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Uncle Sam

Uncle Sam (which has the same initials as United States) is a common national personification of the federal government of the United States or the country in general. Since the early 19th century, Uncle Sam has been a popular symbol of the U.S. government in American culture and a manifestation of patriotic emotion.[3] Uncle Sam has also developed notoriety for his appearance in military propaganda, popularized by a famous 1917 World War I recruiting poster by J.M. Flagg.[4]

J. M. Flagg's 1917 poster was based on the original British Lord Kitchener poster of three years earlier. It was used to recruit soldiers for both World War I and World War II into the US Army. Flagg used a modified version of his own face for Uncle Sam,[1] and veteran Walter Botts provided the pose.[2]

According to legend, the character came into use during the War of 1812 and may have been named for Samuel Wilson. The actual origin is obscure.[5] The first reference to Uncle Sam in formal literature (as distinct from newspapers) was in the 1816 allegorical book The Adventures of Uncle Sam, in Search After His Lost Honor by Frederick Augustus Fidfaddy, Esq.[6]

While the figure of Uncle Sam specifically represents the government, the female figure of Columbia represents the United States as a nation. An archaic character, Brother Jonathan, was known to represent the American populace.

Earlier personifications

 
Columbia, a female personification of America, by American illustrator Paul Stahr

The earliest known personification of the United States was as a woman named Columbia, who first appeared in 1738 (pre-US) and sometimes was associated with another female personification, Lady Liberty.

With the American Revolutionary War of 1775 came Brother Jonathan, a male personification.

Uncle Sam finally appeared after the War of 1812.[7] Columbia appeared with either Brother Jonathan or Uncle Sam, but her use declined as a national person in favor of Liberty, and she was effectively abandoned once she became the mascot of Columbia Pictures in the 1920s.

A March 24, 1810, journal entry by Isaac Mayo (a midshipman in the US Navy) states:

weighed anchor stood down the harbor, passed Sandy Hook, where there are two light-houses, and put to sea, first and the second day out most deadly seasick, oh could I have got onshore in the hight [sic] of it, I swear that uncle Sam, as they call him, would certainly forever have lost the services of at least one sailor.[8]

Evolution

 
Samuel Wilson Memorial in Arlington, Massachusetts
 
Photograph of Samuel Wilson of Troy, New York
 
Uncle Sam and Columbia in an 1869 cartoon by Thomas Nast
 
Uncle Sam often personified the United States in political cartoons, such as this one in 1897 about the U.S. annexation of Hawaii.
 
Uncle Sam taking the lead in cutting up China in J. S. Pughe's cartoon (Puck magazine, August 23, 1899)
 
Poster by the United States Fuel Administration during World War One: "Uncle Sam needs that extra shovelful"

An 1810 edition of Niles' Weekly Register has a footnote defining Uncle Sam as "a cant term in the army for the United States."[9] Presumably, it came from the abbreviation of the United States: U.S.

Samuel Wilson legend

The precise origin of the Uncle Sam character is unclear, but a popular legend is that the name "Uncle Sam" was derived from Samuel Wilson, a meatpacker from Troy, New York, who supplied rations for American soldiers during the War of 1812. There was a requirement at the time for contractors to stamp their name and where the rations came from onto the food they were sending. Wilson's packages were labeled "E.A.—U.S." When someone asked what that stood for, a co-worker jokingly said, "Elbert Anderson [the contractor] and Uncle Sam," referring to Wilson, though the U.S. actually stood for "United States".[10]

Doubts have been raised as to the authenticity of this story, as the claim did not appear in print until 1842.[11] Additionally, the earliest known mention definitely referring to the metaphorical Uncle Sam is from 1810, predating Wilson's contract with the government.[8]

Development of the character

In 1835, Brother Jonathan made a reference to Uncle Sam, implying that they symbolized different things: Brother Jonathan was the country itself, while Uncle Sam was the government and its power.[12]

A clockmaker in an 1849 comedic novel explains "we call...the American public Uncle Sam, as you call the British John Bull."[13]

By the 1850s, the names Brother Jonathan and Uncle Sam were being used nearly interchangeably, to the point that images of what had previously been called "Brother Jonathan" were being called "Uncle Sam". Similarly, the appearance of both personifications varied wildly. For example, one depiction of Uncle Sam in 1860 showed him looking like Benjamin Franklin,[14] while a contemporaneous depiction of Brother Jonathan[15] looks more like the modern version of Uncle Sam, though without a goatee.

