visibility Similar

code Related

John Wilson Bengough - chalk talk

description

Summary

Canadian cartoonist John Wilson Bengough caricatures himself giving a chalk talk

Born in Toronto in the Province of Canada to Scottish and Irish immigrants, Bengough grew up in nearby Whitby, where after graduating from high school he began a career in newspapers as a typesetter. The political cartoons of the American Thomas Nast inspired Bengough to direct his drawing talents towards cartooning; a lack of outlets for his work drove him to found Grip in 1873. The Pacific Scandal gave Bengough ample material to lampoon, and soon Bengough's image of prime minister John A. Macdonald achieved fame across Canada. After Grip folded in 1894, Bengough published books, contributed cartoons to Canadian and foreign newspapers, and toured giving chalk talks internationally. Bengough was deeply religious and devoted himself to promoting social reforms. He supported free trade, prohibition of alcohol and tobacco, women's suffrage, and other liberal beliefs, but was opposed to Canadian bilingualism. Bengough had ambitions to run for office, though Liberal leader Wilfrid Laurier convinced him against running for Parliament; he served as alderman on the Toronto City Council from 1907 to 1909. The Canadian government listed Bengough as a Person of National Historic Significance in 1938 and he was inducted into the Canadian Cartoonist Hall of Fame in 2005.

label_outline

Tags

cartoons by john wilson bengough chalk talk public domain cartoon images
date_range

Date

2016
collections

in collections

John Wilson Bengough (1851–1923)

Canada's earliest cartoonists, as well as an editor, publisher, writer, poet, entertainer, and politician.
create

Source

Yesterday's Papers (archiving blocked)
link

Link

http://commons.wikimedia.org/
copyright

Copyright info

public domain

label_outline Explore Cartoons By John Wilson Bengough, Public Domain Cartoon Images

Topics

cartoons by john wilson bengough chalk talk public domain cartoon images