Skip to main content
MU Digital Library, University of Missouri
MU Header
Contact Us
|
Login
Main menu
Browse
About
Search
FAQ
You are here
Home
ยป
Presidents--Election
(x)
Islandora facets
Issue Date
1920
(1)
+
-
1924
(5)
+
-
1931-04-26
(1)
+
-
1943
(1)
+
-
Topic
Politics and government
(3)
+
-
Presidential candidates
(1)
+
-
Presidents--Election
(12)
+
-
Uncle Sam (Symbolic character)
(1)
+
-
Geographic Area
United States
(12)
+
-
Time Period
1920-1924
(1)
+
-
1920-1929
(6)
+
-
1930-1939
(1)
+
-
1940-1949
(1)
+
-
Advanced Search
Field
Title
Subject
Creator/Author
Contributor
Street Name
Notes and Abstracts
Full Text
ID number
Genre/Type
Publisher
Author
Search terms
Search results
(1 - 12 of 12)
Title
JM-205: Contention in Progressive Party candidates in 1912 and 1924
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting two panels set at different presidential elections. In the top panel, Robert La Follette sulks inside while Theodore Roosevelt marches outside in a 1912 Progressive Party parade. In the bottom panel, the spirit of Theodore Roosevelt accuses La Follette of having no right to carry the Progressive Party banner in a later parade, also with representatives from the Socialist Party and the Farmer-Labor Party. In 1912, La Follette was hoping to be the presidential nomination for the progressive wing of the Republicans, but his supporters abandoned him in favor of Theodore Roosevelt when the former president announced his return to politics, and Roosevelt became the 1912 presidential candidate for the Progressive Party instead; La Follette supported Wilson in the election. When the Progressive Party re-formed, after World War 1, they chose La Follette as their presidential candidate at a convention in Ohio in July of 1924; the Socialist Party and Farmer-Labor Party joined La Follette's progressive platform.
Title
JM-228: All aboard the grand experiment. 228
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Robert M. La Follette Sr. trying to get people to hop on his bandwagon along with Discontent, Labor, and New York Socialists.
Title
JM-025: Presidential nominees are always chosen in leap year
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting a woman titled "Presidential Nomination" asking a man to be hers. In the bottom panel, lots of men chase the Presidential Nomination up a tree. The pursuers are trying to catch her and asking her to be theirs.
Title
JM-226: They're off!. 226
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting the presidential race of 1924, with candidates Robert M. La Follette Sr. with the Progressive Party, John W. Davis of the Democratic Party, and Calvin Coolidge of the Republican Party, who won the election and became the president of the United States that year.
Title
JM-227: Dawes remedy for public ills. 227
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Charles G. Dawes, running mate of Calvin Coolidge on the Republican ticket in the presidential election of 1924, giving his acceptance speech.
Title
JM-230: Hooray for Coolidge. 230
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Henry Ford driving away from his supporters to cheer on Calvin Coolidge.
Title
JM-015: How the election returns look to a man who is trying to get an office the people don't want him to have
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Taft reading unfavorable headlines.
Title
JM-281: This will be a race worth watching
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting a race between stork carrying 1932 campaign and "Dr. Hoover".
Title
JM-W020: Why not cut out the "un" and make it the "written law"?
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Uncle Sam holding a marker and pointing to the cornerstone stating that one should only run for president two terms. Behind him, a group of people from different states wave a banner asking for it to be allowed that a person can run for a third term.
Title
JM-229: The South Dakota primary endorsement. 229
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Coolidge throwing his hat in the ring at the South Dakota primary.
Title
JM-225: Campaign shenanigans. 225
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting the 1924 presidential election. Charles G. Dawes attacks Roger M. La Follette Sr., the Progressive party nominee, with constitutionalism. John W. Davis and Charles W. Bryan, who both ran on the Democratic ticket, play the piano and confuse both sides of the country.
Title
JM-018: The honorable mention for president, subject to revision
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting a parade of contenders for office, ordered so as to be named alphabetically and in rhyme.