An 1893 article in The Lutheran Witness claims Uncle Sam was simply another name for Brother Jonathan:

When we meet him in politics we call him Uncle Sam; when we meet him in society we call him Brother Jonathan. Here of late Uncle Sam alias Brother Jonathan has been doing a powerful lot of complaining, hardly doing anything else. [sic][16]

Uncle Sam did not get a standard appearance, even with the effective abandonment of Brother Jonathan near the end of the American Civil War, until the well-known recruitment image of Uncle Sam was first created by James Montgomery Flagg during World War I. The image was inspired by a British recruitment poster showing Lord Kitchener in a similar pose.[citation needed] It is this image more than any other that has influenced the modern appearance of Uncle Sam: an elderly white man with white hair and a goatee, wearing a white top hat with white stars on a blue band, a blue tail coat, and red-and-white-striped trousers.

Flagg's depiction of Uncle Sam was shown publicly for the first time, according to some, on the cover of the magazine Leslie's Weekly on July 6, 1916, with the caption "What Are You Doing for Preparedness?"[1][17] More than four million copies of this image were printed between 1917 and 1918. Flagg's image was also used extensively during World War II, during which the US was codenamed "Samland" by the German intelligence agency Abwehr.[18] The term was central in the song "The Yankee Doodle Boy", which was featured in 1942 in the musical Yankee Doodle Dandy.

There are two memorials to Uncle Sam, both of which commemorate the life of Samuel Wilson: the Uncle Sam Memorial Statue in Arlington, Massachusetts, his birthplace; and a memorial near his long-term residence in Riverfront Park, Troy, New York. Wilson's boyhood home can still be visited in Mason, New Hampshire. Samuel Wilson died on July 31, 1854, aged 87, and is buried in Oakwood Cemetery, Troy, New York.

In 1976, Uncle Sam was depicted in "Our Nation's 200th Birthday, The Telephone's 100th Birthday" by Stanley Meltzoff for Bell System.[19]

In 1989, "Uncle Sam Day" became official. A Congressional joint resolution[20] designated September 13, 1989, as "Uncle Sam Day", the birthday of Samuel Wilson. In 2015, the family history company MyHeritage researched Uncle Sam's family tree and claims to have tracked down his living relatives.[21][22]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "The Most Famous Poster". American Treasures of the Library of Congress. from the original on July 2, 2016.
  2. ^ "Walter Botts, the Man Who Modeled Uncle Sam's Pose for J.M. Flagg's Famous Poster". from the original on November 19, 2017. Retrieved February 21, 2018.
  3. ^ Terry Allan Hicks (2006). Uncle Sam. Marshall Cavendish 2006, 40 pages. p. 9. ISBN 978-0761421375. from the original on August 14, 2021. Retrieved August 1, 2015.
  4. ^ "What's the deal with Uncle Sam?". from the original on January 21, 2022. Retrieved September 27, 2020.
  5. ^ Schauffler, Robert Haven (1912). Flag day; its history. New York : Moffat, Yard and Co. p. 145.
  6. ^ pp. 40–41 of Albert Matthews, "Uncle Sam". Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society, v.19, 1908. pp. 21–65. Google Books October 3, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ "Uncle Sam". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. from the original on January 20, 2013. Retrieved June 9, 2012.
  8. ^ a b Zimmer, Ben (July 4, 2013). "New Light on "Uncle Sam" referencing work at USS Constitution Museum in Charlestown, Mass". from the original on July 3, 2015. Retrieved July 2, 2015.
  9. ^ Niles' Weekly Register. Vol. 7. Franklin Press, Baltimore. 1815. p. 187.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  10. ^ Wyandott Herald, Kansas City, August 17, 1882, p. 2
  11. ^ Matthews, Albert (1908). "Uncle Sam". Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society, Volume 19. from the original on October 3, 2015. Retrieved July 2, 2015.
  12. ^ Morgan, Winifred (1988). An American icon: Brother Jonathan and American identity. University of Delaware Press. pg. 81.
  13. ^ Haliburton, Thomas Chandler (1839). The Clockmaker, Or the Sayings and Doings of Sam. Slick of Slickville: To which is Added, the Bubbles of Canada, by the Same Author. Baudry. p. 20.
  14. ^ An appearance echoed in Harper's Weekly, June 3, 1865 "Checkmate" political cartoon (Morgan, Winifred (1988) An American icon: Brother Jonathan and American identity University of Delaware Press pg 95)
  15. ^ On page 32 of the January 11, 1862, edition Harper's Weekly.
  16. ^ December 7, 1893 "A Bit of Advice" The Lutheran Witness he pg 100
  17. ^ . Life's Little Mysteries. Live Science. Archived from the original on December 3, 2008. Retrieved February 16, 2012.
  18. ^ Macintyre, Ben. Operation Mincemeat, p. 57. ISBN 978-1-4088-0921-1
  19. ^ "Stanley Meltzoff Archives: The 1976 Bell System Telephone Book Cover" August 13, 2021, at the Wayback Machine JKL Museum of Telephony (December 19, 2015); retrieved March 16, 2021
  20. ^ "Bill Summary & Status – 100th Congress (1987–1988) – H.J.RES.626 – All Congressional Actions – THOMAS (Library of Congress)". loc.gov. from the original on July 5, 2016. Retrieved September 13, 2013.
  21. ^ "New York Butcher is Named as Real Live Uncle Sam". The New York Times. July 3, 2015. from the original on July 8, 2015. Retrieved July 3, 2015.
  22. ^ "The History Behind Uncle Sam's Family Tree". Fox News. July 3, 2015. from the original on March 10, 2021. Retrieved July 3, 2015.

