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“The Third-Term Panic"

"An Ass, having put on the Lion's skin, roamed about in the Forest, and amused himself by frightening all the foolish Animals he met with in his wanderings."--Shakespeare or Bacon

In
this cartoon, artist Thomas Nast reacts to a series of editorials in the
New York Herald criticizing what Herald owner/editor
James
Gordon Bennett Jr. considered to be President Ulysses S.
Grant’s bid for an unprecedented third term.
There was no constitutional limit on the number of presidential
terms until ratification of the 22nd Amendment in 1951, but
the tradition of serving no more than two terms, set by President George
Washington, carried a strong stigma against anyone who attempted to
violate it. To Bennett and
others long dissatisfied with the policies and scandals of the Grant
administration, any possibility that the former general would seek a
third term was condemned as “Caesarism”—an undemocratic attempt to
wield imperial power. Grant
declined to pursue the Republican nomination actively in 1876, but was a
candidate in 1880, when the deadlocked convention selected Congressman
James Garfield, instead.
The
image of the featured cartoon was inspired by, and the text taken from,
one of Aesop’s fables, “The Ass in the Lion’s Skin.”
The rest of the fable reads:
“At last coming upon a fox, he [the ass] tried to frighten him
also, but the fox no sooner heard the sound of his voice than he
exclaimed, ‘I might possibly have been frightened myself, if I had not
hear your bray.’” The
moral of the fable is that although a fool may disguise his appearance,
his words will reveal his true nature.
To Nast, the New York Herald is not a roaring lion to be
feared, but a braying ass to be ridiculed.
The reference in the citation to “Shakespeare or Bacon” is a
jibe at Bennett’s contention that Shakespeare’s works were actually
written by
Sir Francis Bacon.
Here,
the New York Herald appears as an ass in a lion’s skin, whose
ferocious presence frightens the “foolish animals” of the press,
including The New York Times (unicorn), the New York Tribune
(giraffe), and the New York World (owl).
A skittish fox, representing the Democratic Party, has edged onto
a reform plank near a gaping pit, by which the trumpeting elephant,
symbolizing the Republican vote, lumbers.
Since this issue of Harper’s Weekly went to press
shortly before the congressional elections of November 3, 1874, the
artist was uncertain which party would tumble into the pit, but early
results boded ill for the Republicans.
Thus,
the elephant’s foreleg is raised precariously over the chasm, the
“Ohio” and “Indiana” geese squawk about Democratic victories in
those pivotal states, and the ostrich with its head in the ground
alludes to temperance Republicans who nominated their own slate of
candidates in New York. On
November 3, the Democrats did win control of the U.S. House of
Representatives for the first time since before the Civil War, and Nast
drew a sequel to this featured cartoon entitled “Caught In A
Trap—The Third-Term Hoax” (November 21, 1874), in which the
Republican Elephant has tumbled into the pit.
It
is often mistakenly assumed that the image in the featured cartoon of
stampeding animals was based on a hoax concocted by one of Bennett's
editors at the Herald in the fall of 1874.
On November 9, the New York Herald reported in bold
headlines that wild animals had broken loose in Central Park, causing
“Terrible Scenes of Mutilation.”
However, the postdated November 7 issue of Harper’s Weekly,
which includes "The Third-Term Panic," was published in late
October, over a week before the hoax.
There
is no evidence that either Nast knew about the hoax before it was
perpetrated (which seems unlikely) or that the Herald was
inspired by his cartoon (although it is an intriguing possibility).
Soon after the incident, Nast craftily incorporated visual and textual
references to the hoax in several cartoons over the ensuing months to
mock Bennett and his journalistic colleagues.
The postdated November 21 sequel, “Caught in a Trap,” was
also probably drawn before the hoax, although the cartoonist had time
before publication to add a subtitle referring to it:
“The Result of the Third-Term Hoax.”
The
featured November 7 cartoon is one of Thomas Nast’s most important
because it marks the first notable appearance of the Republican
Elephant, which the cartoonist would develop over the next few years
into the universally recognized symbol for the Republican Party.
An elephant had been associated twice before with the Republican
Party, once in President Abraham Lincoln’s 1864 campaign sheet, Father Abraham , (not The Rail-Splitter of 1860, as often cited), and once in Harper’s Weekly to depict the
Liberal Republicans of 1872. However,
in neither case did the caricature have a lasting impact on other
political cartoonists or the public as a symbol for the Republican
Party.
Nast’s
first use of an animal symbol for the Republican Party came in 1871.
Like the featured cartoon, he employed an Aesop’s allusion to
warn Republicans, depicted as a bloodied lion and bear, that their
continued intra-party fighting might allow the Democrat Party (as a fox)
to capture the presidency the next year.
During the rest of the 1870s, Nast associated various animals
with the Republican Party—bull, eagle, fish, fox, horse, lamb,
rooster, and sheep (beleaguered Southern Republicans).
Beginning with “The Third-Term Panic” of November 7, 1874,
Nast used the elephant seven times over the following 18 months to
represent the “Republican Vote.”
However,
Nast’s cartoon of April 29, 1876, indicates that the animal was not
yet exclusively the symbol of the Republican Party. In that prophetic image, “The Political Situation,” a
two-headed elephant, upon which sits a perplexed Uncle Sam, is “The
Vote of the People,” with one head facing “The Democratic Road”
and the other toward “The Republican Road.”
Nast did not use the symbol again during the 1876 presidential
campaign until his election-eve cartoon of October 28, "The Elephant
Walk Around," in which the “Republican Vote” appears
as a massive elephant crushing a two-headed Democratic Tiger.
The uncertain outcome of the Electoral College controversy of
1876-1877 prompted the cartoonist to contribute two drawings during
February 1877 of a two-tailed elephant (with no head), labeled the
“Republican What-Is-It,” modeled after P. T. Barnum’s
hoax.
When
the Electoral College Commission decided the presidency in favor of
Republican Rutherford B. Hayes, Nast no doubt captured the feeling of
many by portraying a badly wounded elephant at the grave of the
Democratic Tiger. Entitled
"Another Such Victory And I Am
Undone," it was the first
time that the elephant’s name was not qualified by “Vote” or
another designation, but represented the entire Republican Party.
Thereafter, Nast continued using the Republican Elephant symbol,
and after 1879 stopped associating any other animal with the Republican
Party except for one cartoon in 1886 in which Republican spoilsmen were
depicted as vultures. By
the 1880 presidential election, cartoonists for other publications had
incorporated the elephant symbol into their own work, and by March 1884
Nast could refer to the image he had created for the Republican Party as
“The Sacred
Elephant.”
Robert C. Kennedy
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