A stack of turtles drawn similarly to those featured in "Yertle the Turtle" first appeared on March 20, 1942, in a cartoon for the New York City newspaper
PM, where Seuss worked as an
editorial cartoonist. The illustration shows two stacks of turtles forming the letter "V" on top of a large turtle labelled "Dawdling Producers", with a caption reading "You Can't Build A Substantial V Out of Turtles!" Seuss has stated that the titular character Yertle represented
Francisco Franco, with Yertle's despotic rule of the pond and takeover of the surrounding area parallel to Franco's
regime in Spain. Though Seuss made a point of not beginning the writing of his stories with a moral in mind, stating that "kids can see a moral coming a mile off", he was not against writing about issues; he said "there's an inherent moral in any story" and remarked that he was "subversive as hell". "Yertle the Turtle" has variously been described as "
autocratic rule overturned", "a reaction against the
fascism of World War II", and "subversive of
authoritarian rule". All three stories in
Yertle were originally published in
Redbook magazine in the early 1950s, as part of a series of stories that Dr. Seuss wrote for the magazine. These stories proved to be popular, and Geisel decided to put some of them in a book. On September 14, 1956, Geisel signed a contract with Random House for such a book, which would include the story "How Officer Pat Saved the Whole Town" and have the title
How Officer Pat Saved the Town and Other Stories.
Officer Pat was planned to be published in the autumn of 1957, but it never did get published. On December 18, 1957, the
Officer Pat contract was dissolved, and Geisel signed another contract for the publication of
Yertle in 1958. The "Officer Pat" story was eventually included in
Horton and the Kwuggerbug and More Lost Stories, which was published posthumously in 2014. The last lines of "Yertle the Turtle" read: "And the turtles, of course ...all the turtles are free / As turtles, and maybe, all creatures should be". However, despite the publishers' initial worries, it eventually proved to be a hit—in 2001,
Publishers Weekly reported that it was 125th on the list of best-selling hardcover children's books in the United States, at just over one million copies. The book is dedicated to the Sagmaster family as a tribute to Joseph Sagmaster, who had introduced Seuss to his first wife,
Helen Palmer, when they were both attending
Oxford University. Sagmaster is quoted as saying that bringing the two together was "the happiest inspiration I've ever had". ==Adaptations==