Saturday, July 02, 2016

 

Herriman Saturday


November 28, 1908 -- Herriman commemorates lightweight boxer Freddie Welsh's victory over Abe Attell with a cartoon celebrating his prime attributes. Note the rather 'katty' cat beating up on Gooseberry Sprig in the background, and the vaguely Native American symbols on the cloak, later a standard feature of Herriman cartoons.

Labels:


Comments: Post a Comment

Friday, July 01, 2016

 

History of Newspaper Syndicates by Elmo Scott Watson: Chapter 7


CHAPTER VII

The Era of Consolidation 1890-1920


The opening of the last decade of the nineteenth century witnessed the concentration of the syndicate business, carried on through the two media of printed service and stereotype plates, into the hands of one dominant organization. The mat and copy services rapidly increased in number and almost as rapidly decreased through consolidations and mergers. It was an era of "big business" in every branch of American industry and syndicate service followed that trend.

In the same year that the Western Newspaper Union took over the plate business of the Standifords' International Press Association in Chicago, thereby bringing it into active competition in this branch of syndicate service with the American Press Association and the Kellogg Newspaper Company, Joslyn, as trustee, bought the Western from its directors, giving them stock in the Western Newspaper Union of Illinois which was incorporated in that state on July 23, 1890. He was determined to make his syndicate supreme in the country newspaper field and set about energetically to accomplish that ambition.

In 1891 editorial headquarters were established in Chicago and placed in charge of E. C. Standiford, who was authorized by the board of directors to "get up all matter to be used in readyprint and plates, to employ editors and such other help as he may deem necessary for this purpose." In the same year the Galveston office was closed but in 1892 a branch house was opened at Winfield, Kan.

In 1894 the Western re-entered the Texas field with a branch office at Houston and in the same year combined its Winfield branch with the Kansas Newspaper Union and moved the office to Wichita. In 1897 Joslyn's company penetrated even farther into the Rocky Mountain territory with a branch office at Salt Lake City, Utah, and four years later opened a new office at Oklahoma City.

During all this time the Western's expansion of its printed service business was being bitterly contested by the Chicago Newspaper Union, which had opened additional offices at Fort Wayne, Ind., and Sioux City, Iowa, but more particularly by the Kellogg company, which had established branches at Wichita, Kan., in 1890 and at Little Rock, Ark., in 1892. Moreover, the Kellogg list of papers was mounting steadily—from 1,760 in 1890 to 1,887 in 1895 and to 1,957 in 1900. Thereafter the number fluctuated up and down each year but never again reached the mark set at the opening of the new century.



In 1905 the Kellogg company put into effect a new business method of supplying printed service which had been worked out by Wright A. Patterson, editor-in-chief of the company.1  It was the acme of business efficiency and completely revolutionized some of the former haphazard methods of supply by the early syndicates. This "service plan," when combined with a new "non-interference system" and modern transportation, allowed a rapidity of supply and an almost unlimited flexibility of make-up that justified the claim that the Kellogg company was "a composing room just across the street from the editor."2

In January, 1906, Joslyn attained the first objective in his ambition to dominate the syndicate field when he purchased the Kellogg company and in June took over its plate business and its list of 1,827 papers supplied with printed service from the nine Kellogg offices.3  The acquisition of this company, however, was only the first step. In 1909 the Western Newspaper Union absorbed the Northwestern Newspaper Union at St. Paul, Minn., with its branch houses at Fargo, N. D., and Sioux Falls, S. D., and the Indiana Newspaper Union at Indianapolis.4 The St. Paul syndicate had been supplying 526 newspapers and the Indianapolis company, 65, so Joslyn's company added nearly 600 more newspapers to its list of printed service customers.

In 1910 Joslyn purchased Beals' New York Newspaper Union with its seven branches, supplying 1,021 newspapers, and in the same year Cramer, Aikens and Cramer's Chicago Newspaper Union with its four offices and its list of 906 papers. Two smaller lists, one of 47 papers supplied by the York (Neb.) Newspaper Union, and another of 34 papers which received printed service from the Wisconsin State Journal at Madison, were also absorbed at this time.

Joslyn now had a virtual monopoly on the syndicate business supplied through the medium of printed service. In the space of four years he had bought out all of his principal competitors and added more than 4,000 newspapers to the Western Newspaper Union lists. The acquisition of the Kellogg company had also given him the largest plate supply department of any syndicate then operating. But there was still an important rival in that field—the American Press Association.

