TABLE OF CONTENTS
Descriptive Summary of the Collection
Administrative Information
Biography of Harold R. Heaton
Scope and Content of the Collection
Arrangement
Selected Search Terms
Container List
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The Newberry Library Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special
Collections 60 West Walton Street Chicago, Illinois 60610-7324 USA Phone: 312-255-3506 Fax: 312-255-3646 E-Mail: specialcolls@newberry.org URL: http://www.newberry.org
Machine-readable finding aid encoded by
Lisa Janssen,
2004.
©2004.
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| Creator |
Heaton, Harold
R.
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| Title |
Harold R. Heaton
Political Cartoons
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| Dates |
1909-ca.1913 |
| Extent |
2 cubic ft. (3 flat
boxes)
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| Abstract |
Sixty original political
and editorial cartoons by Harold R. Heaton for the Chicago newspaper
Inter-Ocean, drawn between 1909 and circa 1913.
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| Language |
Materials are in
English.
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| Repository |
Newberry Library, Roger and Julie Baskes Department
of Special Collections
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| Collection Call Number |
Midwest MS Heaton |
| Collection Stack Location |
3a 39 3 |
Harold R. Heaton Political Cartoons, Midwest Manuscript Collection,
The Newberry Library, Chicago.
Gift of Joel and Patricia Dryer, 2002
Virginia H. Smith
Access
The Harold R. Heaton Political Cartoons are open for research in the
Special Collections Reading Room; 5 folders at a time maximum (Priority
II).
Ownership and Literary Rights
The Harold R. Heaton Political Cartoons are the physical property of
the Newberry Library. Copyright may belong to the authors or their legal heirs
or assigns. For permission to publish or reproduce any materials from this
collection, contact the Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special
Collections.
Return to the Table of Contents
Little is known about the life of Harold R. Heaton, except that he was
a newspaper cartoonist of some skill, an actor, and a failed playwright.
Called "a forgotten cartoonist" in a short article in the
Chicago Daily Tribune on October 8, 1942, Heaton
joined the Tribune staff an illustrator in about 1885, gradually rising to the
position of front-page cartoonist, signing himself as "H.R.H." By 1892 his
drawings were a popular feature of the Sunday edition and in 1893 he produced
weekly commentaries on the World's Columbian Exposition. In 1897 Anderson's Art
Galleries in Chicago mounted an exhibition of Heaton's work which included 190
Tribune illustrations and cartoons and 19
watercolors of his travels abroad.
Despite his success as an artist, in 1899 Heaton quit the
Tribune and joined the theatrical company of
William Gillette, appearing in productions of Sherlock
Holmes and then several other dramas. In 1906 he wrote a play called
Lady Jim, but apparently he wasn't very successful
as a playwright or an actor for in 1908 he returned to his artistic career as a
political and editorial cartoonist for the Tribune's
arch competitor, the Inter-Ocean.
Now signing his pictures "Harold Heaton" and appearing daily on the
front page beginning in mid-1908, at first Heaton' subject matter consisted
mainly of state and national politics or commentaries on international topics.
However, by the end of 1909 he had narrowed his scope to concentrate on
lampooning Chicago Mayor Fred Busse and his cohorts and appointees, and State's
Attorney John E. Wayman. By 1913, Heaton's cartoons were no longer featured on
the Inter-Ocean's front page, but on inside pages
he continued to express opinions on issues of the day, with such topics as
prison reform, the activities of Teddy Roosevelt or unrest in Ireland.
When the Inter-Ocean folded in 1914,
Heaton apparently returned to a theatrical life, for he acted on Broadway
between 1920 and 1932, starting with "The Guest of
Honor" and finishing with The Boy Friend in
1932. He died about 1940, although it is not known exactly when or where.
Return to the Table of Contents
Sixty original cartoons, each measuring approximately 13 x 14 inches,
produced for the Chicago newspaper the Inter-Ocean
between 1909 and about 1913. Twenty of these are dated; possibly some were
never published. The drawings primarily are commentaries on Chicago politics of
this period, and depict such figures as Chicago Mayor Fred Busse, "Shale Rock
Judge" A.C. Barnes, William Lorimer, Charles E. Merriam, and State's Attorney
John E. Wayman. Chicago, during Fred Busse's administration (1909-1912),
endured a number of scandals involving graft and corrupt political payoffs to
businesses Busse was connected to, such as the "Shale Rock Scandal," the
"Cummings Foundry Affair," and the Chicago Fire Appliance Company outrage.
Also, Heaton produced strong and often humorous comments on the so-called
"Lorimer Case," which concerned the bribery scandal surrounding the appointment
of Illinois Senator William Lorimer.
