Watson Heston
Watson Heston (September 25, 1846 – January 27, 1905)[1] was an American editorial cartoonist who peaked in popularity during the Golden Age of Freethought in the late 19th century.
Biography
Born in Ohio, he spent the majority of his life in Carthage, Missouri. He published cartoons satirising the Republican party in People's Party publications, and his cartoons satirising religion in general and Christianity in particular, appeared in the famous freethought newspapers Truth Seeker, Etta Semple's Free-Thought Ideal, and other regional papers.[2] Later, he would write and illustrate The Old Testament Comically Illustrated (1892),[3] and The New Testament Comically Illustrated (1898), which caricature scenes from the Bible. In 1890, Heston published a critique of the involvement of religious clergy in politics, calling for strict separation of church and state.[4]
The Bible Comically Illustrated was published in 1900 by the Truth Seeker Company and sold at least 10,000 copies. Few copies of this book or his earlier works survive, as most were apparently destroyed by those who did not appreciate such blasphemy. His works can be found on sale from time to time, with the asking prices usually reaching $2,000.
Gallery
- Famous among his caricatures of bible scenes are his depiction of Elisha watching two female bears mauling forty-two boys in 2 Kings 2:24.
- In another cartoon, Heston calls on readers to reflect on the incest between Lot and his daughters in Genesis 19:30-38.
- Heston caricatures Moses killing an Egyptian
- Heston caricatures the Ten Commandments, changing "thou shalt not commit adultery" to "thou shalt not do as the preachers are wont to do"
References
- "Watson Heston". findagrave.com. Retrieved 23 December 2014.
- Worth Robert Miller (1 Feb 2011). Populist Cartoons: An Illustrated History of the Third-party Movement in the 1890s. Truman State University Press. ISBN 9781935503057.
- "Old Testament stories comically illustrated". hathitrust.org. Retrieved 23 December 2014.
- "The freethinkers' pictorial text-book : showing the absurdity and untruthfulness of the Church's claim to be a divine and beneficent institution and revealing the abuses of a union of church and state ... (1896)". Archive.org.