General Garfield.” 12 March 1881.
James Garfield.
23. “Another Conjunction of Stars.” 10 September 1881?? Pasted with 8 other
cartoons.
24. “After All.” 1 October 1881. Assassination of President James Garfield.
25. “Caught!” 24 December 1881. Christmas, Santa Claus, Children’s cartoons.
26. “A New Year’s Call.” 7 January 1882.
27. “The Christ-Child.” 7 January 1882.
28. “The Domestic Express.” 7 January 1882.
29. “Bismarck Putting It in His Pipe to Smoke.” 1 July 1882. Otto von Bismarck.
30. “The Power Behind the Throne.” 7 November 1885.
30a. “Nevermore.” 7 November 1885.
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31. “Senator Mahone ‘In the Saddle Again’.” 14 November 1885.
32. “A Greek Vase That Will Be Exhumed Some Day From the Ruins of New
York.” 26 June 1886. William Tweed. 4 other comics pasted in.
33. “Those Foreign Savages.” 24 July 1886. Immigrants.
33a. “On Or about this Time.” 24 July 1886. 4 other cartoons tipped in
34. “An Eruption At Capitol Hill.” 11 September 1886.
35. “What the Spirit of Columbus Will Discover This Time.” 10 August 1889.
35a. “Where Protection Does Not Protect.” 10 August 1889.
36. “A Response in Time.” 14 December 1889.
36a. “Down.” 14 December 1889. Princeton-Yale rivalry, Edgar Allan Poe.
37. “An Everlasting Subject of Conversation.” 1 February 1890. Time Magazine.
THOMAS NAST BOX 11
1. “The Christ Child.” From a Holiday Greeting Card from the Nasts, 1945.
2. Various Cartoons and Campaign Emblems. No date given.
3. “Sickly Democrat.” No date given. Suffrage, Salmon P. Chase.
4. “The Last of LL.D. Russell the Prophet.” 15 February 1862. Civil War.
5. “The Latest Edition of ‘Shoo Fly!’.” Chinese immigrants, labor.
6. “The Long and Short Of It Is A General Bust Up In The Street.” 11 October
1873. Wall Street, Panic of 1873, Financial crises.
7. “Foreign Evangelical Alliance.” 1 November 1873. Italy, Prussia.
7a. “You Are Getting Too Big For Your Cradle.” 1 November 1873. Boston.
8. “The Sympathetic Sheriff.” 13 December 1873. William Tweed.
9. “A Walking Match Between Two Editors.” 13 June 1874. Murat Halstead,
Henry Watterson.
10. “Indian Outrages.” 15 August 1874. General Sherman, Native Americans.
11. “Reconstruction.” 22 August 1874.
12. “The New Ring Master.” 7 November 1874. Tammany Hall.
13. “The Democratic Reform Masquerade.” 26 June 1875. William Tweed,
Political corruption.
14. “March 4, 1877.” 17 March 1877.
15. “Tam O’Shanter.” 17 April 1883.
THOMAS NAST BOX 12
1. Photos of Thomas Nast.
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2. African-American Boy With Broom.
3. Portraits of Thomas Nast.
4. “Uncle Sam’s Thanksgiving Dinner.” From Harper’s Weekly. No date given.
5. Letter Written by Sinclair Hamilton to Alexander Wainwright about Thomas
Nast. February 21, 1951.
6. The National Illustrating Company. Logo by T Nast.
7. “Caricature Self-Portrait, with Compliments of Thomas Nast.” 25 July 1884.
8. ‘Tis Logan that is gently tapping, tapping at the secret chamber door. Pen
Drawing.
9. Portrait of Benjamin Harrison. Pen drawing.
10. Caricature drawing of fat man.
11. 2 musketeers. Ink wash drawing.
12. Head of a little boy. Etching.
13. Holiday Greeting. Inscribed ‘Holiday Greetings 1901-1902.’ Pencil note by
son: ‘Pop’s last holiday greeting 9/21/39 3. Nast/123 Carlton Rd./ New Rochelle.’
14. ‘Birds of a Feather.’
15. ‘Democratic badge’ 1892.
16. ‘Matthew Stanley Quay of Pennsylvania’
17. ‘Platt. Clarkson. Blaine. Dudley. Quay.’ 1892. Republican Party.
18. Portrait of man in Renaissance Costume.
19. “The Department of Agriculture (Truly Rural Culture).”
20. “The Prohibition Amendment—Yes! Or No!” 1884.
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