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1916
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Issue Date
1915
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1920
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1930
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1934
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1943
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Topic
Bombers
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Fighter planes
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John Bull (Symbolic character)
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Postwar reconstruction
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Treaty of Versailles (1919 June 28)
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Type VII U-boat
(1)
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Uncle Sam (Symbolic character)
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War
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War of Independence (Ireland : 1919-1921)
(1)
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Women--Suffrage
(1)
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World War (1939-1945)
(2)
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World politics
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Geographic Area
Austria
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Belgium
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China
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Delaware
(1)
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Denmark
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France
(4)
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Ireland
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Italy
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Japan
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Netherlands
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Norway
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Soviet Union
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Sweden
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Turkey
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United States
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Time Period
1910-1919
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1920-1929
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1930-1939
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1940-1949
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(1 - 6 of 6)
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-164: Will there be enough to go round?
Summary
This cartoon depicts Uncle Sam trying to divide ”U.S. Bread” among various nations. In 1915, World War I was being fought in Europe, but the United States was maintaining a neutral position. Despite its neutrality, the United States supplied resources and arms to nations during the war. All of the countries sitting at the table are nations who lobbied for resources from the United States during the war. England is attempting to block Germany’s chance of receiving resources from Uncle Sam. This is representative the attempts of the British government to limit the United States aid to Allied Powers, most often England. The United States is also sitting at the table, looking worried about sharing the beard with other nations. The United States distributing more resources than it could afford was a fear for many Americans in the 1910s. (Summary created by Mary Delano, MU History Intern, Spring 2018)
Title
JM-W024: In the Allied camp
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Churchill and FDR looking at a map of Europe in the top panel. In the bottom panel, Hitler, Togo, and Mussolini worry about the plane production in the U.S. as the "unpredictable" factor compared to their U-boats.
Title
JM-272: Make him show his cards
Summary
Germany, playing poker with Allies, offers to divide the pot, then quit.
Title
JM-289: Dancing to the spring song
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting men representing nations dancing around "war" organ grinder. The League of Nations watches from a window.
Title
JM-086: The captain and crew of the William P. Frye, which--
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting a ship labeled the "William P. Frye" being sunk by a ship labeled the "Prinz Eitel Friederich." In the next panel, the crew of the Frye waves the Friederich ship on as it sails to open sea. British cruisers can be seen near the horizon line on the water. The William P. Frye was an American merchant vessel sunk in 1915 after encountering a German ship.