Uncle Sam
UNCLE SAM
UNCLE SAM, a nickname of the U.S. government, first used during the War of 1812. Critics of the war applied the term somewhat derisively to customhouse officers and to soldiers while the "war hawks" generally avoided it. As contemporary newspapers show, the term
was doubtless a jocular expansion of the letters "U.S." on uniforms and government property.
The name is also identified with Samuel Wilson of Troy, N.Y. (1766–1854), known as "Uncle Sam" Wilson, who supplied barrels of beef to the government. In 1961 Congress recognized Wilson as a namesake for America's symbol, which over the years has lost its negative connotations.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Ketchum, Alton. Uncle Sam: The Man and the Legend. New York: Hill and Wang, 1959.
AlbertMatthews/c. w.
Uncle Sam
Uncle Sam ★ 1996 (R)
The box art is cool but this is basically a video horror. Desert Storm hero Sam Harper (Fralick) returns home—in a coffin. Only he doesn't stay dead and decides to liven up his small town's Fourth of July celebration by dressing up as Uncle Sam and going on a killing spree. 91m/C VHS, DVD . David “Shark” Fralick, Timothy Bottoms, Robert Forster, Isaac Hayes, Bo Hopkins; D: William Lustig; W: Larry Cohen; C: James Lebovitz; M: Mark Governor. VIDEO
Uncle Sam
Un·cle Sam / sam/ a personification of the federal government or citizens of the U.S., typically portrayed as a tall, thin, bearded man wearing a suit of red, white, and blue.