"No Stamp Act"
Date1766
OriginAmerica or England
MediumBronze
DimensionsDiameter: 25 mm
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number2013-82
DescriptionCast bronze button with integral drilled shank (broken). Bust of William Pitt facing to left within a circle. *NO * STAMP * ACT * 1766 * PITT around.Label TextWhile the popularity of political buttons was immense during the last half of the nineteenth and the entire twentieth century, they had been around for some time. This slogan-bearing example, produced for one to display his or her disdain for the Stamp Act of 1765, may be the first American political button of any sort.
William Pitt, known as the "Great Commoner," was greatly admired in the American colonies after his successful argument for the repeal of the much-hated act. Almost immediately, commemorative objects praising him began to appear, from inscribed teapots to a wide array of medals, and buttons too.
Its crude execution, and that fact that these extremely rare buttons don't turn up in Britain suggest that they are American-made. With only a handful of others known, all of which are ground finds from Maryland and Massachusetts, this example seems to be the sole undug example.
March 18, 1766
February 16, 1782
1835-1855
1835-1855
1830-1860