Join, or Die political cartoon, 1754

This illustration in the Pennsylvania Gazette, published by Benjamin Franklin, is widely regarded as the first American political cartoon. In this image, Franklin uses the image of a snake cut into eight pieces to make a political point—that American colonists from the 13 colonies, wh...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Unknown Artist (Creator)
Collection:Historical Society of Pennsylvania cartoons and caricatures collection (#3133)
Date:1754-05-09
Alternate Date:May 9, 1754
Extent:1 photograph
Box Number:Box 1
Folder Number:Folder 1
Format: Electronic
Language:English
Published: Benjamin Franklin, 1706-1790
Subjects:
Copyright:Please contact Historical Society of Pennsylvania Rights and Reproductions (rnr@hsp.org)
Online Access:https://digitallibrary.hsp.org/index.php/Detail/objects/12389
id dc-12389
record_format Dc
hierarchy_top_id rs-4
hierarchy_top_title Digital Records
is_hierarchy_id 0
is_hierarchy_title 0
database_name_str_mv Digital Records
format Electronic
title Join, or Die political cartoon, 1754
spellingShingle Join, or Die political cartoon, 1754
Unknown Artist
title_sort Join, or Die political cartoon, 1754
title_txt_mv Join, or Die political cartoon, 1754
date_txt_mv 1754-05-09
year_str_mv 1754
display_date_txt_mv May 9, 1754
creator_txt_mv Unknown Artist (Creator)
author Unknown Artist
author_facet Unknown Artist
author_role Creator
author_sort Unknown Artist
publisher_txt_mv Benjamin Franklin, 1706-1790
publisher Benjamin Franklin, 1706-1790
genre Periodical illustrations
Art Print
Woodcut
Political cartoons
extent_txt_mv 1 photograph
description This illustration in the <em>Pennsylvania Gazette</em>, published by Benjamin Franklin, is widely regarded as the first American political cartoon. In this image, Franklin uses the image of a snake cut into eight pieces to make a political point&mdash;that American colonists from the 13 colonies, who often squabbled among one another&mdash;needed to unite to defend themselves against violence that threatened them all. The context for this cartoon was the outbreak of hostilities between France and Britain and their respective Native American allies in North America. This conflict is often called the French and Indian War in the United States, although the fighting in North America was only one theater of a worldwide conflict known as the Seven Years&#39; War. In an editorial column, Franklin reported on Iroquois attacks against British colonists and warned that if the colonists did not agree to present a united front at the upcoming Albany Conference more violence would ensue. To illustrate his point, he added in an engraved image of a snake cut into pieces, each labeled with an abbreviation for a specific colony. Actually, this image cheats a little. Instead of showing a snake cut into 13 pieces&mdash;one for each colony&mdash;the colonies that made up New England are combined into one segment&mdash;the snake&#39;s head&mdash;labeled &quot;N.E.&quot; The other pieces of the snake are labeled &quot;N.Y.&quot; (New York), &quot;N.J.&quot; (New Jersey), &quot;P.&quot; (Pennsylvania), &quot;M.&quot; (Maryland), &quot;V.&quot; (Virginia), &quot;N.C.&quot; (North Carolina), and the tail is labeled &quot;S.C.&quot; (South Carolina). The slogan accompanying the image, &quot;Join, or Die,&quot; referenced the superstition that a snake that had been cut in half could come back to life if it could rejoin the pieces of its body before the sun set. This simple image contained several clear and powerful messages: although the colonists were divided, they had the chance to save themselves if they joined together. But time was short; if they failed to unite, the consequences could be fatal.<br /> This cartoon enjoyed instant popularity, and images of cut-up snakes were quickly republished in newspapers in New York and Boston. Much like modern-day internet memes, people who shared this image did not always copy it exactly as it had originally appeared, but often made changes to the image or the caption to appeal to their audience. For instance, when this cartoon ran in the <em>Boston Gazette</em>, the caption was changed to &quot;Unite and Conquer.&quot; Well after the Seven Years&#39; War had ended, Franklin&#39;s snake became a symbol of colonial unity against controversial British policies when Paul Revere published his own version of &quot;Join, or Die&quot; during the Stamp Act crisis. It remained a popular pro-colonist symbol throughout the American Revolution and remains to this day one of the most recognizable visual metaphors in American history.
language English
rights_statement_txt_mv Please contact Rights and Reproduction for more information.
collection Historical Society of Pennsylvania cartoons and caricatures collection
collection_number_str_mv 3133
box_number_str Box 1
folder_number_str Folder 1
url https://digitallibrary.hsp.org/index.php/Detail/objects/12389
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