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Udo Keppler - Tammany is great and Croker gets the profit

Tammany is great and Croker gets the profit (1900)

Udo Keppler (American, 1872 – 1956)
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License: All public domain files can be freely used for personal and commercial projects.
Why is this image in the public domain?
It was published or registered with the United States Copyright Office before January 1st, 1928
Udo Keppler

Udo J. Keppler, known from 1894 as Joseph Keppler Jr., was an American political cartoonist, publisher, and Native American advocate. The son of cartoonist Joseph Keppler (1838–1894), who founded Puck magazine, the younger Keppler also contributed cartoons, and became co-owner of the magazine after his father's death, when he changed his name to Joseph Keppler. He was also a collector of Native American artifacts, and was adopted by the Seneca Nation, where he became an honorary chief and given the name Gyantwaka.

Keppler was born on April 4, 1872 in St. Louis, Missouri. He graduated from the Columbia Institute in 1888, and studied in Germany in 1890 and 1891. He was with Puck from 1890 to 1914. He married Louise (Lulu) Eva Bechtel, daughter of wealthy brewer George Bechtel, on April 4, 1895, a marriage opposed by his mother and sisters. He sold Puck in December 1913, remaining art director for another four months. He later contributed to Judge and Leslie's Weekly until 1915. He retired in 1920, and in 1946 moved to La Jolla, California, where he died on July 4, 1956.

In Collection: Puck Illustrations (View all 2176)

We point with pride

We point with pride (1906)

Louis Glackens (American, 1866-1933)
An awful day of reckoning at hand for John Bull – Ireland’s dream of an irresistible anti-English alliance

An awful day of reckoning at hand for John Bull – Ireland’s dream of an irresistible anti-English alliance (1896)

Udo Keppler (American, 1872 – 1956)
Opening of the opera season – drilling the merry villagers

Opening of the opera season – drilling the merry villagers (1909)

Louis Glackens (American, 1866-1933)
Rotten finance

Rotten finance (1907)

Udo Keppler (American, 1872 – 1956)
A critical situation

A critical situation (1895)

John Samuel Pughe (American, 1870-1909)
The foolish resurrectionists

The foolish resurrectionists (1897)

Udo Keppler (American, 1872 – 1956)
‘Will you walk into my parlor’ said the spider to the fly

‘Will you walk into my parlor’ said the spider to the fly (1907)

Udo Keppler (American, 1872 – 1956)
A Merry Christmas!

A Merry Christmas! (1900)

Udo Keppler (American, 1872 – 1956)
Come in, boys, warm up, and have a little Christmas cheer!

Come in, boys, warm up, and have a little Christmas cheer! (1894)

Charles Jay Taylor (American, 1855-1929)
Blue-bird lady though you be, with your hat perched careless-wise

Blue-bird lady though you be, with your hat perched careless-wise (1914)

William Barribal (English, 1874-1952)
Our robber barons

Our robber barons (1882)

Bernhard Gillam (American, 1856 – 1896)
The mote in our neighbor’s eye

The mote in our neighbor’s eye (1899)

John Samuel Pughe (American, 1870-1909)
The goat of Cannonism

The goat of Cannonism (1910)

Udo Keppler (American, 1872 – 1956)
A message from Mars

A message from Mars (1901)

Frank Arthur Nankivell (Australian, 1869–1959)
Columbia’s Easter bonnet

Columbia’s Easter bonnet (1901)

Samuel Ehrhart (American, 1862-1937)
View all 2176 Artworks

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