Your TR Source

Brice, Calvin Stewart, 1845-1898

10 Results

A new Toledo Moses

A new Toledo Moses

George P. Waldorf, one of the political bosses of Toledo, Ohio, is now billing himself as a force of progressiveness who, the article facetiously claims, “will be, leading the children of the G.O.P. Israel out of the wilderness of machine politics into the promised land that is flowing with milk and honey.”

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1906-08

Creator(s)

Unknown

Shrunk to their proper size at last – an edifying sight in the United States Senate

Shrunk to their proper size at last – an edifying sight in the United States Senate

Members of the U.S. Senate look down on five diminutive members seated in the front. They are identified as “Hill Repudiated by New York,” “Murphy Repudiated by New York,” “Gorman Repudiated by Maryland,” “Brice Repudiated by Ohio,” and “Smith Repudiated by New Jersey.” Among the senators present are Adlai E. Stevenson, William M. Stewart, George F. Hoar, Charles A. Boutelle, John Sherman, Daniel W. Voorhees, William E. Chandler, John M. Palmer, Justin S. Morrill, John P. Jones, Matthew S. Quay, and William A. Peffer.

Collection

Library of Congress Prints and Photographs

Creation Date

1895-12-11

Creator(s)

Keppler, Udo J., 1872-1956

After the hold-up

After the hold-up

William L. Wilson stands in the street outside the White House, holding open a large carpet bag labeled “Wilson’s Free List” which contains papers labeled “Free Wool.” He has an umbrella labeled “Income Tax” under his left arm. Sitting next to him on the street is the donkey labeled “Dem. Party” that he had been riding. Several men, four of them identified as “Gorman, Brice, McPherson, [and] Faulkner,” have robbed him of papers labeled “Free Iron, Free Sugar, Free Lumber, [and] Free Coal” and are walking up the street toward the U.S. Capitol, visible in the background. Caption: “Gee whiz! And it’s a wonder they left that!”

Collection

Library of Congress Prints and Photographs

Creation Date

1894-06-06

Creator(s)

Dalrymple, Louis, 1866-1905

The only thing that would scare our thick-skinned senators

The only thing that would scare our thick-skinned senators

The U.S. Senate chamber is reduced to pandemonium when a Senate Page announces the unexpected arrival of “Investigators Lexow and Goff.” Among the senators scrambling for cover are Arthur P. Gorman, Matthew S. Quay, Calvin S. Brice, Edward Murphy Jr., and George F. Hoar. Caption: The awful scene that would ensue if investigators Lexow and Goff should unexpectedly appear in the U.S. Senate chambers.

Collection

Library of Congress Prints and Photographs

Creation Date

1894-06-27

Creator(s)

Taylor, Charles Jay, 1855-1929

Even worse than he thought it

Even worse than he thought it

The spirit of General Winfield S. Hancock holds a paper that states “Governors Island 1880. The Tariff is a Local Issue. Gen. W. S. Hancock.” He stands among congressmen in a congressional chamber where senators or representatives from “Maryland, New York, Ohio, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, Ohio, Massachusetts, Maine, New Jersey, Kansas, [and] Pennsylvania” are tearing off sections of a large paper labeled “The Tariff?” that apply to their respective states. Caption: Shade of General Hancock–They laughed at me when I said the tariff is a local issue; but I was right, after all!

Collection

Library of Congress Prints and Photographs

Creation Date

1894-05-02

Creator(s)

Dalrymple, Louis, 1866-1905

A very sick patient – he pays well, but the senatorial quacks can’t save him

A very sick patient – he pays well, but the senatorial quacks can’t save him

Several legislators appear as quack physicians trying to cure a large sick man labeled “Protection” with a packet of “Boodle” on his lap. From left are “Hill, Pugh, Vest, Chandler, Brice, Hoar, Peffer, Gorman, [and] McPherson,” and John Sherman. They apply such medications as “Delay Tonic, Concessions to Trusts, Sympathy, Wind, Senatorial Fog, Obstruction Pills, [and] Misleading Talk.”

Collection

Library of Congress Prints and Photographs

Creation Date

1894-07-18

Creator(s)

Hutchins, Frank Marion, approximately 1867-1896

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Anna Roosevelt

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Anna Roosevelt

Theodore Roosevelt writes to his sister Anna Roosevelt about the recent social happenings in Washington. He and wife Edith have attended many political dinners, including one at Senator Brice’s, and encountered a multitude of individuals. Roosevelt does not think highly of the intellect of some of his colleagues. Son Kermit has now acquired the chicken pox.

Collection

Harvard College Library

Creation Date

1894-02-18

Creator(s)

Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919