Started digging into New Deal political cartoons today. Wanted to see what folks back then really thought about Roosevelt’s plans. Figured cartoons from newspapers and magazines would give it to me straight.
First Steps: Dusty Archives & Confusing Symbols
Hit my local university library basement. Man, those old periodical archives smell like history. Was flipping through microfiche – yeah, old-school – copies of newspapers from the 1930s. Took forever. Eyes started crossing seeing all these drawings.

At first, it was overwhelming. Cartoons used weird symbols. Saw this giant, muscled guy labeled “Industry” getting injected with something by a doctor wearing a top hat. Took me a minute! Top hat doctor meant big business or Wall Street types, I guess. The “medicine” was the New Deal programs. So… maybe the artist thought the New Deal was a forced cure? Or maybe medicine Big Biz needed?
Connecting the Dots (Sometimes Wrongly)
Kept hunting. Found another one with Uncle Sam drowning in this huge wave called “Deficit Spending”. Roosevelt was standing on shore throwing him a rope labeled “More Spending”. Artist was clearly freaked out by all the government debt piling up. Made me chuckle, you know? Same worries then as now.
Then got totally lost on one cartoon. Saw an elephant hiding under a blanket with a donkey tail pinned on its butt. My first stupid thought: “Wait, the Republicans pretending to be Democrats? Why?” Felt dumb later realizing it probably meant the Democrats using New Deal stuff to pull fast ones or something. Symbols trip you up sometimes!
The “Aha!” Moments & Simple Realizations
Slowly started seeing patterns. The cartoons weren’t shy:
- FDR the Magician: Found loads where Roosevelt was pulling rabbits (jobs? recovery?) out of a hat. Sometimes the rabbits looked sick, though. Or the hat was labeled “Taxpayer Money”. Pretty clear skepticism right there.
- Creeping Socialism Bogeyman: Saw several with this slow, creeping octopus labeled “Government Control” wrapping its tentacles around factories and farms. Scary imagery! Plain folks were supposed to be terrified the government was taking over everything. Guess that fear isn’t new either.
- The Helpless Farmer/Businessman: Lots showed these small farmers or shopkeepers buried under a ton of paperwork stamped with government agency names (NRA, AAA – those New Deal acronyms). The message? Too many rules choking regular people.
What Stuck With Me? It Wasn’t Easy!
Honestly, understanding these took way more head-scratching than I expected. You need some context about the programs themselves (NRA? AAA? Had to look those up again!), and the artists weren’t kind or subtle. They hit hard. The fear of big government power and debt jumped off the page constantly. So did the skepticism that all this spending and control would actually fix things.
Simplest takeaway? Political cartoons from the New Deal era screamed one loud message: Massive government intervention is terrifying, expensive, and complicated as hell. Seeing these images drawn right when it was all happening? Powerful stuff. Makes those dry textbook descriptions feel real suddenly. You see the raw nerves they touched. Kinda makes recent political fights look like reruns.