Object Details
- Description
- The successful presidential campaign of Republican Abraham Lincoln perfected the nighttime torchlight parade as an entertainment of unprecedented scale that attracted the attention of men, women, and children. The concept originated in Hartford, Connecticut, in 1858, and was revived for Lincoln’s campaign by the city’s young Republicans. Tailored oil-resistant enameled cloth capes and hats such as this one distinguished the marchers, some of whom were too young to vote. Their example spread from Hartford to cities in the northeastern United States, which contributed traveling companies totaling some ten thousand uniformed men with torches to a Grand Procession in New York City on October 3, 1860. The martial spectacle—including fireworks, Lincoln “Wide Awake” transparencies, and floats—created envy among the city’s Democrats, and panic among southern sympathizers who regarded the torch-lit parade as a provocation.
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
- Credit Line
- Unexcelled Fireworks Co.
- Physical Description
- oilcloth (overall material)
- red, white, blue, black (overall color)
- Measurements
- overall: 8 3/4 in x 8 1/4 in; 22.225 cm x 20.955 cm
- Object Name
- Hat, Parade
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