Abstract
Conventional wisdom holds that “Uncle” Sam Wilson—a Troy, New York, meatpacker who, when he was supplying troops during the War of 1812, stamped his crates “U.S.”—inspired the federal government’s nickname; new evidence suggests, however, that the personification originated earlier, simply as a creative and colorful expansion of “U.S.”
Issue Section:
Memoranda and Documents
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© 2015 by The New England Quarterly
2015
Massachusetts Institute of Technology