British Punch magazine -- from 1841 to 2002, the magazine cast a satirical eye on life in Britain. It charted the interests, concerns and frustrations of the country and today it stands as an invaluable resource not just as cartoon art and satire, but as primary source material for historians.

Illustrator: Bernard Partridge (excellent), from British Punch humor/satire magazine, August 2, 1916, disbound from the magazine, not a modern reproduction. Size 8 x 10 1/2 inches. Condition: excellent-- bright and clean, no handling wear, lays flat for easy framing, backside with unrelated text with some show-though on the facing side.

THE NON-STOP CAR

Erin [personification of Ireland] “Come on out o’ that now, darlint, or ye’ll be kilt intirely.”

I have other hard-to-find original Punch cartoon illustrations for sale; combine orders with no extra shipping fees.

Punch, a magazine of humor and satire, ran from 1841-2002. A very British institution renowned internationally for its wit and irreverence, it helped to coin the term "cartoon" in its modern sense as a humorous illustration.

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