Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Birth of the Elephant and the Donkey:


Oddly, two unconnected events led to the birth of the Republican Elephant.


James Gordon Bennett's New York Herald raised the cry of "Caesarism" in connection with the possibility of a third term try from President Ulysses S. Grant. The issue was taken up by the Democratic politicians in 1874, halfway thru Grant's second term and just before the mid-term elections, and helped disaffect Republican voters. While the illustrated journals were depicting Grant as wearing a crown ,the Herald involved itself in another circulation-builder in an entirely different, non-political area.


This was the Central Park Menagerie Scare of 1874, a delightful hoax perpetrated by the Herald. They ran a story, totally untrue, that the animals in the zoo had broken loose and were roaming the wilds of New York's Central Park in search of prey.Cartoonist Thomas Nast took the two examples of the Herald enterprise and put them together in a cartoon for Harper's Weekly. He showed an ass (symbolizing the Herald) wearing a lion's skin(the scary prospect of Caesarism) frightening away the animals in the forest (Central Park). The caption quoted a familiar fable:"An ass having put on a lion's skin, roamed about in the forest and amused himself by frightening all the foolish animals he met within his wanderings". One of the foolish animals in the cartoon was an elephant, representing the Republican vote, not the party, the Republican vote - which was being frightened away from it's normalties by the phony scare of Caesarism.


In a subsequent cartoon on November 21st, 1874 after the election in which the Republicans did badly, Nast followed up the idea by showing the elephant in a trap,illustrating the way the Republican vote had been decoyed from it's normal allegiance.Other cartoonists picked up the symbol, and the elephant soon ceased to be the vote and became the party itself: the jackass, now referred to as the donkey, made a natural transition from representing the Herald to representing the Democratic party that had frightened the elephant.