Return to the Table of Contents
The cartoons are arranged alphabetically by the artist's titles.
Return to the Table of Contents
The following terms have been used to index the description of this
collection in the Newberry Library's public catalog. Researchers desiring
additional materials on a particular topic should search the catalog using
these headings.
Names
- Barnes, A.C. -
Caricatures and cartoons
- Busse, Fred A., 1886-1914
- Caricatures and cartoons
- Heaton, Harold
R.
- Inter ocean (Chicago,
Ill. : 1902) - Caricatures and cartoons
- Lorimer, William,
1861-1934 - Caricatures and cartoons
- Merriam, Charles Edward,
1874-1953 - Caricatures and cartoons
- Wayman, John E. -
Caricatures and cartoons
Subjects
- Cartoonists - Illinois -
Chicago
- Chicago (Ill.) - Politics
and government - To 1950 - Caricatures and cartoons
- Mayors - Illinois -
Chicago - Caricatures and cartoons
- Pen drawing, American -
Illinois - Chicago
- Political
cartoons
- Political corruption -
Illinois - Chicago - Caricatures and cartoons
- Politicians - Illinois -
Chicago
Return to the Table of Contents
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| Box |
Folder |
Contents |
| 1 |
1 |
"Activity in Police Circles" (Police Chief Steward as a
puppet)
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| 1 |
2 |
Afraid to Look (Christmas stocking possibly holding more
graft news), Dec. 26, 1909
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| 1 |
3 |
"And the Jury Said: 'We Do!' " (Commentary on the Erbstein
case)
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| 1 |
4 |
"Another Hold Up!" (Mayor Busse demanding new, huge bond
issue from the Chicago tax payer)
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| 1 |
5 |
Bouncing Bartzen" (Bartzen vs. McCormick on a seesaw
called "The County Board
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| 1 |
6 |
"A Business Necessity" (Mayor Busse and his coal company
pushing F. W. Blocki for County Board of Review)
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| 1 |
7 |
The Busse Administration's First Defense of the Public
Treasury (Mayor Busse et al. on the Battlements built by Shale Rock, Coal Ring,
Cummings Foundry, fighting the Merriam Commission), Jan. 24, 1910
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| 1 |
8 |
["But we know you..."], a line from a verse which begins:
"Come to me, Charley E...." Drawing is untitled. (The Busse gang dances around
Charles E. Merriam)
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| 1 |
9 |
By Decree of the Court (Judge Barnes finds Busse cohort
Redieske innocent), July 16, 1910
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| 1 |
10 |
"Chicago's Latest Vice Crusade" (Grand Jury pushing past
State's Attorney J.E. Wayman
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| 1 |
11 |
"Cornelia Tribune Before the Senate Committee" (The
Tribune shows off her paid sources)
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| 1 |
12 |
The Difference (City Hall and Mayor Busse about to explode
from scandals), Sept. 21, 1910
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| 1 |
13 |
"The Eighteenth Annual Report "(Voters League looking
closely at the Chicago City Council)
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| 1 |
14 |
Exit! (Direct plurality primary law [a cat] being drowned
by the Illinois Supreme Court), June 18, 1909
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| 1 |
15 |
"A Fair Field for the Merriam Investigating Committee"
(Report of the City comptroller for 1908 depicted as a huge construction "the
most expensive year in the history of Chicago")
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| 1 |
16 |
Follow It Up! (Grand Juries seeking indictments for Shale
Rock and Cummings Foundry scandals), Feb. 7, 1910
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| 1 |
17 |
"For the Uplift of the Home - " (Illinois Commercial
Federation works for better civic conditions)
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| 1 |
18 |
The Gentleman from Illinois Arrives (Senator Lorimer
hustled by Washington's demands), June 16, 1909
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| 1 |
19 |
The Gentleman from New York (Taking a look at the Busse
administration, John T. Fetherston runs back to New York), Jan. 8, 1910
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| 1 |
20 |
"The Grave Robber" (Busse resurrecting "Shale Rock Judge
Barnes)
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| 2 |
21 |
A Hard Proposition (Busse and Wayman robbing Chicago),
Nov. 20, 1909
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| 2 |
22 |
He Refuses to Answer (State's Attorney Wayman allowing
Chicago to be robbed), Nov. 16, 1909
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| 2 |
23 |
He Takes the Cabbage! (State's Attorney Wayman
congratulating himself), May 28, 1910
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| 2 |
24 |
The Immunity Bath (J.J. Hanberg leaving the Grand Jury
Room, surrounded by stamped vouchers), March 5, 1910
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| 2 |
25 |
Impudence! (Mayor Busse, covered with scandals, confronted
by voters in the upcoming election), Oct. 22, 1910
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| 2 |
25a |
"In Place of Fireworks?" ("Sane" Fourth Assoc. inviting
Teddy Roosevelt to Chicago)