Further reading

  • Bivins, Thomas H. "The body politic: the changing shape of Uncle Sam." Journalism Quarterly 64.1 (1987): 13-20.
  • Dewey, Donald. The art of ill will: The story of American political cartoons (NYU Press, 2007). online
  • Gerson, Thomas I. The Story of Uncle Sam: Godfather of America (March 1959) West Sand Lake, NY: "Uncle Sam" Enterprises, Inc.
  • Mouraux, Cecile, and Jean-Pierre Mouraux. Who Was "Uncle Sam": Illustrated Story of the Life of Our National Symbol. Sonoma, CA: Poster Collector (2006). OCLC 70129530
  • Jacques, George W. The Life and Times of Uncle Sam (2007). Troy, NY: IBT Global. ISBN 978-1933994178.
  • Palczewski, Catherine H. "The male Madonna and the feminine Uncle Sam: Visual argument, icons, and ideographs in 1909 anti-woman suffrage postcards." Quarterly Journal of Speech 91.4 (2005): 365-394. online[dead link]
  • Wilde, Lukas RA, and Shane Denson. "Historicizing and Theorizing Pre-Narrative Figures—Who is Uncle Sam?." Narrative 30.2 (2022): 152-168. online
  • A collection of reviews of the book "Who Was Uncle Sam" by Jean-Pierre and Cecile Moreaux.

External links

  • Uncle Sam: The man and the meme by Natalie Elder (National Museum of American History)
  • Historical Uncle Sam pictures
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived October 28, 2004)
  • What's the origin of Uncle Sam? The Straight Dope
  • Uncle Sam online, links to 550 books

