Revolution Propagand a Jana Solaiman 11 SAT G This 1767 engraving, published in Great Britain and attributed to Benjamin Franklin, warned of the consequences of alienating the colonies through enforcement of the Stamp Act. The act was a 1765 attempt by Parliament to increase revenue from the colonies to pay for troops and colonial administration, and it required colonists to purchase stamps for many documents and printed items, such as land titles, contracts, playing cards, books, newspapers, and advertisements. Because it affected almost everyone, the act provoked widespread hostility. The cartoon depicts Britannia, surrounded by her amputated limbs—marked Virginia, Pennsylvania, New York, and New England—as she contemplates the decline of her empire. Franklin, who was in England representing the colonists’ claims, arranged to have the image printed on cards that he distributed to members of Parliament. The Colonies Reduced Join or Die Join, or Die was a political cartoon and woodcut created by Benjamin Franklin in 1754. It was designed to unite the American colonies against the French and their Native allies at the start of the French and Indian War. It is thought to be the first political cartoon that advocated unification of the colonies. It is believed that Franklin did not actually create the image of the snake cut into pieces, but the actual artist is unknown. The symbolism of a snake may have represented regeneration or renewal, since snakes shed their skins, or, may have drawn upon a legend of the time, which suggested that a snake that was cut into pieces could come back to life if its parts were assembled before sunset. The Bostonians playing the excise-man, or tarring and feathering A 1774 British print depicted the tarring and feathering of Boston Commissioner of Customs John Malcolm. Tarring and feathering was a ritual of humiliation and public warning that stopped just short of serious injury. Victims included British officials such as Malcolm and American merchants who violated non-importation by importing British goods. Other forms of public humiliation included daubing victims’ homes with the contents of cesspits, or actual violence against property, such as the burning of stately homes and carriages. This antiPatriot print showed Customs Commissioner Malcolm being attacked under the Liberty Tree by several Patriots, including a leather-aproned artisan, while the Boston Tea Party occurred in the background. In fact, the Tea Party had taken place four weeks earlier. print shows a re-drawn and reversed image of the famous British political cartoon where Bostonians held captive in a cage are suspended from the "Liberty Tree." Three British sailors standing in a boat feed them fish from a basket labeled "To -from the Committee of --" in return for a bundle of papers labeled "Promises"; around the tree and in the background are cannons and British troops. The paper in the hand of one jailed Bostonian says "They tried with the Lord in their Trouble & he saved them out of their Distress. The Bostonian s in Distress The Savages Let Loose or The cruel fate of the Loyalists. During the War for Independence more than 60,000 Americans who remained loyal to the Crown fled the country. In this British etching from 1783, three Indians, representing the United States, murder Americans who remained loyal to the Crown. “The cruel fate of the Loyalists” or “The Savages Let Loose” Translation: "Monsieur be pleas'd to accept the frogs I just have killed them in the Bogs." Monsieur answers, holding out his right hand, "I give you thanks my good Ally, Some will make Soup the rest a Fry." Beneath the design is engraved: "O Britons be wise And part these Allies, Or drive them both into the Bogs; I think it is fit They both should submit To Old England, or live upon Frogs." A large snake representing America, its head erect, addresses France (right), a man standing in profile to the left, dressed as French petit-maître with high toupet-wig, black bag and solitaire, laced suit, sword and chapeau-bras. Between the two stands a circular basket full of frogs; behind the snake (left) is a small pond in which frogs are swimming, inscribed, "A Fish pond for Frenchmen". The snake is saying, The American Rattle Snake Presenting Monsieur his ally a dish of frogs England as an old man with wooden leg and crutch tugging on strings hooked onto the noses of five American men across a divide labeled "The Atlantic Ocean"; the men resist, shoot pellets at, and taunt old England. Includes a quote attributed to Shakespeare, "And therefore is England maimed & forced to go with a staff". Poor Old England endeavoring to reclaim his wicked American Children “Fox’s Martyrs” or the patriots in limbo Charles James Fox's martyrs during the American Revolution. On the right, Frederick, Lord North, hangs from a devil's pitchfork and wears a large stone labeled "American War" from his neck. In the center, Charles Fox apologizes for his actions, in the aftermath of the 1784 general election. The 1784 Parliamentary election was the first national election. The Fox-North coalition came under attack by George III and William Pitt the Younger. Pitt remained Prime Minister and those members of Parliament who continued to support Fox and North became known as "Fox's Martyrs" in reference to John Foxe's Book of Martyrs (1563). This satire lays the blame for the Whig's loss on the American Revolution. The American Rattle Snake Cartoon shows "American" snake, the emblem used by Americans as a device on their flag before the adoption of the stars and stripes, with two of three coils around units of British soldiers, commanded by Burgoyne and Cornwallis at time of their surrender. Gillray is lampooning the British war effort. The verse printed below the image reflects the widespread sympathy in England for the American cause. Print shows a skull and crossbones representation of the official stamp required by the Stamp Act of 1765. Entitled: This is the place to affix the stamp. The Stamp Act of 1765 was a direct tax imposed by the British Parliament on the colonies of British America. The first direct tax to be levied on the American colonies, it required that all newspapers, pamphlets, legal documents, commercial bills, advertisements, and other papers issued in the colonies bear a stamp. The American colonies were furious and refused to pay for the tax that the British put on them. The Americans in all 13 colonies protested strongly and the British retreated part way, but insisted on the right of Parliament to tax the colonies. The Americans rejected that as unconstitutional, declaring "No Taxation without Representation", and it was a major grievance that led to the American Revolution. The Act was repealed on March 18, 1766 as a matter of expedience, but Parliament affirmed its power to legislate for the colonies "in all cases whatsoever" by also passing the Declaratory Act. There followed a series of new taxes and regulations, likewise opposed by the colonists. This is the Place to Affix the Stamp