Born Bucyrus, 1896; died Norwalk, CT, 1979. Illustrator. Cartoonist. Painter. Began doing cartoons and drawings for the Saratoga, WY Sun when he was 15. Attended the University of Wyoming and studied... Read full biography
Born Bucyrus, 1896; died Norwalk, CT, 1979. Illustrator. Cartoonist. Painter. Began doing cartoons and drawings for the Saratoga, WY Sun when he was 15. Attended the University of Wyoming and studied for a year at the Art Institute of Chicago. In 1916 he began working for the Chicago Tribune and... Read full biography
Born Bucyrus, 1896; died Norwalk, CT, 1979. Illustrator. Cartoonist. Painter. Began doing cartoons and drawings for the Saratoga, WY Sun when he was 15. Attended the University of Wyoming and studied for a year at the Art Institute of Chicago. In 1916 he began working for the Chicago Tribune and for the New Yorker magazine in 1925. In 1933 he developed the half-page Sunday strip 'White Boy', about the adventures of a young boy who is captured by a tribe of Native Americans, eventually living... Read full biography
Born Bucyrus, 1896; died Norwalk, CT, 1979. Illustrator. Cartoonist. Painter. Began doing cartoons and drawings for the Saratoga, WY Sun when he was 15. Attended the University of Wyoming and studied for a year at the Art Institute of Chicago. In 1916 he began working for the Chicago Tribune and for the New Yorker magazine in 1925. In 1933 he developed the half-page Sunday strip 'White Boy', about the adventures of a young boy who is captured by a tribe of Native Americans, eventually living peacefully with them and learning their ways. About halfway through its run, the strip suddenly switched both its locale and time period to a dude ranch in the 1930s, dropping almost all the characters and situations that had been developed thus far... Read full biography
Born Bucyrus, 1896; died Norwalk, CT, 1979. Illustrator. Cartoonist. Painter. Began doing cartoons and drawings for the Saratoga, WY Sun when he was 15. Attended the University of Wyoming and studied for a year at the Art Institute of Chicago. In 1916 he began working for the Chicago Tribune and for the New Yorker magazine in 1925. In 1933 he developed the half-page Sunday strip 'White Boy', about the adventures of a young boy who is captured by a tribe of Native Americans, eventually living peacefully with them and learning their ways. About halfway through its run, the strip suddenly switched both its locale and time period to a dude ranch in the 1930s, dropping almost all the characters and situations that had been developed thus far and changing its name to 'Skull Valley'. Illustrated a number of books including Good Morning, Miss Dove (1954), The Finer Things of Life (1951.... Read full biography
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