Description: This is why we love campaign postcards so much: because you can do a lot more on a card than you can a pin. If this artwork and anti-Bryan message was on a celluloid button, you'd be paying hundreds for it! This standard sized postcard is from a set printed at the time of the 1908 Democratic National Convention that was held at Denver, Colorado. Most of them make fun of or disparage their leading candidate, William Jennings Bryan, since he was headed towards his third nomination for president by that party. Many democrats had realized by then or thought that he was a blowhard, past his time and that the party could do better than him. (Obviously so did the people behind most of these cards, although a couple were anti-GOP hopefuls, too). Here's one of the three in the set making fun of the republicans. In this case it's their nominee, William Howard Taft, stuck in the mud in a boat at the shore. And even with their party mascot pushing hard, president Teddy Roosevelt's bear is unwilling to help much at all, so it's all to no affect. Meanwhile the democrat boat has clear sailing. Well, it actually didn't turn out that way. Great artwork on a great, tough card. Others in this set which we have listed are our items 275047030592, 274540821010, 274540822042, 274540823076 and 303733597418. This is in nice shape but please enlarge our images and judge condition for yourself so that you can be happy with your purchase. S & H on this will be $4.50 carefully packed, first class with tracking, and we'll buy the insurance on your package to protect both of us. We are members of APIC and sell only authentic presidential campaign material so buy with confidence. We will combine S&H even though eBay says we don't. Just request a new invoice before paying. We recently returned from the northeastern part of the U.S. where we purchased another top-notch political postcard collection from a life-long specialist and friend. PLUS we're still selling out of the collection of our mid-west friend! Since many of their cards are duplicates of our own, we feel it is important to offer them back into the collector market, so that others continue having the fun of discovery and pride of ownership that we three have experienced over the decades. Hopefully you can find a gem or two to add to your own collection, so check our eBay store over time for this great opportunity for adding to your collection. Our collecting interests fall into all categories of presidential campaign material, but postcards remain at the top of the list. Like buttons, their graphics can be spectacular. But they have the added advantage of being able to contain a lot more of it with much more diverse art. They may relate to a specific person or event or articulate opposing campaign slogans. Many can be "mated-up" with an example for another candidate: the 1912 pennant cards have seemingly endless color combinations, images and slogans so you'll never have them all, which keeps your quest alive. Some have "coat-tails" and are geographically specific or contain "hopefuls" or are from a person's early career. One can simply collect their favorite candidate. In history, the 1908 election occurred at the height of the overall postcard craze by the public, so one can acquire a massive collection for that year alone. Cards can be one-of-a-kind real photos, printed photos or lithographs while others are part of a set. Some are cross-collectibles involving baseball, other sports, artists, causes or holidays. They can show one or more candidates - often even the opposing candidates - which one rarely finds on pins. Just remember this: if it doesn't have a printed place for a stamp and an address or wasn't machine-mailed like most modern examples, by definition it ISN'T a postcard. Having it used through the mail confirms its history (if you're worried about reproductions) and adds to its depth. Be aware that condition may be part of the mailing: it's important and can affect the value. But being obsessed and possessed like many button fanatics over obtaining perfect condition examples can be time wasted from the joy of collecting. Cards are much more personal than pins. You know they were handled, way back when, and are also meant to be today (using care). If folding or mechanical, they MUST be touched and worked to fully appreciate them. Many backs contain a political message or show a postmark nailing down a small town or date. Some show a particular moment in American history: a meeting of great individuals or the last days or hours of a person - often the president. Others then show the early days of his successor. Pins don't often show that. Many cards have anti-cartoons - their great, artwork barbs and blurbs are classic political fun; sarcastic, creative, witty and sometimes suggestive, as being rendered by the famous or not-so. Pro-examples can gush enthusiastically. Some reflect America's socially or racially questionable past from which we may learn. Others show an obscure candidate and were printed in rather limited numbers. Postcard evolution from the late 19th-century to the oversize mailers of today can be displayed in one tray. Can you tell we love 'em! Therefore, we're listing a broad selection to pique your interest and show what we mean about how great, diverse and wonderful these relatively affordable political collectibles are. Most of all, have fun with them. Postcards were meant to be FUN.
Price: 85 USD
Location: Beverly Hills, Florida
End Time: 2024-12-19T21:04:53.000Z
Shipping Cost: 4.5 USD
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All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Presidential Campaign: William Jennings Bryan 1908