C1885

The Roll-Call. -The Return of the N.S.W. Contingent.

Rare cartoon of the returning New South Wales contingent from the Soudan by Hop (Livingston York Yourtee Hopkins), supplement to the Bulletin for 20th June, 1885. The Australian contingent sailed for home on 17 May 1885 and arrived in Sydney … Read Full Description

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Details

Full Title:

The Roll-Call. -The Return of the N.S.W. Contingent.

Date:

C1885

Condition:

Trimmed to black neat lines, minor surface wear at lower right. Laid onto archival linen.

Technique:

Lithograph

Image Size: 

510mm 
x 305mm

Paper Size: 

463mm 
x 311mm
AUTHENTICITY
The Roll-Call. -The Return of the N.S.W. Contingent. - Antique Print from 1885

Genuine antique
dated:

1885

Description:

Rare cartoon of the returning New South Wales contingent from the Soudan by Hop (Livingston York Yourtee Hopkins), supplement to the Bulletin for 20th June, 1885.

The Australian contingent sailed for home on 17 May 1885 and arrived in Sydney on 19 June. Five days after their arrival in Sydney the contingent, dressed in their khaki uniforms, marched through the city to a reception at Victoria Barracks where they stood in pouring rain as a number of public figures, including the Governor, Lord Loftus, the Premier, and the commandant of the contingent, Colonel Richardson, gave speeches. 

Collections:
National Library Australia: Bib ID 15291

Livingston York Yourtee (Hop) Hopkins (1846 - 1927)

Hopkins was a cartoonist best known as 'HOP', born on 7 July 1846 at Bellefontaine, Ohio, United States of America, son of Daniel Hopkins (1800-1849), surveyor, and his wife Sarah, née Carter. At 17 he left a clerkship to join the 130th Ohio Volunteer Regiment, which was reviewed in Washington by President Lincoln before it saw service near Petersburg, Virginia, in the summer of 1864.

Hopkins, however, spent most of his time picketing the lines and relieving his boredom by drawing. Mustered out in September 1864, he took a job as a railroad messenger, worked on newspapers in Ohio and Illinois and in 1870 moved to New York. By then a freelance 'Designer on Wood', he contributed to newspapers and comic magazines, and illustrated books. In 1880 A Comic History of the United States, which he wrote and copiously illustrated, was published but a patriotic reading public was not amused. On 9 June 1875 at Toledo he had married Harriet Augusta Commager.  In 1882 Hopkins met William Traill who so inspired him that by February 1883 Hopkins had arrived in Sydney with his wife, three children and a two-year contract with the Bulletin. Soon he was joined by Phil May, lured by Traill from England, and together they contributed much to the Bulletin's popularity and prosperity. Their skill, enhanced by improved methods of reproduction, attracted other artists to the magazine. Best known of 'Hop's' cartoons were the Sudan war and Federation series, and those that caricatured Sir Henry Parkes, Sir George Dibbs, Sir George Reid, Sir William Lyne, Bernhard Wise and other public figures. In 1904 he published a selection of his work, On the Hop, but his output steadily declined until his virtual retirement in 1913, by which time he was a director of the Bulletin.  'Hop's' draftsmanship was inferior to May's and though his political satire was racy and irreverent, it lacked toughness; as the Bulletin put it, 'he used his gift for gaiety and mirth, searing or scathing none'. Yet Hopkins remained the most popular of the Bulletin cartoonists and, for its proprietors, perhaps the most useful. He diligently kept notebooks of ideas and captions, and constantly referred to the scrapbooks of his past work. His 19,000 drawings included social satire, jokes, Bulletin calendars and postcards, and illustrations for such publications as F. J. Donahue's The History of Botany Bay (1888). His interpretation of the politicians and the regular appearance of his symbolic figures and menagerie of allegorical animals did much to explain the gospel of economic and racial isolationism, Republican nationalism and cultural chauvinism that the Bulletin preached before Federation.

He was an etcher and a painter as well as a cartoonist, and samples of his work are in the Mitchell Library, National Library of Australia, and art galleries at Geelong and Castlemaine and in most States.

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