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A., 1857-1924"},{"label":"Scale","value":"Not drawn to scale"},{"label":"Place of Publication","value":"Denver (Colo.)"},{"label":"Publisher","value":"publisher not identified"},{"label":"Date of Publication","value":"1896"},{"label":"Extent","value":"1 map : color"},{"label":"Dimensions","value":"21 x 27 cm"},{"label":"Notes","value":["In this political cartoon, a map of the United States takes the form of a very well-fed dog gnawing on a bone bearing the word, \"election.\" The states from the southern borders of Ohio and Maryland to Maine are depicted as \"gold states,\" and the rest of the country (excluding four Midwestern states) consists of \"silver states.\" The Panic of 1893 had left the U.S. in a recession that persisted in 1896, and Democratic candidate William Jennings Bryan argued that the country could extract itself from this quagmire by abandoning the gold standard and backing paper money with silver. Republican William McKinley, with the support of the nation's largest companies--which were located principally in the Northeast--maintained that this course of action would cheat lenders of an honest return on their money.","\"All rights reserved, M.A. Root ... Denver, Colo.\"","Includes 3 statistical tables and other data regarding the wealth of silver and gold states. "]},{"label":"Language","value":"English"},{"label":"Subject","value":["Presidents","Election","Political campaigns","History","19th century","Silver question","Gold standard","Satirical maps. "]},{"label":"Genre","value":"Maps"},{"label":"Rights","value":"No Copyright - United States"},{"label":"Type","value":"Cartographic material"},{"label":"Repository","value":"Map Library"},{"label":"Local Bib ID","value":"99902983112205899"},{"label":"Collection Title","value":"American Empire Maps"}],"description":"In this political cartoon, a map of the United States takes the form of a very well-fed dog gnawing on a bone bearing the word, \"election.\" The states from the southern borders of Ohio and Maryland to Maine are depicted as \"gold states,\" and the rest of the country (excluding four Midwestern states) consists of \"silver states.\" The Panic of 1893 had left the U.S. in a recession that persisted in 1896, and Democratic candidate William Jennings Bryan argued that the country could extract itself from this quagmire by abandoning the gold standard and backing paper money with silver. Republican William McKinley, with the support of the nation's largest companies--which were located principally in the Northeast--maintained that this course of action would cheat lenders of an honest return on their money.","thumbnail":{"@id":"https://images.digital.library.illinois.edu/iiif/2/ee310a30-3d7b-013d-4df4-02d0d7bfd6e4-1/full/!256,256/0/default.jpg","service":{"@context":"http://iiif.io/api/image/2/context.json","@id":"https://images.digital.library.illinois.edu/iiif/2/ee310a30-3d7b-013d-4df4-02d0d7bfd6e4-1","profile":"http://iiif.io/api/image/2/level2.json"}},"service":[{"@context":"http://iiif.io/api/image/2/context.json","@id":"https://images.digital.library.illinois.edu/iiif/2/ee310a30-3d7b-013d-4df4-02d0d7bfd6e4-1","profile":"http://iiif.io/api/image/2/level2.json"}],"logo":"https://digital.library.illinois.edu/assets/Illinois-Logo-Reversed-Orange-RGB-100-4dc138603db54952c91732afd189efd828ba543796a2ab0f9a81afcf2b308b27.png","related":{"@id":"https://digital.library.illinois.edu/items/932ec590-3d7b-013d-4df4-02d0d7bfd6e4-c","format":"text/html"},"seeAlso":[{"@id":"https://digital.library.illinois.edu/items/932ec590-3d7b-013d-4df4-02d0d7bfd6e4-c.json","format":"application/json"},{"@id":"https://digital.library.illinois.edu/items/932ec590-3d7b-013d-4df4-02d0d7bfd6e4-c.atom","format":"application/atom+xml"}],"viewingDirection":"left-to-right","viewingHint":"individuals","navDate":"1896-01-01T06:00:00Z","license":"https://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/","attribution":"No Copyright - United States","within":{"@id":"https://digital.library.illinois.edu/collections/1c2af700-80db-013c-4aaa-02d0d7bfd6e4-b/iiif","format":"application/json"},"sequences":[{"@id":"https://digital.library.illinois.edu/items/932ec590-3d7b-013d-4df4-02d0d7bfd6e4-c/sequence/item","@type":"sc:Sequence","label":"The silver dog with the golden tail : will the tail wag the dog, or the dog wag the tail?","canvases":[{"@id":"https://digital.library.illinois.edu/items/932ec590-3d7b-013d-4df4-02d0d7bfd6e4-c/canvas/canvas1","@type":"sc:Canvas","label":"The silver dog with the golden tail : will the tail wag the dog, or the dog wag the tail?","height":4000,"width":5124,"metadata":[{"label":"Title","value":"The silver dog with the golden tail : will the tail wag the dog, or the dog wag the tail?"},{"label":"Creator","value":"Root, M. 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Republican William McKinley, with the support of the nation's largest companies--which were located principally in the Northeast--maintained that this course of action would cheat lenders of an honest return on their money.","\"All rights reserved, M.A. Root ... Denver, Colo.\"","Includes 3 statistical tables and other data regarding the wealth of silver and gold states. "]},{"label":"Language","value":"English"},{"label":"Subject","value":["Presidents","Election","Political campaigns","History","19th century","Silver question","Gold standard","Satirical maps. 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