1896 WILLIAM MCKINLEY 7/8" campaign pin pinback button political president
An Original 1896 William McKinley Presidential Campaign Button Pinback button promoting William McKinley for president, 1896. The Whitehead and Hoag Co., Newark, New Jersey. Made for Sweet Caporal Cigarettes (see reverse etching).Under the watchful eye of a professional campaign manager, the Republican governor of Ohio conducted his 1896 presidential campaign from the front porch of his home in Canton. Aloof and above the fray, McKinley would appear at appointed times and deliver carefully scripted speeches to a sympathetic press corps. His conventional style of campaigning was intended to contrast with that of his opponent, the voluble William Jennings Bryan, who barnstormed the country, regaling throngs of common folk with populist oratory. A massive Republican propaganda blitz ultimately carried McKinley into the White House by a comfortable margin.We offer this original celluloid pinback, one of the first made for an election, picturing McKinley. Normal 0 false false false EN-US ZH-CN AR-SA MicrosoftInternetExplorer4
Specifications
| Return Shipping Will Be Paid By | Seller |
| All Returns Accepted | Returns Accepted |
| Item Must Be Returned Within | 30 Days |
| Refund Will Be Given As | Money Back |
| First Lady | Ida McKinley |
| President | William McKinley |
| Theme | Politics |
| Type | Button |
| Term In Office | 1865-1901 |
| Country/Region | United States |
An Original 1896 William McKinley Presidential Campaign Button Pinback button promoting William McKinley for president, 1896. The Whitehead and Hoag Co., Newark, New Jersey. Made for Sweet Caporal Cigarettes (see reverse etching).Under the watchful eye of a professional campaign manager, the Republican governor of Ohio conducted his 1896 presidential campaign from the front porch of his home in Canton. Aloof and above the fray, McKinley would appear at appointed times and deliver carefully scripted speeches to a sympathetic press corps. His conventional style of campaigning was intended to contrast with that of his opponent, the voluble William Jennings Bryan, who barnstormed the country, regaling throngs of common folk with populist oratory. A massive Republican propaganda blitz ultimately carried McKinley into the White House by a comfortable margin.We offer this original celluloid pinback, one of the first made for an election, picturing McKinley. Normal 0 false false false EN-US ZH-CN AR-SA MicrosoftInternetExplorer4
