RMCWBWMH–An Anti-Irish cartoon entitled IRISH INDUSTRIES, appeared in the American humor magazine PUCK in November 1881. Drawn by master
RMBTKJ1X–An Anti-Irish cartoon entitled IRISH INDUSTRIES, appeared in the American humor magazine PUCK in November 1881. Drawn by master
RMG39WN5–THE IRISH FRANKENSTEIN Anti-Irish cartoon depicting the Irish Fenian as a monster. Date: 1869
RMDYF1K8–The vision. Political hydrophobia, shewing the comfort of crowns, and how to obtain them by Ezra Bizbee, 1834. Lithograph print on wove paper. A political cartoon satirising Jackson's veto of the re-charter of the US Bank. Attacking Jackson and Van Buren as the bethroned destroyers of liberty. The cartoon also puts across an anti-Irish immigrant message, portraying them as unruly yobs who rally to Jackson's whims.
RMA30XY2–The Irish Frankenstein
RMC2JM40–Shamrocks
RMCWBWMA–Anti-Immigrant cartoon showing two men with barrels as bodies, labeled 'Irish Wiskey' and 'Lager Bier', carrying a ballot box.
RMBTKJ0G–Anti-immigration cartoon of 1883 is captioned,' The balance of trade with Great Britain seems to be still against us--650 paupers arrived at Boston in the steamship Nestoria, April 15th, from Galway, Ireland, shipped by the British government.' by William A. Rogers in HARPER'S WEEKLY.
RMAHCPW5–Irish Idol Cartoon 1869
RMG39WN6–Cartoon, The Irish Idol
RMD87HGR–Irish Vampire Cartoon
RM2ARBFY4–Cartoon, Young Gulliver and the Brobdingnag Minister -- a satirical comment on Benjamin Disraeli's constant attacks on Sir Robert Peel during the latter's time as Prime Minister, with a reference to Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift.
RMCWBWKX–Anti-immigration cartoon of 1883 is captioned,' The balance of trade with Great Britain seems to be still against us--650
RMBTKJ18–Anti-Immigrant cartoon showing two men with barrels as bodies, labeled 'Irish Wiskey' and 'Lager Bier', carrying a ballot box. In the background is a rioting crowd at a polling place. Nativism, a social and political movement that opposed immigration of Catholic Irish, non-Protestants, and non-English speaking peoples. Ca. 1850.
RMBTKHX8–1895 political cartoon of New York City's Mayor Strong, dressed as St. Patrick, driving snakes and frogs, representing Tammany Hall's immigrant political base, from N.Y. City Hall. William Lafayette Strong (1827- 1900) was the Mayor of New York from 1895 to 1897. He was a Republican who won the votes of the anti-Tammany Democrats.
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