Cartoons and Caricatures of Seattle Citizens by Frank Calvert et al.

(12 User reviews)   1117
By Asher Baker Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Architecture
English
Hey, have you ever wondered what your city's founders and early big shots were really like? Not the stiff, formal portraits in history books, but the real, gossip-worthy characters? I just stumbled on the weirdest, coolest book. It's called 'Cartoons and Caricatures of Seattle Citizens,' and it's basically a century-old burn book. The author is listed as 'Unknown,' which already feels shady. It's a collection of these incredibly sharp, funny, and sometimes downright mean drawings of Seattle's early elite—mayors, bankers, newspaper owners. The mystery isn't in the plot; it's in the pages. Who drew these? Why were they so brutally honest? And what does it say about the city that this was a popular thing to publish? It's like finding your great-grandparents' yearbook where everyone wrote brutally honest roasts instead of nice notes. I couldn't put it down. It turns dusty history into a juicy, human drama.
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Forget dry timelines and lists of mayors. This book is history with a sense of humor. 'Cartoons and Caricatures of Seattle Citizens' isn't a story with a plot in the traditional sense. Instead, it's a gallery. Page after page introduces you to the men (and it's almost all men) who built Seattle in the late 1800s and early 1900s. But you don't meet them through their accomplishments. You meet them through exaggerated noses, pompous postures, and clever visual puns that highlight their professions or reputations.

The Story

There's no narrative arc here. The 'story' is the act of looking. Each cartoon is a little character study. You see a banker drawn as a miserly troll guarding his vault, a politician with a windbag for a head, or a real estate tycoon depicted as literally carving up the city. The text by Frank Calvert and others provides brief, often cheeky captions that add context. The real thrill is in the recognition. These weren't anonymous figures; they were the city's most powerful people, being openly mocked in print. The book itself, published anonymously, becomes a character—a silent rebel with a pen.

Why You Should Read It

This book does something magical: it makes history feel immediate and human. Portraits in city halls make founders look like saints. These cartoons make them look like your slightly ridiculous, ambitious neighbors. You get a real sense of the city's early personality—boisterous, opinionated, and not afraid to laugh at itself (or its leaders). It's a powerful reminder that public figures have always been subjects of gossip and satire. Reading it, you're not just learning names; you're getting the inside joke from over a hundred years ago.

Final Verdict

Perfect for history buffs who are tired of the textbook treatment, Seattle locals curious about their city's gritty personality, or anyone who loves political satire and art. It's a quick, visually engaging read that packs more insight into human nature and civic life than many long biographies. Don't expect a novel. Do expect to be thoroughly entertained and to see the past in a brilliantly new, unfiltered light.

Betty Nguyen
8 months ago

Honestly, the pacing is just right, keeping you engaged. Exceeded all my expectations.

Elijah Jones
1 year ago

Perfect.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (12 User reviews )

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