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Saving Lady Liberty: Joseph Pulitzer's Fight for the Statue of Liberty- A Picture Book Review and A Giveaway- Part I

Like me, you might associate Joseph Pulitzer with the Pulitzer Prize. But, you might not know how he was instrumental in bringing the Statue of Liberty to the United States. Here is the inspirational story of Saving Lady Liberty  (Calkins Creek, 2020) which author Claudia Friddell packed into forty-eight informative pages. The illustrator, Stacy Innerst, is not new to my blog. Check out his illustrations from Lincoln Clears a Path.


 

REVIEW

Joseph Pulitzer loved words. And the word he loved best was liberty.

Maybe that’s because Joseph, the son of a wealthy Jewish merchant, enjoyed freedoms that other Jewish boys outside of Pest, Hungary could not. But after his father died when Joseph was eleven, his world changed forever.
That is Claudia Friddell’s opening which lures readers into turning the page. 
The book proceeds to show how Joseph was left penniless–unable to even get a job in the army because of his poor eyesight. But,
 

(Isn’t it cool how Lincoln appears in this book too?)
Pulitzer went from guard duty in the Civil War (where he’d rather plan battles on the chess board than be in a battle) to a poor immigrant who couldn’t speak English (although he was fluent in French, German, Hungarian, and Yiddish).

After weeks of sleeping on park benches, Joseph hopped a train and headed for St. Louis–a city filled with German-speaking immigrants. 

When he wasn’t working or learning how to read and write English, Joseph played chess in the library. He caught the attention of an owner of a German newspaper and finally got a job he loved–he was a reporter! 

Grateful for the freedom to write what he chose, Joseph uncovered corruption and inequality. His brash manner and relentless drive didn’t earn him many friends but no matter–Joseph kept moving up until he owned the newspaper alongside his chess-playing boss.

Joseph married and traveled to the 1878 Paris World’s Fair where he was entranced by Graham Bell’s talking machine and the “colossal copper leaf of Auguste Bartholdi‘s unfinished statue, Liberty Enlightening the World..”

https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/statue-liberty-construction-gallery-1.1397435
Albert Fernique/New York Public Library

After being impressed with the statue, Joseph met Auguste.

But although the United States had agreed to build a pedestal for the statue, New Yorkers didn’t want to pay for it. When he returned to the States, Joseph vowed to convince his fellow citizens to pay to have the pedestal built and installed on Bedloe’s Island (renamed Liberty Island in 1956).


Pulitzer bought the New York World newspaper and put Lady Liberty in the middle of the masthead:


                                     https://www.loc.gov/item/sn83030193/1900-01-30/ed-1/


He wrote editorials and scolded wealthy NewYorkers. 

What a burning disgrace it will be to the United States if the statue of the goddess is brought to our shores on a French government vessel and is met by the intelligence that our people, with all their wealth, have not enough public spirit, liberality, and pride to provide a fitting pedestal on which it can be placed!

No matter how hard he tried to raise the money for the pedestal, Pulitzer didn’t have enough. Finally he came up with a new plan. “If a person donated even a penny, he would print their name and their story in the World.


His idea worked. Stories poured in and Pulitzer printed them all. Two of my favorite pages show letters from children with their contributions. One child sold squash and pumpkins and sent in ten cents, another raided his “frog-bank” and combined his earnings with his friends for another ten cents. One kindergarten class sent in $1.35.

Finally, Lady Liberty was loaded into 214 crates and sailed across the stormy Atlantic. 


Of course, when the pedestal was completed, that was a newsworthy story!

Eight years after Pulitzer first saw Lady Liberty, he “witnessed Bartholdi unveil his magnificent monument ready to welcome every traveler with a torch of hope and a promise of freedom.” 

As the daughter of German Jewish immigrants, I imagine that the first time my parents saw Lady Liberty, they were filled with a mixture of fear, awe, and excitement. Here was the symbol of the country that would be their new home–a place of liberty.

                                                ****

Next week Claudia will answer questions about her research process and her path to publication. 

Claudia’s newest fan,
“Uncle Bob” Toupal. 


CURRICULUM RESOURCE

This book is an excellent resource for any student studying immigration and American history. Eight pages of back matter include little-known facts about the statute and Joseph Pulitzer. Claudia Friddell has created an educator’s guide with a variety of  activities for students in grades 2-6. 

For more details about how the statue evolved and how it was connected to the end of slavery and Reconstruction, see this post.

GIVEAWAY
Leave a comment to enter the giveaway along with your email address if you are new to my blog. If you also leave a comment next week on the interview, then I’ll put your name in twice. Winner’s name will be drawn at 4 PM on July 16.  Continental U.S. addresses only. 

Congratulations to Helena George and Kim Peterson who won copies of THE BUTTON GIRL.


56 thoughts on “Saving Lady Liberty: Joseph Pulitzer's Fight for the Statue of Liberty- A Picture Book Review and A Giveaway- Part I”

  1. Great review Carol. Not only did I not know that Mr. Pulitzer was instrumental in bringing the statue of Liberty here, I had no idea about all the pieces that had to fall into place, the clever way he raised the funds to construct the pedestal, and bring it over to New York City! Illustrations look fantastic as well!

  2. NF PB authors and historical novelists have something in common–we love to discover nuggets for our work! Nice to see you here, Kathleen.

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