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Bywater, John.
(x)
Islandora facets
Author
Allen, James Baylis, 1803-1876
(1)
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Bromyard, John, active 1390.
(1)
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Gerard, John, 1545-1612.
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Guillim, John, 1565-1621
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Hampden, John, -1891
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Key, John Ross, 1832-1920
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Marchant, J.
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Montanus, Arnoldus, approximately 1625-1683
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Ogilby, John, 1600-1676
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Rapkin, John
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Rapkin,John
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Tallis, John,1817-1876
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Walker, John, 1786-1873
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Issue Date
1500
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1546
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1582
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1617
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1626
(5)
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1627
(1)
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1633
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1638
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1651
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1671
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1676
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1695
(1)
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1721
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1730
(1)
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1745
(1)
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1778
(4)
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1782-1785
(1)
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1803
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1806
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1814
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1835
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1837
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1856
(1)
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1857
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1867
(1)
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1869
(1)
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1877
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1889
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1890
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1894
(1)
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1896
(1)
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1897
(1)
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1900
(3)
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1901
(2)
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1902
(1)
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1903
(3)
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1904
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1905
(6)
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1906
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1907
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Topic
Accounting
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Adam (Biblical figure)
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Adultery
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Advertising
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Agricultural laborers
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Air pilots
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Alcohol
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Ambassadors
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American Civil War (1861-1865)
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American newspapers
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American wit and humor
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Ammunition
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Anarchists
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Anti-Catholicism
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Arc de Triomphe (Paris, France)
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Armed Forces
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Art
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Assembly-line methods
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Automobile driving
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Automobile industry and trade
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Automobile showrooms
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Automobiles
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Bad news
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Baseball
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Baseball players
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Baths
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Battle casualties
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Battles
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Beaches
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Billiards
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Black Sea -- Maps -- Early works to 1800
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Bombers
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Botany
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Bribery
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Britannia (Symbolic character)
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Building laws
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Cabinet officers
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Calendars
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Canals--Rates and tolls
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Carriage and wagon making
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Geographic Area
Aden
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Africa
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Alexandria
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Algiers
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American West
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Amsterdam
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Angiers
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Arabian Peninsula
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Arkansas
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Asia
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Atlantic Ocean
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Augsburg
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Australia
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Austria
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Bantam
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Belgium
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Black Sea -- Turkish Straits
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Bordeaux
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Borneo
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British Columbia
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Bulgaria--Petrich
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Cairo
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Calais
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California
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California--San Francisco
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Canada
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Canal Zone
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Canary Islands
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Celebes
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Ceuta
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Chicago
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China
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Cologne
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Constantinople
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Constantinople (Istanbul)
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Corsica
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Damascus
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Delaware
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Denmark
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Dorsetshire
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Show more
Time Period
1600-1639
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1861-1865
(9)
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1890-1899
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1900-1909
(31)
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1910-1919
(78)
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1920-1924
(1)
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1920-1929
(84)
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1930-1939
(32)
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1940-1949
(41)
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Type
Book
(1)
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book
(11)
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Series
Su20-042
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(81 - 100 of 464)
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Title
JM-098: Strategic war map showing Japanese plan of operations at Port Arthur and the "Tiger's Tail"
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting a rope with many cans attached to it tied around the "Tiger's Tail" area of Korea.
Title
JM-202: Cartoons of the day
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting three separate cartoons. In the top panel, a man on a cart titled "Delaware" blocks women in cars titled "Suffrage" from passing him on the road to the 1920 polls. In the middle panel, "Germany" kills his pack horse ("Hope") underneath a burden of "Economic Terms of the Treaty"; he is unable to continue on "Reparation Trail". In the bottom panel, Uncle Sam and John Bull attempt to communicate via telephone, but uproar in Ireland blocks connection.
Title
JM-090: Grosvenor and Platt present different views on McKinley
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Charles Henry Grosvenor and Thomas C. Platt presented as sideshow hawkers speaking to a group of people. They each point to a large banner focusing on President William McKinley behind them. On Grosvenor's banner, McKinley is presented as the "largest man in the world." On Platt's banner, McKinley is presented as the "smallest man in the U.S."
Title
JM-174: All about politics
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting five scenes about the Democratic convention in St. Louis. Wilson and Bryan appear.
Title
JM-170: Getting scareder and scareder!
Summary
This cartoon depicts President Woodrow Wilson planning his reelection campaign against Charles Evans Hughes during the presidential election of 1916. The first panel shows President Wilson calmly planning to take a passive role in the campaign until he receives a note that the state of Maine voted for Hughes by a narrow majority. The second panel shows a concerned Wilson receiving news that Hughes was addressing crowds in the West, whose vote Wilson was counting on for winning the election. The third panel shows a shocked Wilson learning Hughes was predicted to win the election by a large margin. Despite the assumptions made in this cartoon, Woodrow Wilson would defeat Hughes in the election of 1916, and he became the first democratic president to serve two consecutive terms in a row since Andrew Jackson. Woodrow Wilson appealed to many with his campaign slogan, "He kept us out of war," which appealed to many European (especially German) immigrants who did not wish to have the conflict of loyalty that would come from the United States joining World War I. Despite this, the United States would eventually enter World War I in 1917 during Wilson’s second term. The Chicago Tribune published many articles in support of Hughes and his campaign. (Summary created by Mary Delano, MU History Intern, Spring 2018)
Title
JM-295: Sunken ships are historic trouble-breeders
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting a group, including FDR, examine sinking of U.S. gunboat Panay.
