1 - 15 of 19 records
JM-295: Sunken ships are historic trouble-breeders

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting a group, including FDR, examine sinking of U.S. gunboat Panay.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-321: The ideal ally

Description:
Editorial cartoon set after WWI. While the spoils are broken up, Uncle Sam wishes for one island, but the spokesperson stepped out. Now Japan holds most strategic islands.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-026: At 70% naval efficiency in the United States

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting a man representing Congress in front of a blackboard showing the naval efficiency of Britain, Japan, and the United States. Britain and Japan both have 100% efficiency, but the man crosses out the 100% mark by the United States and replaces it with 70%, remarking on how this will please voters and reduce costs. Uncle Sam and Hughes watch from the window and express shock.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-111: One sun that hasn't been eclipsed

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting a Japanese soldier waving a Japanese flag.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-212: Movies for the conference

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting a Japanese figure watching a movie with Uncle Sam. Film shows both the victorious nations and the defeated ones being crushed underneath debt, suffering, and unrest; war sits in a field filled with gravestones.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-075: The polite arts of diplomacy

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Baron Uchida, an ambassador of Japan stationed in the United States, and President Taft facing each other. Uschida has a secret treaty with Mexico in his back pocket, and Taft has a photograph of the secret treaty in his back pocket.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-106: Two ways by which peace may be restored without casting Russia a kopeck

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting two panels, each with a different solution to promoting peace. In the top panel, Rockefeller comes forward to Komura and Dewitte with carriages full of money. In the second panel, Carnegie purchases rights to build a library on Sakhalin Island from Komura, making himself poor, but allowing the two men to walk away from each other.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-211: Will Japan want a "no limit" game?

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Uncle Sam threatening a Japanese diplomat over fair naval ratios in a proposal and showing the diplomat how the ratio would look with unlimited naval competition.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-289: Dancing to the spring song

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting men representing nations dancing around "war" organ grinder. The League of Nations watches from a window.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-109: Well, General, you put up a magnificent fight

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting a scene of surrender: Nogi Maresuke gives Anatoly Stoessel peace laurel, receives sword. Stoessel surrendered on January 1st, 1905 after the fall of Wantai to the Japanese; the surrender was accepted on January 2nd, 1905.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-078: Three scenes of Uncle Sam excluding immigrants

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting three scenes in three different panels. In the top panel, Uncle Sam stands in a garden of Americanism surrounded by crows labeled "Unassimilable Asiatic Immigration" and "Undesirable European Immigration." In the middle panel, Uncle Sam is putting up two signs along the coast: "Exclusion of Chinese" and "Exclusion of Japanese Immigrants" while a figure representing Japan, a country who also has exclusion signs for China and Korea, watches. In the third panel, the same figure from Japan gestures with an angry face and Japanese Emigrants behind him, while Uncle Sam proudly shows off a sign welcoming only particular groups of Japanese people: tourists, students, scientists, etc.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-043: Wilson expanding the Monroe Doctrine while Uncle Sam worries about America

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting President Wilson standing on a globe and acting as a policeman of the world. Uncle Sam grabs his arm and says, "America first!" All over the globe, signs depict new orders and laws based on Wilson's expansion of the Monroe Doctrine. Wilson is credited with expanding the Doctrine to allow for "Missionary Diplomacy" in locations such as Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-080: School is about to open in the far East

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting a figure representing Japan standing in front of a blackboard with a lesson about modern military methods written on it. Figures representing Korea and China sit in the student desks with books open in front of them.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-273: China's place in the sun

Description:
China caught in spiderweb of Japan.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-315: Storm clouds on the Axis front

Description:
Mussolini, Hitler, Hirohito see powerful U.S. fists.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
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