Unite Initials Settlement For Free

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It is a woodcut showing a snake cut into eighths, with each segment labeled with the initials of one of the American colonies or regions. New England was represented as one segment, rather than the four colonies it was at that time. ... It became a symbol of colonial freedom during the American Revolutionary War.
The 'Join or Die' snake carried many symbols. The head of the snake was labeled N.E., signifying the four New England colonies of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island, which Franklin combined to emphasize the importance of unity.
The 'Join or Die' snake carried many symbols. The head of the snake was labeled N.E., signifying the four New England colonies of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island, which Franklin combined to emphasize the importance of unity.
The cartoon depicts the early American colonies as a snake divided into eight segments. Toward the head of the snake, NE represents New England, followed by NY (New York), NJ (New Jersey), P (Pennsylvania), M (Maryland), V (Virginia), NC (North Carolina) and SC (South Carolina).
Join or Die Flag (Benjamin Franklin) Flag — Nylon — 3' x 5' In 1751 Benjamin Franklin's Pennsylvania Gazette carried a bitter article protesting the British practice of sending convicts to America.
PURPOSE OF THE FLAG When Franklin published the woodcut, it became the first political cartoon. It was based on a superstition, being that if a snake was cut in two and the pieces were put together before sunset, the snake would return to life.
The “Join, or Die” snake, a cartoon image printed in numerous newspapers as the conflict between England and France over the Ohio Valley was expanding into war”the first global war fought on every continent,” as Thomas Bender recently has written first appeared in the May 9, 1754, edition of Benjamin Franklin's ...
Precisely three years later, on May 9, 1754, Franklin published a political cartoon depicting a rattlesnake with the admonishing title, JOIN, or DIE.
The 'Join or Die' snake carried many symbols. The head of the snake was labeled N.E., signifying the four New England colonies of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island, which Franklin combined to emphasize the importance of unity.
Franklin owned and ran the Pennsylvania Gazette, a Philadelphia-based newspaper that featured the Join, or Die cartoon on May 9, 1754.
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