Is This Why Hawaii Wants Independence?

http://www.alplm-cdi.com/chroniclingillinois/files/uploads/400985-01.jpg

Title

Is This Why Hawaii Wants Independence?

Subject

McCutcheon, John T. (John Tinney), 1870-1949
Political cartoons
Ethnic relations
Imperialism
Hawaii
Uncle Sam (Symbolic character)
Race relations
Lynching
African Americans
Massie, Thalia, 1911-1963

Description

Hawaii, in the form of an ethnic charicature, walks with Uncle Sam while holding his hand. A newspaper boy runs up to the pair with a newspaper reading "Extra- All about the epidemic of lynchings! RaceWar! Blacks driven out of town!", shocking Hawaii. In the final panel, Hawaii begs for independence to a shocked Uncle Sam.

In 1893, U.S. forces overthrow Queen Liliuokalani of Hawaii and established a Provisional Government, establishing a U.S. territory on July 7, 1898 under controversial circumstances. This cartoon by John T. McCutcheon possibly refer to the Massie Trial, in which an intoxicated Thalia Massie, a white navy wife, asserted she had been raped and assaulted. The police arrested five plantation workers, whom Massie positively identified. Plantations workers tended to be any combination of Japanese, Chinese, Native Hawaiian, Pilipino, and Portuguese, and many believe she accused them based on their race. One of the five was later severely beaten and another murdered. The murderers served an hour sentence in the Territorial Governor's executive chambers.

Creator

McCutcheon, John T.

Publisher

Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum

Date

n.d.

Format

jpg

Language

eng

Identifier

400985
John T. McCutcheon Collection

Original Format

political cartoon
b&w
1

Physical Dimensions

48 x 37 cm