Title |
St. Jacobs Oil, "it conquers pain" [graphic]. |
Publisher |
[United States] : [publisher not identified] |
Publisher |
UNITED STATES. 1880 |
Date |
[ca. 1880] |
Physical Description |
1 print : chromolithograph; sheet 8 x 11 cm (3 x 4 in.) |
Description |
Racist trade card illustration promoting St. Jacobs Oil, a pain relieiving remedy, and depicting one white and one African
American male jockey competing with one another. The African American jockey is attired in a, collared shirt, a yellow and
orange striped sweater, white pants, white gloves, a red and white cap, and black boots. He holds his whip in his right hand
and his horses reins in his left hand. His dark brown horse kicks its hind legs up toward the man and his carriage, causing
the man to frown fearfully and hold his right hand to his forehead. The white jockey is attired in a white collared shirt,
a red tie, a blue sport jacket, a blue and yellow cap, yellow gloves, and white pants. He holds his light brown horse's reins
in both hands and a whip in his right. The African American man is depicted with exaggerated features. St. Jacobs Oil was
invented by August Vogeler, a German immigrant, his son Charles A., and John H. Winkleman after 1878. Charles A. Vogeler evenutally
took over the business in the late 19th century.
|
Notes |
Title from item. |
|
Advertising text printed on verso: Blue Grass Breeders. Mr. R.S. Withers, son of Gen'l Wm. T. Withers of Fairlawn Stock Farm,
Lexington, Ky., writes: "I have such confidence in St. Jacobs Oil, the great pain-cure, that I use it on everything; myself,
my horses, my men. Everybody, for all kinds of aches and pains, believe in its sovereignty as a cure." From Horsemen's Head-Quarters.
Messrs. Treacy & Wilson, Lexington, Ky., favorably known throughout the United States and other countries as successful breeders,
trainers of and dealers in fine trotting and thoroughbred stock of every description, write as follows: "We find St. Jacobs
Oil very useful for both man and horse, and the article has our full endorsement. We are willing our recommendation of it
should be given the widest publicity." The Doctors Prescribe It. Dr. William A. Soula, Doctor Veterinary Surgery and for nine
years in charge of the Third Avenue Railroad Stables, New York City, working thousands of horses, certifies to the curative
qualities of St. Jacobs Oil, the great pain-cure for sprains, galls, rheumatism and all other afflictions to which horses
are subject. A Leading Authority Endorses It. Mr. E.A. Buck, Editor and Publisher, The Spirit of the Times, New York, the
leading Turf paper and Sporting Authority of the United States, says: "I have used St. Jacobs Oil repeatedly, with satisfactory
results." Interviews have been published in the Spirit with leading horsement, stablemen and turfmen, who say that it will
do all that is claimed for it, in removing aches and pains from man and beast. The Great German Remedy, St. Jacobs Oil, for
the cure of pain, is sold by druggists everywhere. Price, 50 cents a bottle. Directions in eleven languages.
|
|
Gift of David Doret. |
Subject |
Charles A. Vogeler Company. |
|
African American jockeys. |
|
African American men -- Caricatures and cartoons. |
|
Horse racing. |
|
Jockeys. |
|
Pharmaceutical industry -- Maryland -- Baltimore. |
|
Racism in popular culture. |
Genre |
Chromolithographs. -- 1870-1880. |
|
Trade cards. -- 1870-1880. |
Location |
Library Company of Philadelphia| Print Department| Goldman Trade Card Collection - St. Jacobs [P.2017.95.163] |
Accession number |
P.2017.95.163 |