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| 2 |
26 |
"In Sight at Last!" (Railway negotiations nearly
completed)
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| 2 |
27 |
"It Begins to Look Like an Explosion, This Time" (State's
Attorney Wayman and the police investigation of yet another bomb)
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| 2 |
28 |
It Is to Laugh! (Busse and Police Chief Steward helpless
as 42nd bomb explodes), Sept. 22, 1910
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| 2 |
29 |
"It's Up to You, Mr. Voter!" (City of Chicago encouraging
voters to get efficient aldermen in the upcoming primary)
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| 2 |
30 |
"Just Thrashing 'Round!" (State's Attorney Hoyne in wild
activity)
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| 2 |
31 |
"Kissed by the Sun!" (Chicago is hot) |
| 2 |
32 |
"Looks Like an Obstacle Race!" (John Wayman carrying too
much baggage to be elected governor of Illinois)
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| 2 |
33 |
"The Lorimer Case" (The Tribune still investigating
William Lorimer)
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34 |
"Next!" (The "plain people" being stripped by
reformers)
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35 |
"Next!" (The Tribune front page spread has incited a
circus atmosphere to attack Senator Lorimer)
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36 |
"Not the Slightest Danger!" (Charles E. Merriam's
nightmare of running for mayor of Chicago)
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37 |
"Nothing Doing!" (Wisconsin trying to send back scandal to
Chicago)
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38 |
"Parting is Such Sweet Sorrow" (Judge P.S. Grosscup as
Romeo)
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39 |
"The Pity of It" (Justice weighing H.C. Beattie,
Jr.)
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40 |
A Pointed Question (How is Busse connected with the
Cummings Foundry affair?), March 3, 1910
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| 3 |
41 |
"The Police Department Takes Off Its Hat to Him!" (Police
and Mayor Busse in agreement)
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| 3 |
42 |
"The Program for this Week" (Charles Merriam with his
investigating agenda)
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43 |
The Rats Desert the Sinking Ship (Inter-Ocean exposures
causing Busse administration to sink), Jan. 15, 1910
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| 3 |
44 |
"Recommended for the Ermine!" (Shale Rock gang embracing
A.C. Barnes, the "Shale Rock Judge")
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45 |
"Redieske: 'Cut it Out, Fred, They Haven't Adjourned
Yet!'" (Busse dancing around Redieske), Feb. 19, 1910
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46 |
"Released at Last!" (Money for families of firemen killed
in the stockyard fires of Dec., 1910, becomes available)
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47 |
"Scraping Off the Barnacles" (A.A. McCormick cleaning up
the County Board)
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48 |
"Sticking Closer Than a Brother!" (Judge Cooper after the
money raised for firemen's families after stockyard fire)
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49 |
"Taft May Come and Taft May go, But These Fight On
Forever!" (Illinois politicians continue to quarrel, while Taft blows through
town)
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50 |
"Tempering the Wind to a Lamb Shorn and Roasted" (The
public swelters while railway workers arbitrate a strike)
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51 |
They Don't See It Coming-- (The coming election doesn't
look good for the Busse gang), Oct. 15, 1910
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52 |
"Virtue Rewarded - A Political Playlet Without Wordlets"
(The Tribune rewards Merriam for putting a lid on Inter-Ocean exposures of
Busse's graft)
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53 |
"What About This?" (Chicago scolding the police department
after another bomb explosion)
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54 |
"What Are the Wild Waves Saying!" (Senate Committee
exonerates Lorimer and Hines - waves about to wash over the Tribune and
Harvester Trust)
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55 |
" What Inefficiency Has Brought Us To!" (City garbage
disposal issue)
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56 |
What's the Use? (Busse, Hanberg and Coleman watching the
Statute of Limitations run out), April 27, 1910
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| 3 |
57 |
The Whitewash Man (Commentary on Elton Lower urged by
Busse to whitewash the Merriam Commission findings), Jan. 20, 1910
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| 3 |
58 |
"Who Says There's Nothing Doing in Politics!" (State's
Attorney Wayman: "The Grand Jury endorses ME for governor")
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59 |
"Will It Come to This?" (Life insurance companies plan to
raise premiums for married men)
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| 3 |
60 |
"The Worm turns at Last!" (Citizen's Association squashing
Mayor Busse)
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