Handout C: Thomas Nast Cartoons on Boss Tweed
Thomas Nast Cartoons on Boss Tweed
Directions: Discuss the meaning of the political cartoons of Thomas Nast, using the discussion questions below as a guide.
Note: For a clear and detailed digitized image, search Princeton University Digital Library (www. pudl.princeton.edu) for the title and/or date of each cartoon.
Thomas Nast, Harper’s Weekly, October 21, 1871.
“Under the Thumb,” Thomas Nast, Harper’s Weekly, June 1871.
“The New Board of Education,” Thomas Nast, Harper’s Weekly, May 13, 1871.
“The Tammany Tiger Loose,” Thomas Nast, Harper’s Weekly, November 11, 1871.
REVIEW QUESTIONS
- How does Thomas Nast portray Boss Tweed as a corrupt and greedy politician?
- How do the political cartoons demonstrate that Boss Tweed has an unfair grip over politics in New York?
- What threat does Boss Tweed represent to constitutional principles and a healthy civil society as portrayed by Thomas Nast?
- What is the role of a free press in questioning the actions of the government in the American constitutional republic?