uncle, this, article, about, national, personification, united, states, federal, government, comic, book, adaptation, comics, other, uses, disambiguation, which, same, initials, united, states, common, national, personification, federal, government, united, st. This article is about the national personification of the United States federal government For its comic book adaptation see Uncle Sam comics For other uses see Uncle Sam disambiguation Uncle Sam which has the same initials as United States is a common national personification of the federal government of the United States or the country in general Since the early 19th century Uncle Sam has been a popular symbol of the U S government in American culture and a manifestation of patriotic emotion 3 Uncle Sam has also developed notoriety for his appearance in military propaganda popularized by a famous 1917 World War I recruiting poster by J M Flagg 4 J M Flagg s 1917 poster was based on the original British Lord Kitchener poster of three years earlier It was used to recruit soldiers for both World War I and World War II into the US Army Flagg used a modified version of his own face for Uncle Sam 1 and veteran Walter Botts provided the pose 2 According to legend the character came into use during the War of 1812 and may have been named for Samuel Wilson The actual origin is obscure 5 The first reference to Uncle Sam in formal literature as distinct from newspapers was in the 1816 allegorical book The Adventures of Uncle Sam in Search After His Lost Honor by Frederick Augustus Fidfaddy Esq 6 While the figure of Uncle Sam specifically represents the government the female figure of Columbia represents the United States as a nation An archaic character Brother Jonathan was known to represent the American populace Contents 1 Earlier personifications 2 Evolution 2 1 Samuel Wilson legend 2 2 Development of the character 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksEarlier personifications Edit Columbia a female personification of America by American illustrator Paul Stahr The earliest known personification of the United States was as a woman named Columbia who first appeared in 1738 pre US and sometimes was associated with another female personification Lady Liberty With the American Revolutionary War of 1775 came Brother Jonathan a male personification Uncle Sam finally appeared after the War of 1812 7 Columbia appeared with either Brother Jonathan or Uncle Sam but her use declined as a national person in favor of Liberty and she was effectively abandoned once she became the mascot of Columbia Pictures in the 1920s A March 24 1810 journal entry by Isaac Mayo a midshipman in the US Navy states weighed anchor stood down the harbor passed Sandy Hook where there are two light houses and put to sea first and the second day out most deadly seasick oh could I have got onshore in the hight sic of it I swear that uncle Sam as they call him would certainly forever have lost the services of at least one sailor 8 Evolution Edit Samuel Wilson Memorial in Arlington Massachusetts Photograph of Samuel Wilson of Troy New York Uncle Sam and Columbia in an 1869 cartoon by Thomas Nast Uncle Sam often personified the United States in political cartoons such as this one in 1897 about the U S annexation of Hawaii Uncle Sam taking the lead in cutting up China in J S Pughe s cartoon Puck magazine August 23 1899 Poster by the United States Fuel Administration during World War One Uncle Sam needs that extra shovelful An 1810 edition of Niles Weekly Register has a footnote defining Uncle Sam as a cant term in the army for the United States 9 Presumably it came from the abbreviation of the United States U S Samuel Wilson legend Edit The precise origin of the Uncle Sam character is unclear but a popular legend is that the name Uncle Sam was derived from Samuel Wilson a meatpacker from Troy New York who supplied rations for American soldiers during the War of 1812 There was a requirement at the time for contractors to stamp their name and where the rations came from onto the food they were sending Wilson s packages were labeled E A U S When someone asked what that stood for a co worker jokingly said Elbert Anderson the contractor and Uncle Sam referring to Wilson though the U S actually stood for United States 10 Doubts have been raised as to the authenticity of this story as the claim did not appear in print until 1842 11 Additionally the earliest known mention definitely referring to the metaphorical Uncle Sam is from 1810 predating Wilson s contract with the government 8 Development of the character Edit In 1835 Brother Jonathan made a reference to Uncle Sam implying that they symbolized different things Brother Jonathan was the country itself while Uncle Sam was the government and its power 12 A clockmaker in an 1849 comedic novel explains we call the American public Uncle Sam as you call the British John Bull 13 By the 1850s the names Brother Jonathan and Uncle Sam were being used nearly interchangeably to the point that images of what had previously been called Brother Jonathan were being called Uncle Sam Similarly the appearance of both personifications varied wildly For example one depiction of Uncle Sam in 1860 showed him looking like Benjamin Franklin 14 while a contemporaneous depiction of Brother Jonathan 15 looks more like the modern version of Uncle Sam though without a goatee An 1893 article in The Lutheran Witness claims Uncle Sam was simply another name for Brother Jonathan When we meet him in politics we call him Uncle Sam when we meet him in society we call him Brother Jonathan Here of late Uncle Sam alias Brother Jonathan has been doing a powerful lot of complaining hardly doing anything else sic 16 Uncle Sam did not get a standard appearance even with the effective abandonment of Brother Jonathan near the end of the American Civil War until the well known recruitment image of Uncle Sam was first created by James Montgomery Flagg during World War I The image was inspired by a British recruitment poster showing Lord Kitchener in a similar pose citation needed It is this image more than any other that has influenced