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  1. Political cartoons and drawings were popular features in 1890s newspapers and the yellow journals of the Spanish-American War era. Before the Spanish-American War began, drawings...

  2. This collection is a scrapbook of political cartoons pertaining to the Spanish-American War compiled by Blanche S. Crawford. The cartoons were taken from various popular newspapers published in 1898, including The Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune and the discontinued New York World.

    • George A. Smathers Libraries, Gainesville, 32611-7005, Florida
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    • Spanish-American War in Cartoons
    • Cartoons from The Spanish-American War Period
    • Spanish Barbarians
    • What Spain Has Lost
    • The Maine, The Big Excuse
    • The Spanish "Monster"
    • Sources Consulted

    *Spanish versionoh this article. Spanish cartoons (La Correspondencia, Black and White, D.Quixote, Spanish Cuba) and Americans (The World NY, Herald) confronted in an "infographic" of the time. Source: The San Francisco Call, May 15, 1898, Page 18. The Spanish-American War (25 April to 12 August 1898), also known as the "Disaster of '98" or the "Wa...

    This is a review of a few cartoons, not all of them, that were crossed by both sides in newspapers and magazines, before, during and after the Spanish-American War. They are ordered by date, all dating back to 1898. Magazine La Campana de Gràcianumber 1498 of January 29th. Legend: "With the mask of friendship he already has one leg in it" 11 Februa...

    Also on March 27thin The Anaconda Standard (Montana), they dedicate a good space to the cruelty of the Spanish and assure that they carry it in the mixture of their different bloods. "They have no mercy because they are ruthless," they said without further argument. In three illustrations they show Spaniards roasting a man to death and torturing an...

    Page of The San Francisco Call of 24 April, one day before the start of the war, under the title "What Spain has lost, countries that have slipped away from the crown since 1640". 30th April 1898. Cartoon by Ramón Cilla entitled "warrior purposes" in the magazine Madrid Cómico. The expression "no sea mackinleiro" refers to the American President Mc...

    . The Herald, May 15. "Remember the Maine". Despite not being able to prove Spain's involvement in the sinking of the Maine (which may have been due to an accident although others claimed it was sunk by the Americans), the press continued to repeat that it was the Spaniards. The Spanish fleet is destroyed in Manila, and Uncle Sam, seeing the wrecka...

    Judge magazine, although it was not a sensationalist publication, already at the beginning of the war published some images going with the flow, such as the cover illustrated by Grant Hamilton(1862 - 1926) on 9 July 1898 with the legend: "The Spanish brute adds mutilation to murder", related to the death of the sailors in the explosion of the Maine...

    Biblioteca Virtual dePrensa Histórica Arca, arxiu de revistes catalanes antigues Biblioteca del Congreso de Estados Unidos Cartoons of the Spanish-American War.Charles Lewis Bartholomew, 1869-1949 Los periódicos de Madrid en 1898,Concha Edo, UCM (PDF) 1898: Prensa y opinión pública en España y los Estados Unidos, Juan Jiménez Mancha , UCM Revista S...

    • Missy Sullivan
    • 3 min
    • Causes: Remember the Maine! The war originated in the Cuban struggle for independence from Spain, which began in February 1895. Spain’s brutally repressive measures to halt the rebellion were graphically portrayed for the U.S. public by several sensational newspapers engaging in yellow journalism, and American sympathy for the Cuban rebels rose.
    • War Is Declared. Spain announced an armistice on April 9 and speeded up its new program to grant Cuba limited powers of self-government. But the U.S. Congress soon afterward issued resolutions that declared Cuba’s right to independence, demanded the withdrawal of Spain’s armed forces from the island, and authorized the use of force by President William McKinley to secure that withdrawal while renouncing any U.S. design for annexing Cuba.
    • Spanish American War Begins. The ensuing war was pathetically one-sided, since Spain had readied neither its army nor its navy for a distant war with the formidable power of the United States.
    • Treaty of Paris. The Treaty of Paris ending the Spanish American War was signed on December 10, 1898. In it, Spain renounced all claim to Cuba, ceded Guam and Puerto Rico to the United States and transferred sovereignty over the Philippines to the United States for $20 million.
  4. Oct 4, 2006 · Cartoons of the Spanish-American War : Bartholomew, Charles Lewis, 1869-1949 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive. by. Bartholomew, Charles Lewis, 1869-1949. Publication date. 1899. Topics. Minneapolis Journal, Caricatures and cartoons -- United States, Spanish-American War, 1898 -- Caricatures and cartoons. Publisher.

  5. The timeline of events of the SpanishAmerican War covers major events leading up to, during, and concluding the SpanishAmerican War, a ten-week conflict in 1898 between Spain and the United States of America. The conflict had its roots in the worsening socio-economic and military position of Spain after the Peninsular War, the growing ...

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