The conflict between the Western and the American Press started with a bitter price war in 1912 and this economic battle became a legal one, carried on in the federal courts. The final result was a petition by the American Press Association to the United States district court to sell out to its rival. The petition was granted. On September 15, 1917. Joslyn's syndicate paid the American Press Association $500,000 for its plate, mat and photographic business and took over the American Press offices at Philadelphia, Buffalo. Columbus, San Francisco and Portland, Ore. Thereafter the American Press confined its activities to the advertising business.5

Joslyn, however, had not lived to see his triumph complete. He died in Omaha, Neb., October 4, 1916. At that time the Western Newspaper Union was capitalized for $6,500,000 and was operating on a nationwide scale—a far cry from the almost bankrupt State Printing company of 40 years before. The greatest factor in its growth had been the financial genius and aggressive leadership of the young New Englander w ho had started as the $18-a-week manager of its Omaha office back in 1880.



Joslyn was succeeded as president of the Western Newspaper Union by H. H. Fish, its present chief executive.6  After acquiring the plate business of the American Press Association, the Western also began building up its facilities for supplying service through the medium of mats and copy and today it is not only the largest newspaper syndicate in the world, in point of number of newspapers using its service, but it is also the only syndicate which supplies that service through four media of delivery—printed service, plates, mats and copy.

During the time Joslyn's organization was rising to its position of supremacy in the printed service and plate field, other syndicates were springing up to compete in the mat and copy field. Some of these were independent ventures which started up and soon disappeared or consolidated with rivals to form new organizations. Others were subsidiaries of metropolitan newspapers which added to their prestige and financial standing by syndicating the work of their most popular writers and artists to other newspapers.

The year 1895 was especially significant in this era of syndicate history. It was about that time that Frank Carpenter started syndicating his series of travel letters to newspapers and became so successful that he soon had a number of imitators or would-be imitators. At that time, too, the New York Herald Syndicate entered the field. It began with a news bureau which T. O. Davidson found in operation when he joined the Herald staff and under his direction the news bureau branched out into the feature syndicate field, supplying first news pictures in mat form and later Sunday comic pages, daily comics, and a variety of general features syndicated in copy form. Among the Sunday pages were Winsor McCay's "Little Nemo" and "Dream of a Rarebit Fiend." When the New York Tribune purchased the Herald in 1924, it also took over this syndicate and merged it with its own which had been established in 1914.

The first of the Hearst syndicates was also started in 1895. In that year one of the editors of the Pittsburgh Press, observing the rapid rise of the circulation of the Hearst papers, wrote to the New York Journal to inquire if he could buy some of its features for his paper. The result was the organization of the Hearst syndicate with Curtis J. Mar as its general manager.

The features supplied by this syndicate included daily and Sunday magazine articles by "Dorothy Dix," Garrett P. Serviss, "Beatrice Fairfax," Max O'Rell and Ambrose Bierce; the well-known "Mr. Dooley" stories by Finley Peter Dunne; poems by Ella Wheeler Wilcox and a number of comic strips.

In 1906 Hearst organized his International News Service and three years later Richard A. Farrelly, as general manager, took over the distribution of the features mentioned above, thus discontinuing the name of the Hearst syndicate. In 1916 William H. Johnston succeeded Farrelly and at that time the Hearst feature organization became a producing concern. It took charge of all the work of the Hearst writers and began selling their product to Hearst papers in the same manner as it sold them to other publications.

In 1913 a Hearst executive, M. Koenigsberg, started a new company called the Newspaper Feature Service, launched the King Features Syndicate the next year and soon afterwards the Premier Syndicate. While these three were ostensibly separate organizations, it was generally known that all of them were Hearst subsidiaries. Then Koenigsberg succeeded Johnston as head of the Hearst feature enterprises, all of them being merged into one company with the Newspaper Feature Service and the Premier Syndicate acting as the producing agencies and King Features Syndicate as the sales agent.

About 1898 the New York World, in response to the requests of other newspapers, began syndicating some of its features, including the colored comics which had resulted in adding the term "yellow journalism" to the American vocabulary.7  But it was not until 1905 that the World syndicate, as a subsidiary to the Pulitzer paper, became a real business organization. It continued its operations until 1931 when the Scripps-Howard chain of newspapers purchased the World and merged this syndicate with the United Features Syndicate, an outgrowth of the "literary department" established by the United Press in 1891.

Many of the syndicates established during this era required that all papers seeking their features sign a contract for a specified time and in some cases a certain feature much in demand could only be secured by contracting for the whole service. A departure from this method was introduced in 1899 when Howard E. Miller and R. Maurice Miller founded the International Syndicate in Baltimore, Md., as an independent company. They announced a policy of "no contract," and sold their features separately from the others, giving their customers the privilege of discontinuing the service at any time by merely giving notice.

