If I live to be ninety years old, and go on at this rate, I shall be rabidest radical that ever pelted a throne, or upset an image. Lydia Maria Child to William Lloyd Garrison, 7 July 1865 In 1865, printer L. Franklin Smith and lithographer Max Rosenthal commemorated Abraham Lincoln's declaration of emancipation by publishing an extravagantly ornate print, Proclamation of Emancipation (see fig. 1). Adhering to conventions for such patriotic displays, Smith and Rosenthal surrounded text of Emancipation Proclamation with ample decoration: cherished American icons like flag and eagle, portraits of founding fathers and well-known abolitionists, allegorical figures, and several intricate vignettes depicting, as an accompanying booklet explains, the more striking results of great Crime (slavery) on left and results of the great Justice (emancipation) on right (Smith 7). This elaborate construction, with words of proclamation spread between scenes of slavery and freedom, implies that emancipation ended the great Crime and enacted the great Justice. According to Proclamation of Emancipation, Americans had much to celebrate and only past to grieve. Yet racial injustice in form of prejudice and segregation persist in print. The images present cliched scenes of black life before and after A shorter version of this essay won first prize in Legacy's Best Paper Contest, Student Category, honoring best student paper presented at Society for Study of American Women Writers Conference in Denver in 2012. It also won first place in SSAWW'S Graduate Student Paper Award Competition for that conference. emancipation, and none of scenes depict egalitarian integration. The only white figures pictured are slaveowners and overseers (on left) and a white teacher, far more elegantly dressed than his black pupils (on right). Between scenes of slavery and freedom are white allegorical figures and formal cameo portraits of white men and women celebrated for emancipation and America's commitment to liberty. These latter white figures are placed prominently toward center at bottom and top. As Harold Holzer, who has studied art and history of emancipation, explains, in nearly all these initial, tentative efforts to commemorate emancipation in popular prints, black Americans were emphatically not created equal. Blacks are relegated to sidelines, where they appear as generic figures, nominally free but still subordinate to whites (Holzer, Emancipating Lincoln 138). In this way, Proclamation of Emancipation, like most of era's strategically patriotic prints, promotes white supremacy and Northern pride. It placates rather than provokes its white postbellum viewers. (1) This print, however, unwittingly broaches its own critique by featuring Lydia Maria Child. While it is fitting that Child should be honored for her fierce advocacy of abolition, it is also ironic that her image should appear on such propaganda. Throughout her career, as we will see, she challenged grandiose conceptions of United States demonstrated by type of iconography appearing in abundance on this print. Moreover, she was openly critical of Emancipation Proclamation's compromises and failure to address problem of racial injustice at large. On 3o October 1862, soon after President Lincoln issued Preliminary Proclamation, Child wrote to good friend Sarah Shaw, As for President's Proclamation, I was thankful for it, but it excited no enthusiasm in my mind. With my gratitude to God was mixed an under-tone of sadness that moral sense of people was so low, that thing could not be done nobly.... The ugly fact cannot be concealed from history that it was done reluctantly and stintedly, and that even degree that was accomplished was done selfishly; was merely a war-measure, to which we were forced by our own perils and necessities. …