The Tramp is the sixth film directed by Charlie Chaplin for Essanay Studios, released in 1915.
It was Chaplin's fifth and final film produced at Essanay's Niles, California studio.
Seeking refuge on a farm, he faces various humorous situations, including a hobo trading his sandwich for a brick.
As the story unfolds, the Tramp engages in farm work, gets involved in a tiff with a farmhand, and foils a planned robbery.
The Tramp faced cuts by city and state film censorship boards, including a scene of Chaplin sitting in a sewage drainage pipe after burning his posterior, cut by the Chicago Board of Censors.