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Puck, v. 53, no. 1365

2 Results

Liberty?

Liberty?

A caricature of the Statue of Liberty replaces Liberty with a labor union “Walking Delegate.” His torch is labeled “Lawlessness” and he holds a tablet labeled “Tyranny.” At the base are crowds of immigrants disembarking from boats, as other boats stream across the sea from a location marked with a sign that states “To the Land of the Free.”

comments and context

Comments and Context

A generation earlier, the concept of this cartoonist might have featured only a different label or two. The caricature of the Statue of Liberty might have represented an urban political boss and municipal corruption. Instead, here, the arriving immigrants, depicted in their various native outfits, are confounded by the tyranny of the crooked labor boss, the “Walking Delegate” union organizer, and advocate of violence. At this point in time, this is how many American citizens, not only immigrants, saw a large part of the labor movement.

Well guarded

Well guarded

A bulldog wearing black tie and formal naval dress sits on the shore with the America’s Cup behind him. A yacht labeled “Shamrock III” sails just offshore.

comments and context

Comments and Context

The country took such interest in the America’s Cup yacht races, which America never had lost, that when Sir Thomas Lipton registered his Shamrock III a full four months before the 1903 competition, it merited a cover cartoon in Puck. The American entry was the radically designed (by Nathaniel Herreshoff) Reliance, owned by the Cornelius Vanderbilt syndicate. Held in New York Harbor, the best of five competition was won in three races by Reliant, with Lipton’s ship not even bothering to sail to the finish line of the third race. J. P. Morgan, an avid yachtsman, watched the race with guests aboard his Corsair.