The Political Gymnasium

Presidential and vice-presidential candidates for the 1860 election, as well as their supporters in the press, are depicted exercising at the "Political Gymnasium." At left, Edward Everett, vice-presidential candidate for the Constitutional Union Party, lifts up a barbell on which sits pre...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Louis Maurer, 1832-1932 (Creator)
Collection:Historical Society of Pennsylvania cartoons and caricatures collection (#3133)
Date:1860
Alternate Date:1860
Extent:1 loose sheet
Box Number:Box 4
Folder Number:Folder 11
Format: Electronic
Language:English
Published: Currier & Ives
Copyright:Please contact Historical Society of Pennsylvania Rights and Reproductions (rnr@hsp.org)
Online Access:https://digitallibrary.hsp.org/index.php/Detail/objects/11561
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Summary: Presidential and vice-presidential candidates for the 1860 election, as well as their supporters in the press, are depicted exercising at the "Political Gymnasium." At left, Edward Everett, vice-presidential candidate for the Constitutional Union Party, lifts up a barbell on which sits presidential candidate John Bell. To the right of them, New York Tribune editor Horace Greeley tries to swing his legs over a bar labeled "Nom[ination] for Governor." Abraham Lincoln, straddling a balance beam constructed of wooden rails, advises Greeley to ask for a boost. At far right, William H. Seward, supporting himself on crutches and wearing bandages on his feet, warns Lincoln not to fall. Below Lincoln, New York Courier editor James Watson Webb bends backward into a somersault. To Lincoln's right, Stephen Douglas and John Breckinridge, both Democratic presidential candidates, spar with boxing gloves.