亚洲网紅露点

Was There A Real Uncle Sam?

There are many famous cartoon figures in American culture, but only one that鈥檚 regularly paired with the pointed statement that it wants you (yes, YOU) to do something: Uncle Sam.

What Uncle Sam wants you for varies. Historically he has most often wanted you to join the Army, though twists and variations abound. Uncle Sam himself, however, almost always has a white goatee and white locks covered by a top hat, and he鈥檚 typically wearing a blue blazer, red bowtie, and white shirt. Above all, depictions of Uncle Sam famously show him staring straight at whoever is looking at the poster in a direct call to action.

This depiction has been around for more than 100 years (prior to Uncle Sam, the goddess-like figure of Columbia personified first the colonies and then the US). But the legend of Uncle Sam dates back even further. The icon鈥檚 longevity and prevalence is part of the reason there鈥檚 an official Uncle Sam Day on September 13. But what about the real Uncle Sam? Was there one?

The real Uncle Sam?

There are several popular stories connecting the character of Uncle Sam to historical figures, though solid evidence for them is lacking. One thing, though, is certain: Uncle Sam is an extension of the common short form of the United States (of America), US.

According to legend, a meat packer from Troy, New York, named Samuel Wilson is the original Uncle Sam. (Sam, of course, is a pet short form of Samuel). He supplied barrels of beef to the US Army during the War of 1812, and each barrel had 鈥淯.S.鈥 printed on it for United States. Another thing the initials came to stand for: Uncle Sam.

United States … and Commonwealths of America? Do you know which states in the US are actually commonwealths?

There are a couple theories on how the letters of the United States came to mean “Uncle Sam.” One is that people in Troy called Wilson Uncle Sam, and they assumed that鈥檚 what the lettering on the barrels stood for when they saw the beef being shipped to the Army. A Congressional resolution in 1961 declared this the official story, but it鈥檚 not the only one. The other theory is that soldiers who received the barrels played off of the lettering and called the contents of the barrel 鈥淯ncle Sam鈥檚鈥 food rations.

Whatever his exact origins, Uncle Sam became the personification of the United States and Troy became 鈥淭he Home of Uncle Sam.鈥 Though it wasn鈥檛 for another century that the cartoon we鈥檙e familiar with today was popularized.

Uncle Sam Wants YOU

Wilson, who died in 1854, didn鈥檛 live to see what mass media would turn his image into. Political cartoonist Thomas Nast is credited with drawing some of the most popular Uncle Sam cartoons in the 1870s. Nast is the same person responsible for the jolly bearded depiction of Santa Claus, and he helped popularize Uncle Sam鈥檚 white beard and patriotic attire.

In 1917, Uncle Sam became the character that you鈥檇 recognize today. New York illustrator James Montgomery Flagg took Uncle Sam and merged it with the concept behind a British military poster鈥攖he same country that the troops Samuel Wilson fed were fighting against. The British poster showed Secretary of State for War Lord Kitchener staring off the page and pointing at the viewer, just like Flagg鈥檚 final Uncle Sam poster. Basing a character on a historical figure can be complicated, however. Kitchener was an especially brutal commander, and he鈥檚 infamous for creating some of the first concentration camps during the Boer War in Africa.

Flagg鈥檚 Uncle Sam drawing was done for a newsweekly with the title 鈥淲hat Are You Doing for Preparedness?鈥 The text was changed to 鈥淚 Want YOU for U.S. Army鈥 when turned into a recruitment poster. In 1917 and 1918, when the US was involved in World War I, about 4 million Uncle Sam posters were printed.

This version of Uncle Sam made another appearance in World War II, and continues to live on in popular culture.

Keep Learning New 亚洲网紅露点s Every Day!

Get the 亚洲网紅露点 of The Day delivered straight to your inbox!
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

How much do you know about another patriotic holiday: Flag Day?

Previous The Language Legacy Of 9/11: How A Single Day Changed Our Language Next Interpolation vs. Extrapolation: What's The Difference?