The Hercules Of The Union, Slaying The Great Dragon Of Secession, 1861

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Image Title: The Hercules Of The Union, Slaying The Great Dragon Of Secession, 1861

Creator: Currier & Ives.,

Date: 1861

Summary: A tribute to commander of Union forces Gen. Winfield Scott, shown as the mythical Hercules slaying the many-headed dragon or hydra, here symbolizing the secession of the Confederate states. At left stands Scott, wielding a great club "Liberty and Union," about to strike the beast. The hydra has seven heads, each representing a prominent Southern leader. The neck of each Southerner depicted is labeled with a vice or crime associated with him. They are (from top to bottom): Hatred and Blasphemy (Confederate secretary of state Robert Toombs), Lying (vice president Alexander Stephens), Piracy (president Jefferson Davis), Perjury (army commander P. G. T. Beauregard), Treason (United States general David E. Twiggs who in February 1861 turned over nineteen federal army posts under his command in Texas to the South), Extortion (South Carolina governor Francis W. Pickens), and Robbery (James Buchanan's secretary of war John B. Floyd, accused of supplying federal arms and supplies to the South).

Subjects: Beauregard, P.G.T
Confederate States of America, government and officers of
Davis, Jefferson
Floyd, John B
Georgia, secession of
Pickens, Francis W
Scott, Winfield, in the Civil War
Stephens, Alexander
Toombs, Robert
Twiggs, David E

Original Media: Lithograph

Collections: Cartoon Prints, American » more info...
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About our canvas prints...

Each high-quality canvas we produce is printed on demand, one at a time, just for you. Our unique finishing process of stretching the canvas over a heavy-duty wooden frame creates a three-dimensional piece of art, and means that no additional framing is necessary. Your canvas will arrive ready-to-hang.

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