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  • join or die

    .... seems a timely review, given todays politics.
    On this day in 1754, Benjamin Franklin published one of the most famous cartoons in history: the Join or Die woodcut. Franklin’s art carried significant importance at the time and is considered an early masterpiece of political messaging.

    At the time, Franklin was the publisher of the Pennsylvania Gazette. He also had been chosen as a delegate for an upcoming conference in Albany, New York, to deal with a combined threat to the British from French and Indian forces.
    During what later became known as the Albany Congress, representatives from seven colonies – Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island – were going to meet to discuss the French threat and work on a treaty with the Iroquois Confederacy.
    As the Albany Congress approached, Franklin was concerned about a recent military loss to the French and he was clearly pondering a colonial alliance to confront more French aggression. A few days after the small military defeat, Franklin published an article about the loss, as reported by a young major in the Virginia Regiment, George Washington.
    “The Confidence of the French in this Undertaking seems well-grounded on the present disunited State of the British Colonies, and the extreme Difficulty of bringing so many different Governments and Assemblies to agree in any speedy and effectual Measures for our common Defence and Security,” Franklin wrote.
    “They presume that they may with Impunity violate the most solemn Treaties subsisting between the two Crowns, kill, seize and imprison our Traders, and confiscate their Effects at Pleasure (as they have done for several Years past) murder and scalp our Farmers, with their Wives and Children, and take an easy Possession of such Parts of the British Territory as they find most convenient for them,” Franklin concluded, warning that the British presence in North America was at stake.
    Accompanying the article was the “JOIN, OR DIE” cartoon, with a snake cut into eight pieces that symbolized the British colonies. Franklin’s message hit home as the cartoon and article started appearing in other colonial newspapers.
    In a 1996 article in The British Library Journal, Karen Severud Cook reviewed the brief, but interesting, historical interpretations of the cartoon. Franklin’s cartoon, Cook said, was also a symbolic map, with the initials next to the snake’s segments in the same order of the colonies and a rough proximity of a coastline.
    It is likely that Franklin himself didn’t engrave the etching, since he was busy with his political career. The “Join or Die” cartoon also wasn’t the first political cartoon he had published; Franklin had done another cartoon for a pamphlet in 1747.
    A severed snake image, in two pieces, had first appeared in a 1685 book in France accompanied by the words “se rejoindre ou mourir” (will join or die). And Franklin might also have been inspired by rattlesnake images drawn by nature historian Mark Catesby.
    The emblematic image gained considerable attention as the Albany Congress approached. The Congress met in June and July, where Franklin proposed an early version of a unified colonial government. A President General appointed by the crown and a Grand Council of representatives would be appointed by each of the colonies. Franklin’s government was limited in scope: It could provide for joint military protection and also levy taxes. The Congress approved the plan, but the British government and the colonies never acted on it.
    In later years, the Join or Die cartoon resurfaced on important occasions. The emblem reappeared in colonial newspapers during the Stamp Act crisis. Versions of the snake cartoon appeared in newspapers during the American Revolutionary War, sometimes as part of a masthead. And the snake cartoon was used by both sides during the Civil War.
    There's a lot of things they didn't tell me when I signed on with this outfit....

  • #2
    Re: join or die

    But why a snake ?

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    • #3
      Re: join or die

      There's a lot of things they didn't tell me when I signed on with this outfit....

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: join or die

        Originally posted by LeeG
        But why a snake ?
        Because rejoining it looks plausible in the cartoon. A drawing of a chopped-up human is just gross.
        "For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations,
        for nature cannot be fooled."

        Richard Feynman

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        • #5
          Re: join or die

          Ok I’ll look into this. A snake seems like a less than positive metaphor for ones civic identity.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: join or die

            LeeG is right, not to mention that whole Garden of Eden thing.
            “Come, come, my conservative friend, wipe the dew off your spectacles and see the world is moving" - Elizabeth Cady Stanton

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            • #7
              Re: join or die

              I thought Yeadon was right.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: join or die

                I recall a bit of folklore that if left alone, the pieces would would rejoin overnight.

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                • #9
                  Re: join or die

                  It's because "The Snake" is TLG's favorite poem.....
                  If you take him in, he will bite you, but you should have known that, silly woman!

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                  • #10
                    Re: join or die

                    Franklin was using the snake to reference the Don't Tread on Me flag.

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                    • #11
                      Re: join or die

                      Originally posted by Mike.Higgins.94301
                      Franklin was using the snake to reference the Don't Tread on Me flag.
                      Other way around? Gadsden flag followed Frankins cartoon by 20 yrs.




                      The flag is named for Christopher Gadsden, South Carolina delegate to the Continental Congress and brigadier general in the Continental Army.[4][5] Gadsden designed the flag in 1775 during the American Revolution.[6]
                      .
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                      In December 1775, Benjamin Franklin published an essay in the Pennsylvania Journal under the pseudonym "American Guesser" in which he suggested that the rattlesnake was a good symbol for the American spirit and its valuation for vigilance, assertiveness, individualism, unity, and liberty:[23]

                      [...] there was painted a Rattle-Snake, with this modest motto under it, "Don't tread on me." [...] she has no eye-lids. She may therefore be esteemed an emblem of vigilance. She never begins an attack, nor, when once engaged, ever surrenders [...] The Rattle-Snake is solitary, and associates with her kind only when it is necessary for their preservation [...] 'Tis curious and amazing to observe how distinct and independent of each other the rattles of this animal are, and yet how firmly they are united together, so as never to be separated but by breaking them to pieces. [...] The power of fascination attributed to her, by a generous construction, may be understood to mean, that those who consider the liberty and blessings which America affords, and once come over to her, never afterwards leave her, but spend their lives with her.
                      Last edited by LeeG; 05-26-2023, 02:45 PM.

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                      • #12
                        Re: join or die

                        Originally posted by LeeG
                        I thought Yeadon was right.
                        Pretty sure Yeadon is left, which indicates he's usually correct

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