Contributor |
Quad, M., 1842-1924. Brother Gardner's Lime-Kiln Club. |
|
Donaldson Brothers (Firm), printer. |
Title |
Brother Gardner addresses the Lime Kiln Club on the virtues of Dixon's Stove Polish [graphic]. |
Publisher |
New York : Donaldson Brothers |
Publisher |
N.Y. New York. 1886 |
Date |
1886 |
Physical Description |
1 print : chromolithograph ; sheet 13 x 16 cm (5 x 6.25 in.) |
Description |
Racist, satiric trade card promoting Joseph Dixon Crucible Company's stove polish and depicting a caricature of an African
American man presenting Dixon’s Stove Polish to the African American men members of the Lime Kiln Club. Shows Brother Gardner,
the white-haired, African American man, in the left with spectacles on his forehead and attired in a white collared shirt
with a red bowtie, an orange jacket with a sunflower on the lapel, red and white checked pants, and black shoes. He stands
holding a blue box of Dixon’s in his left hand and a gavel in his right hand. In the left is a wooden table with a blue pitcher
and a top hat on top of it and a sign that reads, “Dixon’s Carburet of Iron Stove Polish.” Brother Gardner addresses the men
in the vernacular, who are identified by number with the key of their names on the verso of the card. In the right, the man,
attired in a striped white collared shirt, a red tie, a white and blue striped jacket, yellow and red striped pants, and black
shoes, sits on a wooden chair and examines a blue box of Dixon’s in his hands. Beside him another man, balding with tufts
of white hair on the sides of his head and a white beard and attired in a red jacket and blue striped pants, kneels down and
carries a brush in his right hand. Behind them two men sit on chairs and an additional nine men stand and listen to Brother
Gardner. In the background, the wall reads, “Lime Kiln Club, Paradise Hall.” A horseshoe and framed prints that read “Beautify
your homes” and “Rules of the Lime Kiln Club” hang on the wall. In the center is a large, black stove.
|
|
The African American "Lime Kiln Club" caricatures originally were devised by Charles Bertrand Lewis (i.e., M. Quad) in the
Detroit Free Press. The Joseph Dixon Crucible Company, established by Joseph Dixon in Salem, Mass. in 1827, produced graphite
pencils, crucibles and stove polish, and relocated to Jersey City, N.J. in 1847. In 1868, the firm name changed from Joseph
Dixon & Co. to the Jos. Dixon Crucible Co. In 1870 the firm won a trademark case against a Philadelphia competitor selling
J.C. Dixon Stove Polish.
|
Notes |
Title from item. |
|
Date from copyright statement: Copyright 1886. |
|
Advertising text printed on verso: The Lime Kiln Club, Brother Gardner in the Chair. “Dis Club hab ebery reason to be proud
of de Stove Committee. We has tried all de other stove polishes. We has been stunk out wid so-called peperahuns and seen de
piping rust to pieces, till de stove-pipe wus a tumbled down disgrace to de good name of de Lime Kiln Club. De honah of dis
occashun belongs to Brudder Shindig, who has made a name for hisself, by introducing Dixon’s Big cake of Stove Polish, and
has covered hisself wid shine. Stand up, Brudder Shindig, and let us gaze upon your countenance. Now, my frens, let us draw
a lesson from dis: Seek and find out for yerselves, and when you’s got a good ting stick to it, so dat, like DIXON’S STOVE
POLISH, you may not only be a use to de community in which yer libes, but a shining example for de rest of mankind. “De club
owes a vote of thanks to de Stove Committee, an’ to Brudder Shindig in particular, an’ extend de heartfelt thanks of de Lime
Kiln Club to DIXONS for de valuable addition to de comfits of dis life through their CARBURET OF IRON STOVE POLISH. Wid one
drawback, Brudder Shindig—you orer haf found dis outen befo’ for de DIXON’S STOVE POLISH has bin in de market SINCE 1827,--58
YEARS.” (Signed) No. 1. Bro. Gardner, 2. Old Man Jenkins, 3. Bro. Shindig, 4. Give-A-Dam Jones, 6. Sundown Davis, No. 7. Accordingly
Davis, 8. Stepoff Johnson, 9. Trustee Pullback, 10. Sickles Smith, 11. Sir Isaac Walpole, 12. Layback Jones, Committee.
|
|
Advertising text printed on verso: Fifty-eight years in market! The oldest, the best, the neatest, the quickest. Ask your
dealer for Dixon's Stove Polish. Jos. Dixon Crucible Co., Jersey City, N.J. Illustration showing a box of "Dixon's Prepared
Carburet of Iron (Trademark) For Polishing Stoves, Grates, Ranges, and Every Kind of Cast and Sheet Iron work."
|
|
Purchased with funds from the Walter J. Miller Trust for the Visual Culture Program. |
|
RVCDC |
|
Description revised 2022. |
|
Access points revised 2022. |
|
Part of digital collections catalog through a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services as administered by the
Pennsylvania Department of Education through the Office of the Commonwealth Libraries, and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
Tom Corbett, Governor, 2013-2014.
|
Subject |
Joseph Dixon Crucible Company. |
|
African American men -- Caricatures and cartoons. |
|
Brother Gardner (Fictitious character) |
|
Clubs. |
|
Polishes. |
|
Polishes industry -- New Jersey -- Jersey City. |
|
Public speaking. |
|
Racism in popular culture. |
|
Stoves. |
|
SP3 African American History |
Genre |
Chromolithographs -- 1880-1890. |
|
Satires (Visual works) -- 1880-1890. |
|
Trade cards -- 1880-1890. |
Printer |
Donaldson Brothers (Firm), printer. |
Location |
Library Company of Philadelphia| Print Department| *trade card - J [P.2012.54.2] |
Accession number |
P.2012.54.2 |