Another innovation in syndicate practice was introduced in 1901 when Robert F. Paine, managing editor of the Cleveland Press, and William B. Colver, its former telegraph editor, started the Newspaper Enterprise Association and supplied features exclusively to newspapers in the Scripps-McRae (later Scripps-Howard) chain. They offered the first "budget service," a variety of features selected with the idea of filling every feature need of the Scripps papers. Under the management of A. M. Hopkins, Marlen E. Pew (at present editor of Editor and Publisher) and Sam T. Hughes, the success of this idea became so pronounced that newspapers outside the chain sought the service and in 1909 NEA Service. Inc., was organized. It provided the large city daily with everything it required except local and telegraph news. It specialized in illustrated news features which barely missed being "spot news." Perhaps the most distinctive factor of this syndicate's operations was its "preparedness service," for by constantly looking ahead of the day's news, it provided its clients with suitable pictures and informative sidelight material for any "spot news" that might come over the wire.



Nine years after the two Cleveland editors started NEA service, another "budget plan" syndicate was begun there. This was the Central Press Association, founded by V. V. McNitt in August, 1910. McNitt had some assistance from Harry Talmadge and Nat Wright, lessees of the Cleveland Leader. However, the backing they provided was withdrawn the next year as McNitt gave them preferred stock on their loan but they still continued to supply him with mechanical facilities at cost.

McNitt's service included news pictures and features, cartoons and other material that originated in the Cleveland Leader and the Cleveland News. In 1912 William Jennings Bryan was engaged to report the national conventions for McNitt and the sales from the "Great Commoner's" dispatches to newspapers all over the country helped to put the syndicate on a firm basis. In the same year the Central Press bought the North American Press Syndicate, another budget service, from the Meyer-Both company of Chicago and added 180 papers to its list of clients.8



In 1907 George Matthew Adams, a young advertising man, talked the manager of a Chicago office building into allowing him to have an office for a month on credit. Then he got busy, wrote a series of articles on classified advertising which he sold to the Chicago Tribune and used the money to pay his rent and secure office furniture and a typewriter. Later he syndicated the articles to about a hundred newspapers and this marked the beginning of a successful new syndicate.

It was built mainly on two ideas. One was securing the services of well-known writers to cover big national events. In 1908 Adams sent William Allen White, famous editor of the Emporia (Kan.) Gazette, to cover the Democratic national convention in Denver, Colo., and he followed this up in 1910 by having Rex Beach, the novelist, cover the Jeffries-Johnson fight in Reno, Nev. The other was offering short features which proved popular with editors because of the small space they occupied. Among these were Walt Mason's "Prose Poems," George Fitch's "Vest Pocket Essays," Kin Hubbard's "Abe Martin" and the women's features of Ruth Cameron and Elsie Robinson.

In 1912 Victor Lawson, publisher of the Chicago Daily News, sent Adams to New York to organize a syndicate and the result was Associated Newspapers, a cooperative enterprise supported by the New York Globe, the Chicago Daily News, the Boston Globe and the Philadelphia Bulletin. Within a year Adams had started on their careers such well-known writers and artists as Thornton Burgess, Dr. Frank Crane, Edgar A. Guest, J. N. ("Ding") Darling, H. T. Webster and "Believe It or Not" Ripley. After a year with Associated Newspapers, Adams returned to his own syndicate which he moved from Chicago to New York, where it has been conducted since that time.



In 1913 a new syndicate was organized by a man who was destined to become an outstanding figure in modern syndicate history. He was John N. Wheeler, who had been a reporter and baseball writer on the old New York Herald and had collaborated with Christy Mathewson, famous pitcher for the New York Giants, in writing a series of baseball stories released by the McClure Syndicate. Associated with Wheeler in the new enterprise were Guy T. Viskniskki and Ed McClure, both of whom had been with the McClure Syndicate.

Wheeler celebrated his advent in the syndicate business by luring H. C. ("Bud") Fisher, the creator of "Mutt and Jeff," away from the Hearst organization with an offer said to have been $50,000 a year, the largest salary ever paid for the services of a newspaper artist. This contract was guaranteed by the New York World, which thereby secured the comic strip for its daily and Sunday issues and also paid off an old score against Hearst for his raid on the World staff in 1895. The Wheeler syndicate specialized in sports, features and continued to distribute the articles by Christy Mathewson. But it also syndicated Fontaine Fox's cartoons and sent Richard Harding Davis to Vera Cruz during the occupation of that port by General Funston and to Belgium as a war correspondent at the opening of the world war.

In 1916 Wheeler, because he did not have stock control, sold out his interest in the Wheeler Syndicate which was taken over a short time later by Clinton T. Brainard of the McClure Syndicate,9  who had become head of that organization in 1911. Soon after the close of the world war Brainard secured for it the rights to the memoirs of Gen. Eric von Ludendorff of the German army. He scored his greatest coup, however, in 1922 when he purchased the exclusive rights to publication of the memoirs of former Kaiser Wilhelm II. for which he paid $250,000, at the rate of approximately $3 a word. At about the same time Brainard also purchased the memoirs of former Premier Asquith of Great Britain.

