Your TR Source

Divorce

34 Results

Chronology January 1892 to December 1898

Chronology January 1892 to December 1898

Chronology of the daily life of Theodore Roosevelt from January 1892 to December 1898. Notable events include the death of Elliott Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt is appointed New York City Police Commissioner, his tenure as Assistant Secretary of the Navy, the Spanish-American War, and Roosevelt’s gubernatorial campaign.

Collection

Theodore Roosevelt Association

Creation Date

1985

Creator(s)

Moore, Robert J. (Robert John), 1956-; Theodore Roosevelt Association

The decay of home-life among the “smart set”

The decay of home-life among the “smart set”

This vignette cartoon portrays the aspirations for social life among the well-to-do. At center, “The Will-o’-the-Wisp of Social Aspirations” shows a crowd of rich people chasing after “Social Ambition,” a wraith-like female figure floating just beyond the edge of a cliff who entices them to follow her. Among the vignettes are women promenading while “Displaying Gowns at the Summer Resort” and “Kow-towing to Royalty,” “Coaching in the Highlands” and spending “All Day on the Golf-Links,” “Cruising in the Mediterranean” and “Being ‘Sporty’ at Monte Carlo.” This sort of rake’s progress “among the ‘Smart Set'” ends with a final vignette labeled “What It Leads To” that shows a long line of well-dressed men and women leading to the judge’s bench where he hands out documents labeled “Divorce.”

Collection

Library of Congress Prints and Photographs

Creation Date

1899-08-09

Creator(s)

Ehrhart, S. D. (Samuel D.), approximately 1862-1937

A desperate attempt to solve the Mormon question

A desperate attempt to solve the Mormon question

In a four panel cartoon, four Puck cartoonists each take a panel in an effort to solve the issue of Mormonism. Clockwise from bottom left, captioned, “I imagine it must be a perfect paradise–Keppler,” Joseph Keppler places himself at the center of a harem, smoking a hookah signed “J.K.” and surrounded by beautiful women, one bringing a bottle of “G.H. Mumm” champagne. At top left, captioned, “I think one wife is enough–Gillam,” Bernhard Gillam shows a domestic scene at his home where he, labeled “Small Income,” his coattails in the clutches of his wife, attempts to avoid being struck by her with a fireplace scoop, while “My Wife’s Relations” stand behind her. At top right, captioned, “How long will this destructive monster be allowed to live?–Opper,” Frederick Opper is shown gesturing toward a large octopus labeled “Mormonism” that has caught in its tentacles “S.J.T., Uncle Sam, Public Opinion, Y.M.C.A., Public School System, Justice, Independent New Party, W.H.V., Field, Gould, Kelly, [a] New York Dive, [and the] Catholic Church,” as well as Benjamin Butler, the U.S. Capitol, and reaching all the way to “Ireland.” On the bottom right, captioned, “What is the use of Mormonism, when a man can change his wife whenever he likes?–Graetz,” Friedrich Graetz stands in the foreground gesturing toward hordes of men rushing to get divorced on “Saturday. Divorce day in Chicago,” and at places advertising “Divorces without publicity, Divorces procured without delay. Liberal charges, [and] Divorces obtained for $5.00.”

Collection

Library of Congress Prints and Photographs

Creation Date

1884-02-13

Creator(s)

Keppler, Joseph Ferdinand, 1838-1894