FIRST CALL

American Posters of World War One
from the collection of Roger N. Mohovich

November 1999 - February 2000

Fairchild Memorial Gallery
Georgetown University Library

Introduction

The enormous output of posters in the United States during and just after the First World War belies this country's late entry into that conflict. Spurred by the example of the various European combatants, the creation and production of appropriate "pictorial publicity" quickly achieved a very high level of artistic involvement and industrial application. Thousands of designs were created, and most of them were printed in very large numbers. As a result, very few of these posters are scarce even today, and only a small handful might qualify as "rare."
 

A large number of artists were involved in the creation of posters during the war. Some of them came to the work with their reputations already secured through their commercial work in books, magazines, and advertising: of these, for example, Howard Chandler Christy and James Montgomery Flagg are represented in this exhibit, Harrison Fisher and Edward Penfield are not. Some of the artists in the exhibit are now known to us largely because they did these-and other-posters. "Ruttan" and the euphonious "H. Blyleven Esselen" defeated attempts to track them down in the reference resources at hand; John E. Sheridan, who might well be a mystery elsewhere, is known here because he attended Georgetown in the closing years of the 19th century and his first poster work was probably the series he did advertising Georgetown baseball games against Princeton, Yale, Virginia, and Pennsylvania. As in Britain, some posters took advantage of work first published as cartoons in the daily papers; the examples shown here by W. A. Rogers and Oscar Cesare are typical. Many of the artists, whether obscure or famous, contributed their work gratis to the war effort.
 

The posters helped not only with the obvious aim of recruiting members for the armed forces, but with the parallel home-front efforts embodied in various conservation efforts, in the multiple aims of the United War Work Campaign, in the work of the Red Cross, and perhaps most notably in the rapid subscription of the Liberty and Victory loans. Each of the four Liberty loan campaigns (two in 1917, two in 1918) and the Victory loan campaign of early 1919 brought an outpouring of poster art on both the local and national levels. Of the six posters in the exhibit not listed in Theofiles' book, three relate one way or another to recruiting, and the other three are loan appeals.
 

We note also that the same printing firms which thrived on the production of the posters contributed in some cases to their creation. W. F. Powers in New York made and donated the color plates for the Cesare poster; the Robert Gary Company in Brooklyn contributed the entire Cyrus LeRoy Baldridge effort. And the striking poster by Joseph Grosse, unknown to Theofiles, was contributed by the "Cloak, Suit and Skirt Industry Committee." In a context where the various Liberty and Victory loan drives achieved something like 30 billion dollars in returns these efforts may seem tiny, but cumulatively they and others like them did much for the proliferation of the poster as an important means of war effort communication.
 

The current exhibit, timed to "open" on the 81st anniversary of Armistice Day, November 11, is the second in what we hope will be a series of exhibits of posters drawn from the collection of Roger N. Mohovich, acquired in 1997 as a gift from his heirs, David van Buskirk and Warren Wilson. See also: "TAKE UP THE SWORD OF JUSTICE" British Posters of World War One.
 

Entries for each poster are arranged in the following format: artist (where known); title; size (in inches, height before width); place of printing, publisher, and date; notes (those in quotation marks taken directly from the posters themselves); and references. References are to the following works: George Theofiles, American Posters of World War I (Dafran, ©1973); Labert St. Clair, The Story of the Liberty Loans (James William Bryan Press, 1919); Joseph Darracott, The First World War in Posters (Dover, ©1974); and Maurice Rickards, Posters of the First World War (Walker, ©1968).
 

George M. Barringer
Georgetown University Library
 
 

The Posters
 


James Montgomery Flagg (1877-1960)
First Call
11 x 21, printed on board
[New York] Leslie-Judge Co., ©1917
Not in Theofiles
 


Ruttan
A Wonderful Opportunity for YOU
28 x 20 1/4
[n.p., 1919?]
Probably a post-war appeal for recruits.
Not in Theofiles


William Allen Rogers (1854-1931)
ONLY THE NAVY CAN STOP THIS
25 1/4 x 19 ½
New York: U. S. Navy Publishing Bureau [1917]
Reproduction of a cartoon from The New York Herald.
Theofiles 47; Rickards 180


