Collage of historical images and cartoons of the American Civil War

Visual Culture of the American Civil WarA Special Feature of Picturing US History

"Emancipation."

Consternation as well as celebration greeted the Emancipation Proclamation. Among the few pictorial endorsements that appeared in January, 1863, was <a title="Emancipation of the Negroes" href="http://civilwar.picturinghistory.gc.cuny.edu/presentations-about-selected-topics/emancipation/quotthe_emancipation_of_the_negroes_january_1863the_past_and_the_futurequot/i/34/" target="_self">a detailed double-page engraving in <em>Harper's Weekly</em></a> based on a drawing by its news artist and budding editorial cartoonist Thomas Nast. Nast heralded the Emancipation Proclamation by portraying scenes of African-American life in the South before and after freedom. These vignettes of cruel enslavement and potential equality circled around a central domestic scene featuring a black family in a parlor the appearance of which was similar to familiar sentimental prints of white families published before and during the war. An <a title="Emancipation" href="http://civilwar.picturinghistory.gc.cuny.edu/presentations-about-selected-topics/emancipation/emancipation_harpers_weekly_january_24_1863/i/104/" target="_self">accompanying description</a> delineated the image's many aspects. The engraving proved to be very popular, especially after Lincoln's death when this new, separately published edition substituted a portrait of the president for the image of Lucifer at the bottom of the print.Consternation as well as celebration greeted the Emancipation Proclamation. Among the few pictorial endorsements that appeared in January, 1863, was a detailed double-page engraving in Harper's Weekly based on a drawing by its news artist and budding editorial cartoonist Thomas Nast. Nast heralded the Emancipation Proclamation by portraying scenes of African-American life in the South before and after freedom. These vignettes of cruel enslavement and potential equality circled around a central domestic scene featuring a black family in a parlor the appearance of which was similar to familiar sentimental prints of white families published before and during the war. An accompanying description delineated the image's many aspects. The engraving proved to be very popular, especially after Lincoln's death when this new, separately published edition substituted a portrait of the president for the image of Lucifer at the bottom of the print.

Physical Dimensions: 14.1 x 20.5 in.

Creator: Thomas Nast

Source: Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress

Publisher: Philadelphia: S. Bott

Date: 1865