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Try King's quick rising buckwheat. It is the best. The cook likes it [graphic].
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Gwen Goldman African Americana Trade Card Collection
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Details
Title
Try King's quick rising buckwheat. It is the best. The cook likes it [graphic].
Publisher
[Chicago] : [publisher not identified]
Publisher
ILL. Chicago. 1890
Date
[ca. 1890]
Physical Description
1 print : chromolithograph ; sheet 12 x 8 cm (4.75 x 3 in.)
Description
Racist trade card promoting King Cereal Manufacturing Company and depicting a caricature of an African American woman domestic serving pancakes to a white couple while an African American man cook smiles in the kitchen. Shows the African American woman domestic, attired in a red dress, a white apron, and a white bonnet, holding her apron up in her hands while looking at the viewer and winking her eye. In the right, a brown-haired, white man with a mustache attired in a black suit, a white collared shirt, and black shoes and a white woman with brown hair in a bun and attired in a blue dress, sit in wooden chairs at a table covered with a white tablecloth. The white woman looks at the viewer as she wipes her mouth with a white napkin. On the table is a plate of pancakes, a coffee pot, glasses, and a condiment tray with various bottles. Through a doorway in the left background, the African American man cook, attired in a white chef’s hat and jacket, a white apron, pants, and black shoes, smiles as he stands behind a table with a box of King’s Quick Rising Buckwheat. In the right on the wall are two framed pictures and a large window with white curtains. Image also includes a red rug and a wooden chair with a green cushion. Edward King (d. 1907) founded King Cereal Manufacturing Company in 1861 in Chicago. He sold his interest in the firm to H. Horner & Co., wholesale grocers in 1903. The firm continued operations into the 1920s.
Notes
Title from item.
Place of publication inferred from place of operation of the advertised business.
Date deduced from history of the advertised business.
Advertising text printed on verso: We manufacture and sell all the package goods name[?] King’s Quick Ris[ing] Flour, King’s Quick Rising W[heat] For Biscuit, &c. Mrs. Hopper’s Pan[cake] a splendid substitu[te] [spe]cially adapted King’s R[ising] [?]ne Breakfast “Cut Oat Meal. “White Hominy. “Corn Grits or Samp. “Farina. (From the Best Wheat.) “Golden Corn Meal. “Silver Corn Meal. “Flaked Hominy. The best preparation of Corn ever placed on the market. Makes a delicious breakfast dish or after dinner dessert.
Gift of David Doret.
Subject
King Cereal and Manufacturing Company.
African American cooks -- Caricatures and cartoons.
African American household employees -- Caricatures and cartoons.
African American men -- Caricatures and cartoons.
African American women -- Caricatures and cartoons.
Couples.
Eating & drinking.
Flour & meal industry -- Illinois -- Chicago.
Pancakes & waffles.
Racism in popular culture.
Smiling.
Winking.
Chromolithographs -- 1880-1890.
Genre
Trade cards -- 1880-1890.
Location
Library Company of Philadelphia| Print Department| Goldman Trade Card Collection - King [P.2017.95.98]
Accession number
P.2017.95.98
In Collections
Gwen Goldman African Americana Trade Card Collection
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