the modern appearance of Uncle Sam an elderly white man with white hair and a goatee wearing a white top hat with white stars on a blue band a blue tail coat and red and white striped trousers Flagg s depiction of Uncle Sam was shown publicly for the first time according to some on the cover of the magazine Leslie s Weekly on July 6 1916 with the caption What Are You Doing for Preparedness 1 17 More than four million copies of this image were printed between 1917 and 1918 Flagg s image was also used extensively during World War II during which the US was codenamed Samland by the German intelligence agency Abwehr 18 The term was central in the song The Yankee Doodle Boy which was featured in 1942 in the musical Yankee Doodle Dandy There are two memorials to Uncle Sam both of which commemorate the life of Samuel Wilson the Uncle Sam Memorial Statue in Arlington Massachusetts his birthplace and a memorial near his long term residence in Riverfront Park Troy New York Wilson s boyhood home can still be visited in Mason New Hampshire Samuel Wilson died on July 31 1854 aged 87 and is buried in Oakwood Cemetery Troy New York In 1976 Uncle Sam was depicted in Our Nation s 200th Birthday The Telephone s 100th Birthday by Stanley Meltzoff for Bell System 19 In 1989 Uncle Sam Day became official A Congressional joint resolution 20 designated September 13 1989 as Uncle Sam Day the birthday of Samuel Wilson In 2015 the family history company MyHeritage researched Uncle Sam s family tree and claims to have tracked down his living relatives 21 22 See also EditUncle Sam billboard Personification of the Americas Propaganda in the United StatesReferences Edit a b The Most Famous Poster American Treasures of the Library of Congress Archived from the original on July 2 2016 Walter Botts the Man Who Modeled Uncle Sam s Pose for J M Flagg s Famous Poster Archived from the original on November 19 2017 Retrieved February 21 2018 Terry Allan Hicks 2006 Uncle Sam Marshall Cavendish 2006 40 pages p 9 ISBN 978 0761421375 Archived from the original on August 14 2021 Retrieved August 1 2015 What s the deal with Uncle Sam Archived from the original on January 21 2022 Retrieved September 27 2020 Schauffler Robert Haven 1912 Flag day its history New York Moffat Yard and Co p 145 pp 40 41 of Albert Matthews Uncle Sam Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society v 19 1908 pp 21 65 Google Books Archived October 3 2015 at the Wayback Machine Uncle Sam Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Archived from the original on January 20 2013 Retrieved June 9 2012 a b Zimmer Ben July 4 2013 New Light on Uncle Sam referencing work at USS Constitution Museum in Charlestown Mass Archived from the original on July 3 2015 Retrieved July 2 2015 Niles Weekly Register Vol 7 Franklin Press Baltimore 1815 p 187 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Wyandott Herald Kansas City August 17 1882 p 2 Matthews Albert 1908 Uncle Sam Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society Volume 19 Archived from the original on October 3 2015 Retrieved July 2 2015 Morgan Winifred 1988 An American icon Brother Jonathan and American identity University of Delaware Press pg 81 Haliburton Thomas Chandler 1839 The Clockmaker Or the Sayings and Doings of Sam Slick of Slickville To which is Added the Bubbles of Canada by the Same Author Baudry p 20 An appearance echoed in Harper s Weekly June 3 1865 Checkmate political cartoon Morgan Winifred 1988 An American icon Brother Jonathan and American identity University of Delaware Press pg 95 On page 32 of the January 11 1862 edition Harper s Weekly December 7 1893 A Bit of Advice The Lutheran Witness he pg 100 Who Created Uncle Sam Life s Little Mysteries Live Science Archived from the original on December 3 2008 Retrieved February 16 2012 Macintyre Ben Operation Mincemeat p 57 ISBN 978 1 4088 0921 1 Stanley Meltzoff Archives The 1976 Bell System Telephone Book Cover Archived August 13 2021 at the Wayback Machine JKL Museum of Telephony December 19 2015 retrieved March 16 2021 Bill Summary amp Status 100th Congress 1987 1988 H J RES 626 All Congressional Actions THOMAS Library of Congress loc gov Archived from the original on July 5 2016 Retrieved September 13 2013 New York Butcher is Named as Real Live Uncle Sam The New York Times July 3 2015 Archived from the original on July 8 2015 Retrieved July 3 2015 The History Behind Uncle Sam s Family Tree Fox News July 3 2015 Archived from the original on March 10 2021 Retrieved July 3 2015 Further reading EditBivins Thomas H The body politic the changing shape of Uncle Sam Journalism Quarterly 64 1 1987 13 20 Dewey Donald The art of ill will The story of American political cartoons NYU Press 2007 onlineGerson Thomas I The Story of Uncle Sam Godfather of America March 1959 West Sand Lake NY Uncle Sam Enterprises Inc Mouraux Cecile and Jean Pierre Mouraux Who Was Uncle Sam Illustrated Story of the Life of Our National Symbol Sonoma CA Poster Collector 2006 OCLC 70129530 Jacques George W The Life and Times of Uncle Sam 2007 Troy NY IBT Global ISBN 978 1933994178 Palczewski Catherine H The male Madonna and the feminine Uncle Sam Visual argument icons and ideographs in 1909 anti woman suffrage postcards Quarterly Journal of Speech 91 4 2005 365 394 online dead link Wilde Lukas RA and Shane Denson Historicizing and Theorizing Pre Narrative Figures Who is Uncle Sam Narrative 30 2 2022 152 168 onlineA collection of reviews of the book Who Was Uncle Sam by Jean Pierre and Cecile Moreaux External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Uncle Sam Look up Uncle Sam in Wiktionary the free dictionary Uncle Sam The man and the meme by Natalie Elder National Museum of American History Historical Uncle Sam pictures James Montgomery Flagg s 1917 I Want You Poster and other works at the Wayback Machine archived October 28 2004 What s the origin of Uncle Sam The Straight Dope Uncle Sam online links to 550 books Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Uncle Sam amp oldid 1142039477, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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