A political cartoon of a man holding a newspaper Untitled - Political cartoon, public domain image

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A political cartoon of a man holding a newspaper Untitled - Political cartoon, public domain image

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Summary

This untitled illustration by cartoonist Clifford Berryman, which appeared in the Washington Evening Star on August 27, 1915, depicts the action that Woodrow Wilson's Secretary of War, Lindley M. Garrison took to keep former President Theodore Roosevelt from criticizing Woodrow Wilson's national preparedness policies after he had openly criticized them in a speech to an encampment of business and professional men earlier in Plattsburg, New York.
Berryman Political Cartoon Collection

Berryman was born in Kentucky in 1869 and began his career in Washington at age 17 as a draftsman for the U.S. Patent Office. In 1891 he became a cartoonist's understudy at the Washington Post , and within five years he had risen to become the paper's chief political cartoonist. For more than 50 years, from 1896 to 1949, Berryman's cartoons appeared almost daily on the front page of the Washington Post and then the Washington Evening Star. Washington political circles embraced Berryman's cartooning. Berryman rarely drew mean-spirited cartoons and was balanced in his commentary of partisan politics. He was a talented portraitist and his cartoons are renowned for their accurate portrayal of well-known gurus. Berryman often gave away his original cartoons and examples of his artwork can be found in collections across the country.

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Date

27/08/1915
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Source

The U.S. National Archives
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