Title
JM-204: As Uncle Sam prepares to get back in the European game
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Uncle Sam being warned to participate only in an advisory way by U.S. Congress as he climbs over a fence to join a European Reparation Committee.
Title
JM-220: If there was referendum on war debt cancellation. 220
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting the outcry against a referendum on the collection of war debts in the aftermath of WWI.
Title
JM-206: Three scenes of hypocrisy
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting three panels, each panel with its own scene of hypocrisy. In the top panel, a man upset by socialists and unemployment then posts a notice for his apartment complex advancing the rent for his tenants to get their money while he can. In the middle panel, a man is being bribed but refuses to testify against the one bribing him. In the bottom panel, a man is shocked by the spread of lawlessness, but then he buys two cases of bourbon during a potential prohibition-era cartoon.
Title
JM-171: Bi-plane dogfight
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting five panels of bi-plane dogfight scenes in World War 1. The planes with the iron cross symbol are German planes, while the planes with the roundels are either German or French.
Title
JM-175: Don't drop the pilot!
Summary
This cartoon show Uncle Sam talking with President Wilson, Force, and Politics. Uncle Sam is insisting these parties do not allow someone to take the principle of arbitration outside the “ship of the state”. Arbitration is a form of dispute resolution that gained popularity during the world wars. It was a quick and efficient way to resolve personal and commercial disputes without the time and effort associated with moving a claim through the traditional judicial system. The United States government began to use arbitration as a way to efficiently solve disputes involving wartime resources. (Summary created by Mary Delano, MU History Intern, Spring 2018)
Title
JM-268: Supposing American tourists in France tried to adopt the stalling on the payment plan
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting an American tourist finishing a large meal at a French restaurant. When he is handed the bill, he offers to pay for it on condition that another man who owes him money pays him back. The restaurant owner kicks the tourist out, and a policeman comes over and asks what happened.
Title
JM-201: Making a bad situation worse
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting undesirable immigrants coming off a ship near Ellis Island while an army of the unemployed Americans watch them.
Title
JM-176: The daily bread line 1913
Summary
This cartoon depicts a line of men waiting for food during the winter. One of them is holding a sign that says, “He kept us out of work”. This sign is a play on President Wilson’s campaign slogan, “He kept us out of war”. There were some areas of United States economy struggling in 1913, making many individuals unemployed. In 1913, many criticized President Wilson’s economic initiatives to be harmful to workers, and contributing to increased in unemployment. Such initiatives included further limiting commercial trusts and requiring investigations be made when particular businesses changed the wages of their workers. These investigations would be used to evaluate the costs of the factories, which was needed to determine guilt of criminal acts. In response to these initiatives, many factories closed operations or began to limit the changes that could be made to workers’ wages. (Summary created by Mary Delano, MU History Intern, Spring 2018)
Title
JM-C008: Scene at a railroad station with main street in the background
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting men and a boy standing on the platform of a railroad station watching a man draw a diagram of a ship. Behind the station platform, a line of shops on main street are visible.
Title
JM-039: The radio vote of America
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting a politician giving a radio speech. After the speech, his derogatory comments about the American people are overheard, and he is defeated by the greatly populated "Radio Vote", which is shown in the last panel.
Title
JM-067: The Ladies' League of Anti-Vice Crusaders
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting a meeting of the Ladies' League of Anti-Vice Crusaders being interrupted by a policeman.
Title
JM-121: Come on in, Boys! It's Finable Out There.. 121
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting good men, sheltered by the letter of the law, calling to unhappy criminals outside in the rain.
Title
JM-008: "I wish I had waited"
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting three scenes of men who purchased land, stocks, or furniture in the first panel only to express their disappointment in the second panel, when things are rough and what they have has decreased in value.
Title
JM-161: The refining influence of speculating in war stock
Summary
This cartoon shows two impressions of the same family living in the United States during World War I. The top panel displays the family before they bought war stocks. The bottom panel shows them after they purchased war stocks. In the top panel, the mother and father are lamenting on the carnage of the war, causing the death of millions in Europe. The couple is horrified at the seemingly senseless loss of life. In the bottom panel, the couple are thrilled the war is expected to drag on, because the value of their war stocks will continue to increase and provide a temporarily sustained income to the family. This cartoon is meant to illustrate Americans’ disturbing lack of empathy at the mere promise of profit. The United States notoriously made large profits throughout most of World War I selling weapons to use in the war, while remaining neutral in the conflict until 1917. (Summary created by Mary Delano, MU History Intern, Spring 2018)
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