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Collection Reference Number GLC00493.01
From Archive Folder Confederate war etchings 
Title Worship of the North
Date ca. 1880-1890
Author Volck, Adalbert John (1828-1912)  
Document Type Artwork
Content Description Depicts Lincoln in front of an altar with a black idol sitting on a platform with the words "Chicago Platform" on it. A sheet hanging from the platform says "The end justifies the means." Shows a white person being sacrificed in front of it. Henry Ward Beecher is shown having just used the sacrificial knife, Charles Sumner bearing a torch, Horace Greeley swinging a censer that emits snakes, and General Benjamin Butler (Volck had a special enmity for Butler after he occupied Baltimore, Volck's hometown, in early 1861) kneeling in worship with a knapsack full of stolen money. Also shows General Henry Halleck, General Winfield Scott, General David Hunter, Governor John Andrews of Massachusetts, and Harriet Beecher Stowe looking on. Also has an idol statue of John Brown with a pike in the background. The altar has the words puritanism, atheism, rationalism, witch burning, socialism, spirit trapping, free love, and negro worship etched into its bricks. The words "Ego" are etched at the top of the image inside two shining suns, in a reference to Lincoln's inflated feeling of pride in his superiority over the South. Size in extent is for the mount. The actual size of the etching is 20.5 x 26.5 cm.
Subjects African American History  Slavery  Religion  Puritan  Art, Music, Theater, and Film  President  Politics  Election  Slavery  Abolition  Finance  Corruption and Scandal  Union Forces  Union General  Women's History  John Brown  Religion  Propaganda  
People Volck, Adalbert John (1828-1912)  Stowe, Harriet Beecher (1811-1896)  
Place written s.l.
Theme Government & Politics; Slavery & Abolition; The American Civil War; African Americans
Sub-collection Papers and Images of the American Civil War
Additional Information Adalbert John Volck was a dentist, political cartoonist, and a caricaturist who sympathized with the Southern cause. During the Civil War, Volck supported the Confederacy through his satirical political cartoons. He also smuggled drugs and medical supplies for the Confederate army, and served as a personal courier to President Jefferson Davis.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945