War, peace, family and Uncle Sam. The house I grew up had three posters from the First World War. And my aunt saved these posters in her attic. My father rescued them, framed them and hung the posters in the corridor above the stairs. I walked on the way to the room at the end of the corridor. Every time you go up the stairs you can not avoid Uncle Sam trying to hire me. Before I went to study, he never trembled and decided to invite me. I feel he is measuring all ounces of my patriotism: I hope you will become a US army, he cried when I climbed the stairs.
Uncle Sam is a national embodi- ment of the United States, sometimes more specifically the United States Government. The first record using the name "Uncle sam" dates back to the 1775 revolutionary war, but in 1917 the American artist James Montgomery Flag created modernity as an American advertisement. The most common appearance Enter the World War I. Sir Kitchena's Recruitment Poster, it is the most famous symbol of derivation and propaganda.
Uncle Sam, who recruited poster images from the First World War, is one of the most famous posters in the world. This poster reinforces the image of Uncle Sam and creates more than 4 million posters. It became popular as it was rebuilt into World War II and since it was inspired by countless other posters since then. James Montgomery Flagg originally created an image of Leslie's Weekly on July 6, 1916. When the United States entered World War I, the federal government established a publicity department called the Public Relations Committee led by George Krell. Next, Creel established the Poster Advertising Committee (COPP) specializing in the creation of war posters. Flag joined COPP in 1917 and redesigned the cover of his early Leslie magazine as a now famous poster.
Uncle Sam was born out of popular culture. His origin is controversial, but the name is usually associated with a businessman who supplied troops during the war of Sam Wilson, 1812. His barrel was marked as "America", but for the government it was called "Uncle Sam". The emergence of the iconic Sam Uncle sam developed from Brother Jonathan, the most common early symbol of the United States. Between the 1830s and the 1860s these two roles were used interchangeably. Like John Boole, a punch cartoonist helped develop this character and looked like a lean man with silk hat and striped pants. The famous American cartoonist Thomas Nast has been crystallized since the 1870s. By 1917, James Montgomery Flag portrayed him at the famous poster recruitment of the First World War. And that is an idol whose idol is recognized worldwide. He was officially adopted as a national symbol of the United States in 1950.