You fill in the face!

In the 1870s, America’s foremost – and first – political cartoonist, Thomas Nast, attacked Boss Tweed with pen-and-ink. Tweed and his political cronies were draining New York to an extent that is staggering even today. It seems everyone in the Tweed ring got a piece of the pie. The New York County Courthouse eventually ended up twice what the United States government paid for Alaska. Proof of the corruption? A carpenter was paid $4.9 million for a month’s worth of work and a plasterer received $1,82 million for two days work. Tweed hated Nast because his constituents could not read but they could see “the damned pictures.” Nast, an immigrant, gave us a few lasting pictorial gifts: Santa Claus and the elephant as the symbol for the Republicans. (The donkey for the Democrats was a gift of Andrew Jackson.)  Nast cartoons are timeless as you can see from the posted picture. It is as appropriate today – and particularly with the tax bill in the Congress – as it was a century and a half ago. [See my books at https://authormasterminds.com/steve-levi.]

Steve Levi is an Alaskan writer who specializes in the Alaska Gold Rush (nonfiction) and the ‘impossible crime,’ (fiction.)  An ‘impossible crime’ is one where the detective must figure out HOW the crime was committed before going after the perpetrators – like a Greyhound bus with bank robbers and hostages disappearing off the Golden Gate Bridge –THE MATTER OF THE VANISHING GREYHOUND. Steve’s books can be found at www.authormasterminds.com/steve-levi

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