Visit HarpWeek.com

   
 


 Campaign Analogies: Sports and Entertainment

 


 "A Little Game of Bagatelle …"
  Cartoonist:  Unknown
  Source:  Library of Congress
  Date:  c1864

Click to see a large version of this cartoon...

Click to see a large version of this cartoon

Complete HarpWeek Explanation:
The contest for the presidency in 1864 is depicted as a game of bagatelle (a game similar to billiards) between Republican nominee Abraham Lincoln and Democrat George B. McClellan.

Lincoln (left) holds a cue "Baltimore" (the site of the Republican national convention) and is about to shoot a ball on "The Union Board". He says to running-mate Andrew Johnson (upper-right), "I’ll do the best I can Andy, I can do no more." Johnson encourages him, "Hurrah for our side, go ahead Old Abe! O aint he bully on the bagatelle? you’re only got a few more to make, It’s A Sure Thing!!" Johnson points to the scoreboard which reads "Nix" for the "Copper" (i.e., Copperheads or Peace Democrats). The Union side of the board is blank.

At left, McClellan, dressed as a child, holds a cue "Chicago" (site of the Democratic national convention), trying to balance himself on a collapsing "Chicago Platform," which appears to have been given a nudge by Lincoln’s foot. A "peace" plank has fallen from the platform. McClellan complains, "This ‘Cue’ is too heavy! and the "Platform’s’ shakey!! O! O! I want to go back in the yard!!" His running-mate George Pendleton (far-left) retorts impatiently, "O see here. We cant stand this! Old Abe’s getting in all the pots on the board, this game will have to be played over again or there’l be a fight, THAT’S CERTAIN."

At the far-right, Vallandigham sits with crossed legs, saying to McClellan, "There is nothing the matter with the Cue or the Platform, you had the first red and didn’t make anything, now he’ll win the game." Union general Ulysses S. Grant smokes a pipe and stands near the middle of the table. He advises McClellan, " … you travel too near the ground to play on this board, better surrender UNCONDITIONALLY." A grinning black waiter with a tray of drinks watches Pendleton and McClellan.

In the foreground are a cat name "Miss Cegenation" (i.e., miscegenation) and a black dog, tied together at the tails by a string attached to a kettle. They chase two rats, "Old Leas" and "Wood," across a paper holding "Caces Sugar Plumbs."

Source: American Political Prints, 1766 - 1876: A Catalog of the Collections in the Library of Congress, 1991, by Bernard F. Reilly, Jr.
 

 

 

 
 

 

     
 

 

 
     
 

 

 
     
 

 

 

Website design © 2001-2008 HarpWeek, LLC
All Content © 1998-2008 HarpWeek, LLC
Please submit questions to webmaster@harpweek.com