One phrase that Uncle Sam is famous for saying is 'I was you for the U.S. Army'. Uncle Sam was first used in the War of 1812.
Samuel Wilson was a meat-packer from Troy, New York whose name is purportedly the source of the personification of the United States, known as "Uncle Sam." He died on 31 July 1854. Uncle Sam, as the personification of the United States, the way John Bull is a personification of Great Britain, has not and cannot die because personifications do not live or die - they are symbols.
Uncle Sam is a symbol of the United States, and never a real person, so he did not have a wife.
5'9"
One symbol used in World War 1 was "Uncle Sam", the red-white-and-blue clad image created by James Montgomery Flagg.
because they made Sam Wilson into a cartoon called Uncle Sam
Uncle Sam
Uncle Sam has the initials US and is a representation of the United States. It is said he was named for Samuel Wilson.
People aren't completely certain how the character "Uncle Sam" was created, or who (if anyone) he was named after. The prevailing 1. is that Uncle Sam was named after Samuel Wilson. Wilson was born in Arlington, Massachusetts, on September 13, 1766. His 2. home was in Mason, New Hampshire. In 1789, he and his brother Ebenezer 3. to Troy, New York.During the War of 1812, Wilson was 4. of processing and packing meat. He 5. meat to the US Army, in barrels that were stamped with the initials "U.S.". This was done to identify the country of 6. . Supposedly, someone who saw the "U.S." stamp suggested-perhaps as a 7. -that the initials stood for "Uncle Sam" Wilson. The suggestion that the meat came from "Uncle Sam" 8. .Samuel Wilson died in 1854. His grave is in Troy. Uncle Sam's traditional appearance 9.. Samuel Wilson, however, 10. . For example, Wilson was clean-shaven, while Uncle Sam is usually pictured with a beard.
Uncle sam was modeled after Samuel Wilson, a meat purveyor to the United States army during the War of 1812
Jeanette McCurdy
Historians aren't completely certain how the character "Uncle Sam" was created, or who (if anyone) he was named after. The prevailing theory is that Uncle Sam was named after Samuel Wilson. Wilson was born in Arlington, Mass., on September 13, 1766. His childhood home was in Mason, New Hampshire. In 1789, he and his brother Ebenezer walked to Troy, New York. During the War of 1812, Wilson was in the business of slaughtering and packing meat. He provided large shipments of meat to the US Army, in barrels that were stamped with the initials "U.S." Supposedly, someone who saw the "U.S." stamp suggested -- perhaps as a joke -- that the initials stood for "Uncle Sam" Wilson. The suggestion that the meat shipments came from "Uncle Sam" led to the idea that Uncle Sam symbolized the federal government. Samuel Wilson died in 1854. His grave is in the Oakwood Cemetery in Troy. Uncle Sam's traditional appearance, with a white goatee and star-spangled suit, is an invention of artists and political cartoonists; Samuel Wilson did not look like the modern image of Uncle Sam. For example, Wilson was clean-shaven, while Uncle Sam is usually portrayed with a goatee. Thomas Nast, a prominent 19th-century political cartoonist, produced many of the earliest cartoons of Uncle Sam.
Uncle Sam... US.
That is the closest thing we have to an explanation. Samuel Wilson or " Uncle Sam " as he was known was a major meat supplier to the military and he put his initials on the boxes containing his supplies. The US was understood to mean United States but in actuality it was Uncle Sam or Samuel Wilson certifying his goods as genuine.
uncle sam symbolize helping out in the war
he was a meat inspector for the us army. http://www.sonofthesouth.net/uncle-sam/
Uncle Sam was the nickname of the United States, not a president."On this day in 1813, the United States gets its nickname, Uncle Sam. The name is linked to Samuel Wilson, a meat packer from Troy, New York, who supplied barrels of beef to the United States Army during the War of 1812. Wilson (1766-1854) stamped the barrels with "U.S." for United States, but soldiers began referring to the grub as "Uncle Sam's." The local newspaper picked up on the story and Uncle Sam eventually gained widespread acceptance as the nickname for the U.S. federal government."