H. Blyleven Esselen
YOU DRIVE A CAR HERE - WHY NOT A TRANSPORT IN FRANCE?
27 ½ x 19 1/4
[n.p., 1918?]
Not in Theofiles


James Montgomery Flagg (1877-1960)
HOLD ON TO UNCLE SAM'S INSURANCE
30 x 20
Boston: Forbes [1919?]
Theofiles 324


Paul C. Stahr (1883-19??)
Be Patriotic
28 3/4 x 21
New York: W. F. Powers [1918?]
Theofiles 97


John E. Sheridan
Food is Ammunition
28 3/4 x 20 1/4
[n.p., 1918?]
Theofiles 76; St. Clair, p. 155


Burton Rice
SEE HIM THROUGH
25 3/4 x 19 3/4
[n.p.] 1918
Theofiles 294, attributed to "Carlson Rice"


Clarence Frederick Underwood (1871-1929)
Back our girls over there
28 x 21 1/4
[n.p., 1918?]
Theofiles 213; St. Clair, p. 177


Arthur William Brown (1881-19??)
FOR YOUR BOY
29 3/4 x 20
Philadelphia: Ketterlinus [1918?]
Produced by the Committee on Public Information,
Division of Pictorial Publicity.
Theofiles 197


J. Allen St. John
The Hun ~ his Mark
30 1/4 x 19 3/4
Chicago: Manz Engraving Co. [1917]
Theofiles 137; St. Clair, p. 84; Darracott 40


[Anonymous]
Remember Your First Thrill of AMERICAN LIBERTY
30 x 20
New York: Sackett & Wilhelms [1917]
Theofiles 135; St. Clair, p. 73


R. H. Porteous
WOMEN! HELP AMERICA'S SONS WIN THE WAR
30 x 20
Chicago: Edwards & Deutsch [1917]
Theofiles 131, attributed to "P. S. Porteus;" St. Clair, p. 73


[Anonymous]
"THAT GOVERNMENT OF THE PEOPLE..."
30 x 20
[n.p., 1918]
Theofiles 152; St. Clair, p. 36


Henry Raleigh (1880-19??)
HALT the Hun!
28 3/4 x 19 3/4
Chicago: Edwards & Deutsch [1918]
Theofiles 140; St. Clair, p. 37


Joseph L. Grosse
HELP CRUSH the MENACE of the SEAS
27 3/4 x 18 1/4
New York: O'Connor-Fyffe Adv. [1918?]
"Poster Contributed by Cloak, Suit and Skirt Industry Committee"
Not in Theofiles


Joseph Pennell (1860-1926)
PROVIDE THE SINEWS OF WAR
20 x 21, printed on board
New York: Heywood, Strasser & Voigt, ©1918
Theofiles 162


Henry Raleigh (1880-19??)
HUN OR HOME?
29 3/4 x 19 3/4
Chicago: Edwards & Deutsch [1918]
Theofiles 166; St. Clair, p. 137
 
 


Cyrus LeRoy Baldridge (1889-19??)
Pvt. TREPTOW'S PLEDGE
30 x 19 3/4
Brooklyn: Robert Gair Company, 1918.
Poster donated by the printing company.
Not in Theofiles


Oscar E. Cesare
REMEMBER THE BOND
24 3/4 x 18 ½
[New York] The Nation Press [1918?]
"Color Plates made and donated by Powers Engraving Co., N. Y."
Reproduction of a cartoon from The New York Evening Post.
Not in Theofiles


Ray Greenleaf (18??-1950)
Answer the Red Cross Christmas Roll Call
30 x 20
Buffalo: Niagara Litho. Co., ©1918
Produced by the Committee on Public Information,
Division of Pictorial Publicity.
Theofiles 232


William B. King (1880-1927)
Hold up your end!
27 ½ x 20 1/4
[New York? 1918?]
Theofiles 221; St. Clair, p. 142


Jessie Wilcox Smith (1863-1925)
Have YOU a Red Cross Service Flag?
28 x 22 1/4
Chicago: Edwards & Deutsch [1918?]
Theofiles 237


P. G. Morgan
Keep this Hand of Mercy at its work
27 ½ x 20 ½
[New York? 1918?]
Theofiles 228, attributed to "C. Emerson, Jr."


Howard Chandler Christy (1872-1952)
THE SPIRIT OF AMERICA
30 x 20
Boston: Forbes [1918?]
Theofiles 242; Darracott 6



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