Lincoln
  • 1860 Election
  • President Lincoln
  • Civil War
  •   - The pending conflict
      - The great American What is it? chased by Copper-heads
      - The spirit of 61. God, our country and liberty!!
      - Why dont you take it?
      - The Blockade on the
      - Uncle Sam protecting his property against the encroachments of his cousin John
      - Breaking that
      - The Vanishing Trick
      - The clairvoyant's dream
      - 5 to one ha
      - The Union Christmas Dinner
      - Mr. Lincoln Calling for Volunteers
      - Worship of the North
      - Breaking that ‘backbone’
      - The national game. Three "outs" and one "run"
      - A Civil War cartoon showing James Gordon Bennett as an American Indian embellished with the Stars and Stripes
      - The Last Call
      - Compromise with the South
      - Mr. Lincoln Sets a Style
      - The Last Call
      - Commodore Foote’s Game of Ten Pins with Beauregard
      - 5 To One Ha
      - I am glad, I am out of the scrape
      - Lincoln, you'll excuse me General Butler, but as I can't send you everywhere at once, I'll have to take you to pieces
      - Black Civil War Soldier
      - Why Don't You Take It?
      - The Union Christmas Dinner
      - The Blockade on the ‘Connecticut Plan’
      - The great American What is it? chased by Copper-heads
      - The spirit of 61, God, our country and liberty!
      - The Sanitary Commission
  • Cabinet and Patronage
  • Emancipation and Slavery
  • Black Soldiers
  • New York City
  • The Press
  • 1864 Election
  • Assassination & Funeral
  • Secession
  • Foreign Policy
  • Abraham Lincoln's Classroom The Lincoln Institute The Lehrman Institute
    Bookmark this Site
    Map RoomCartoon CornerLinksLibraryFor Teachers OnlyHome
         We bet Abraham Lincoln can get 10 million fans before any other president can.       Become a fan

    Cartoon Corner
    The pending conflict

    The pending conflict

    Title: The pending conflict

    Year: 1863

    Description: One of three similar prints published by Oliver Evans Woods, reflecting grave northern fears of British and French interference on behalf of the Confederacy in the Civil War. (See also "The Pending Conflict" and "The Pending Contest," nos. 1864-2 and 1864-3.) The controversy centered on the "Alabama" and other warships built and fitted out for the Confederates in England. French Emperor Napoleon III's military operations in Mexico in 1862 and 1863 were also perceived as dangerous to the North. The print actually appeared in the summer of 1863, when Southern diplomatic overtures to France and England threatened to result in international recognition for the Confederacy. In the center Jefferson Davis--here called "Secesh"--raises a club labeled "Pirate Alabama" over the head of a brawny Union soldier whose arms are constricted by the Constitution, and around whose waist and legs coils a poisonous snake. Davis tramples on an American flag. At right stands a leering John Bull, who holds a pile of clubs in reserve for Davis. Behind him is a prancing Napoleon III, also watching the contest. In the distance two ships burn on the ocean. Napoleon: "Whip him, Secesh, and when I get Mexico, I'll help you whip him again." John Bull: "Down with him, Secesh--burn his Ships--destroy his Commerce--England has plenty more such clubs for you." Secesh: "I'll fix him--I'll kill him." Soldier: "The flag of my country trampled under foot--the ships of my country burning on the ocean--while I stand here entangled in the coils of this foul Copperhead, and so bound up by Constitutional restraints, that I am unable to put forth my true strength in their behalf." The "restraints" mentioned may refer to opposition on constitutional grounds to Lincoln's use of what he considered valid presidential war powers. The cartoon may have been specifically occasioned by the Supreme Court's review in the "Prize Cases" of 1863 of the legality of the Union blockade. "Copperhead" was the derogatory term used for anti-Lincoln or anti-Republican advocates of a negotiated reconciliation with the South.

    URL: http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3a42348

    Map Room | Cartoon Corner | Link'um Links | Library | Teachers Only | Home

    Abraham Lincoln's Classroom © 2003-2010 The Lincoln Institute. All rights reserved.
    A project of The Lincoln Institute under a grant from The Lehrman Institute.
    Questions? Contact the webmaster.