Political Cartoon: A Society of Patriotic Ladies

The patriotic action of fifty-one Edenton women on October 25, 1774 that became known as the "Edenton Tea" party did not go unnoticed. By January of 1775, news had traveled to London, and their statement as published in the Virginia Gazette was republished in London's Morning Chronicle and London Advertiser. And just a few months after that, a cartoon appeared that satirized their activities.


The cartoon was titled "A Society of Patriotic Ladies, at Edenton in North Carolina." Attributed to London engraver and cartoonist Philip Dawe (or Dawes), it presented the cartoonist's view of the ”patriotic ladies” of Edenton, North Carolina in their attempt to endorse the nonimportation resolves announced by the Continental Congress in 1774 and supported by North Carolina's First Provincial Congress a few months earlier.


"A Society of Patriotic Ladies, at Edenton, North Carolina," a cartoon published in 1775 satirizing the actions of the 51 women from Edenton.Look closely at the image. What is happening? (Read the Notes to find details and get some additional context.) What does the cartoonist think of the Edenton “Tea Party”? Of the Revolutionaries? Of women’s “proper” role?


 

 

Credit text

A North Carolina History Online Resource. 2018. "A Society of Patriotic Ladies'." https://www.ncpedia.org/anchor/society-patriotic-ladies.