10 Best Far Side Comics That Make Jokes About Real World History

10 Best Far Side Comics That Make Jokes About Real World History

The Far Side, Gary Larson’s iconic syndicated comic, never used recurring characters, but it did frequently revisit the same subjects for material again and again. One of these was history, as Larson often took familiar moments from the past and put them in the absurd, unique context his work became synonymous with, and beloved for.

The Far Side’s view of history encompasses the entirety of civilization, from the origins of the species to the potential end of the world. Invariably, Gary Larson sought to turn his readers’ familiarity with these moments on their ear, making use of familiar historical settings and figures in an unfamiliar way – just as he did with everything from inanimate objects to household pets. Unlike many of his more absurd Far Side entries, Larson’s historically-influenced panels offer a more nuanced insight into his worldview, making them essential to study for any fan of the artist’s work.

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10 Best Far Side Comics That Make Jokes About Real World History

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10 Some Problems Go All The Way Back To Pre-History

(First published: December 2, 1986)

Far Side,

Of all the epochs of human history, Gary Larson devoted the most Far Side panels to the species’ most primitive ancestors. Larson frequently depicted cave-people in his work, often infusing their activities with a modern spin, as is the case in this panel where one caveman attempts to sneak behind another and kill him, only for his club to “jam” the way a modern firearm might. Considering the actual activities of humanity’s ancient progenitors would be totally alien to modern readers, depicting contemporary problems in an ancient setting was a perfect way for Larson to get a laugh.

9 The Vikings Rebrand Thanks To An Iconic Innovation

(First published: October 2, 1982)

Far Side, Bjorn Jorgensen introduces the iconic Viking helmet

Above all else, the one thing about the Middle Ages’ infamous Viking raiders almost any reader can recognize is their iconic horned helmet design. The look endures in the popular consciousness over a thousand years after the height of their activities, as a testament to how imposing it would have been for the unfortunate villages and port cities they plundered. Larson delightfully depicts the moment that innovator “Bjorn Jorgensen” changes history forever, by introducing the horned helmet to his Viking cohorts, who up to this point are uniformly wearing hats that look somewhat goofy, rather than scary.

8 Washington Won The War By Any Means Necessary

(First published: October 11, 1980)

Far Side, Washington crossing the Delaware in a

George Washington’s 1776 crossing of the Delaware River is usually depicted as a triumphant moment, as it involed a small band of revolutionaries surmounting the elements in order to win a crucial victory in the War for Independence. Recreating a famous 1851 painting of the crossing, Gary Larson reimagines the iconic row boat as a motorboat, courtesy of “Sid’s Rentals.” Washington appears no less dignified in Larson’s version, and if anything, it portrays him as leading his men to victory through any means necessary – yet, at the same time, the gravitas of the moment can’t help but be undercut by the added silliness.

7 Abraham Lincoln Gets Some Help With His Math

(First published: October 6, 1980)

Far Side, Lincoln getting math help on the Gettysburg Address

Similar to his portrayal of George Washington, here Gary Larson depicts a president in need of some assistance from the average citizen in order to achieve one of the defining moments of his tenure in office. The famous anecdote about Abraham Lincoln’s 1863 Gettysburg Address involves him composing his speech on the train as he approached the site of the battlefield. Larson shows Lincoln needing help from the train conductor with one crucial part of his speech – the “four score and seven years” math at the beginning, as he figures out how many years it has been since the country’s founding.

6 The Great Chicago Fire Was An Act Of Sabotage

(First published: March 13, 1980)

Far Side, Great Chicago Gire was a deliberate cow sabotage operation

As much as Gary Larson loved to write about history, he also loved to write about cows. This panel brings those two interests together for one of the funniest Far Side jokes, as two cows watch Chicago burn during the Great Fire of 1871. Famously, the conflagration started when a cow kicked over a lantern onto a pile of hay. Larson confirms this to have not been an accident, as one cow remarks: “It seems that agent 6373 has accomplished her mission, revealing a deliberate effort to destablize human society on the part of cows.

5 It’s Not The “Gunfight At The Okeedokee Coral,” Fellas

(First published: May 19, 1982)

Far Side, gunfighters mistakenly arrive at the

Time and again, The Far Side often found humor in its characters making obvious mistakes. Over the comic’s run, creator Gary Larson frequently displayed that he was enamored with cowboy jokes, frequently visiting the American Old West to tell some of his goofiest jokes; once again, these two tendencies came together to produce a truly “laugh out loud” panel, as a group of gunslingers on their way to 1881’s famed “Gunfight at the O.K. Corral” misread the directions and wind up at the “Okeedokee Corral,” making them late for their date with history.

4 Nobody Ever Said Trench Warfare Was All Fun & Games

(First published: August 18, 1980)

Far Side, World War I trench warfare

World War I infamously featured the clash of classical 18th and 19th-century European war tactics with the devastating emergence of modern 20th-century weaponry. This led to brutal years of what was known as trench warfare. Gary Larson impressively manages to find humor in the darkest of places with this strip, as an exasperated officer yells at a subordinate to, “just pull the pin, throw the grenade, and refrain from yelling ‘heads’!All the while, the opposing army peek expectantly over the lip of the trench in the distance, in one of Larson’s most understated, but amusing, compositions.

3 Amelia Earhart’s Disappearance, As Inconvenient As It Was Mysterious

(First published: August 19, 1980)

Far Side, Amelia Earhart is late returning from her circumnavigation of the world by plane

Amelia Earhart famously disappeared while trying to fly around the world in 1937. Gary Larson imagines the crowd waiting for her to return home, with the humor coming from the fact that he skips over any worry or display of concern, as one of the members of the expectant gathered crowd notes: “Well, I’m just starting to worry about that roast in the oven, that’s all.” Unfortunately, Earhart never came back from her flight, meaning that the roast was probably burnt to a crisp by the time the speaker got home.

2 JFK’s Inaugural Address Inspires An Anthill

(First published: May 7, 1980)

Far Side,

John J. Kennedy is one of the most well-known presidents of the 20th century. In large part, this stems from the tragic end to his time in office – but even before his assassination in 1963, Kennedy was known as a charismatic, young politician, the first U.S. President of the television age. This reputation was solidified by his 1961 inaugural address, which Larson lampoons here by having an ant leader repeat the words to a thriving community of ants: “And remember…ask not what your anthill can do for you, but what you can do for your anthill.

1 Gary Larson Satirizes The Hippie Movement

(First Published: May 29, 1982)

Far Side,

Gary Larson was born in 1950, making him definitively a child of the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union. Larson came of age at the time of the hippie movement, and began producing Far Side comics in 1975, at the height of the balance of terror, with the looming threat of nuclear war still constant. Here, Larson critiques the slogan popularized by peace protesters in the 1960s, “what if they gave a war and nobody came?” by showing a group of military leaders around a map, jovially asking the opposite question.

“On the other hand, gentlemen, what if we gave a war and everybody came?” Published in 1982, a decade before the fall of the Soviet Union, Larson’s comic represents the still pressing anxieties of the Cold War conflict, as well as a bitterness at the way anti-war activism failed to impact those who really wielded American military power, even at the height of the movement. As a result, this panel was one of Gary Larson’s most overtly political comics, proving his historical perspective to be as insightful as his best jokes.