Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

“Magnificent Display of Fireworks, Prepared by Isaac Edge, Jr., of New York”

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Letterpress print
Hartford, Connecticut: Press of Elihu Geer, 1847
Brown University Library, Broadsides Collection


Decades after the fall of Tipu Sultan, his legacy in American memory lingered in an unexpected way: the production of fireworks. Tipu Sultan and his father, Hyder Ali, gained renown during their lifetimes for expanding the use of the iron-cased Mysorean rockets in their wars against the BEIC. His reputation as a pioneer of rocket artillery lived on past his rule. This broadside credits him with inventing signal rockets with “brilliant reflecting light,” which headlined a fireworks display orchestrated by Isaac Edge Jr. (1801–59) for the Uniformed Militia at Camp Seymour in East Hartford, Connecticut, on October 20, 1847. Replete with exoticizing allusions, the names of fireworks reference key elements of orientalist imaginaries through the foreign origins (both real and spurious) of each pyrotechnic, including the “Indian Palmetto” and “Persian Rose” fireworks, both composed of “Chinese gerbs, which produced fountains or jets of sparks.