Anonymous ID: 648cd8 Nov. 11, 2020, 4:42 a.m. No.11590157   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0173 >>0277 >>0305 >>0313 >>0396 >>0449 >>0626 >>0761

I dug a little on the old Four Season's hotel in Philadelphia, now called the Logan. I found a some bad reviews but most interesting is their collection of "Creepy Art" like this picture that says join or die. WTF?? They have a roof top bar just like the Standard Hotel.

 

https://www.yelp.com/biz_photos/the-logan-philadelphia-curio-collection-by-hilton-philadelphia?select=j6LhwSQcc3li18_raJQVwg

Anonymous ID: 648cd8 Nov. 11, 2020, 5:13 a.m. No.11590396   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0414

>>11590157

Join, or Die. is a political cartoon attributed to Benjamin Franklin. The original publication by the Pennsylvania Gazette on May 9, 1754,[1] is the earliest known pictorial representation of colonial union produced by an American colonist in Colonial America.[2] It is a woodcut showing a snake cut into eighths, with each segment labeled with the initials of one of the American colonies or regions. New England was represented as one segment, rather than the four colonies it was at that time. Delaware was not listed separately as it was part of Pennsylvania. Georgia, however, was omitted completely. Thus, it has eight segments of a snake rather than the traditional 13 colonies.[3] The poster focused solely on the colonies that would go on to make up the present-day United States, due to their shared identities as Americans. The cartoon appeared along with Franklin's editorial about the "disunited state" of the colonies and helped make his point about the importance of colonial unity. It later became a symbol of colonial freedom during the American Revolutionary War.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Join,_or_Die