Wheeler's next enterprise was the Bell Syndicate, organized the same year he retired from his first venture, and when Fisher and Fox completed their contracts with the Wheeler Syndicate, they immediately signed up with the Bell Syndicate. In 1919 Ring Lardner, whose contract with the Chicago Tribune had expired, also joined Wheeler's staff.10  Wheeler continued to operate the Bell Syndicate until 1930, except for an interval of two years, from 1924 to 1926, when he was executive editor of Liberty, the magazine established by the Chicago Tribune. However, with the consent of the publishers of Liberty, he continued his connection with the syndicate, although Henry M. Snevily was actively in charge of it.

In 1915 Cyrus H. K. Curtis, owner of the Philadelphia Public Ledger, began offering to other newspapers some of the feature material appearing in the Ledger as well as the work of writers for his three magazines, the Saturday Evening Post, the Ladies' Home Journal and the Country Gentleman. When America entered the world war he also established a corps of special writers in most of the capitals of Europe. As the scope of the Ledger Syndicate increased a leased wire service was instituted to supply spot European news during the latter days of the war and the several years of peace efforts and League of Nations controversies.

Comics, sports, woman's page features, Sunday magazine pages, editorial page and other features were also added and today the Ledger Syndicate is one of the best-known in the metropolitan field. Its "leader" is Dorothy Dix's daily column which goes into nearly 300 newspapers and is translated into ten foreign languages. In the art field the Ledger's outstanding features are "Vignettes of Life," by J. Norman Lynd and "Hairbreadth Harry," one of the oldest comic strips in point of continuous existence.

In 1918, Capt. J. M. Patterson of the Chicago Tribune (which had been selling its features to other papers since 1910) organized a syndicate subsidiary and placed Arthur Crawford in charge. Later Captain Patterson went to New York to head the Tribune's sister paper, the New York Daily News, and operated the syndicate from New York, changing the name to the Chicago Tribune-Daily News Syndicate, Inc.

In 1919, two young men, John H. Millar and Eugene P. Conley, started a syndicate in Chicago with very little money but a new idea. Heretofore newspapers had been publishing features for children but the majority of these were for very small children. Calling their service Associated Editors, its founders established a "Boys' and Girls' Newspaper," aimed at the "teen" age. This proved a successful venture and although they added other features, notably Robert Quillen's paragraphs, the "Boys' and Girls' Newspaper" remained a best seller until their partnership was dissolved. Millar became the owner of a chain of country newspapers, operated under the name of the Home News Publishing company, and Conley later joined with H. H. Anderson in operating the present Publishers' Syndicate in Chicago.

By the end of the second decade the syndicate was a well-organized business institution and an integral part of American journalism both in the country and the big city field. Hereafter its main problem would be to satisfy the widening interests of a newspaper reading public undergoing post-war adjustments.


~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Addenda

1. The son of a minister in Missouri, where he was born In 1870, Patterson had his first newspaper experience on country weeklies in Iowa, worked on dailies at Fort Madison and Keokuk from 1887 to 1890 when he joined the editorial staff of the Kellogg Newspaper Company. When the Western Newspaper Union took over the Kellogg company he became editor-in-chief of the combined service, a position which he has held for 29 years.

2. The service plan provided for individual service to each paper, the features and departments to be selected by its editor with the assurance that he would have exclusive use of the material in his circulating- territory. The various features were so segregated that any desired combination could be put together in pages of any standard newspaper size in a few minutes' time. The system, although intricate in detail, was simple in operation and made it possible for each editor to control the contents of the printed service in his paper to as great an extent as he could the sections printed in his own office. Under the ''non-interference system" the matter of circulating territories was carefully worked out for every city and town in the United States in which a newspaper is published. The various features used by papers in each territory were so recorded as to make the problem of finding the material that was open in the field of any newspaper a matter of only a few seconds. Any material that was sold to a newspaper through the medium of printed service would not be sold to any other newspaper circulating in the same territory.

3. The Kellogg branches and the number of papers served were as follows: Chicago, 293; St. Louis, 296; Cleveland, 141; Kansas City, 231; Cincinnati, 145; Memphis, 279; Minneapolis, 270; Wichita, 66; and Little Rock, 96.

4. The Northwestern Newspaper Union had been organized about 1880 by H. P. Hall of the St. Paul Globe who sold it to A. E. Bunker. Bunker later sold it to Frederick Driscoll, manager of the St. Paul Pioneer-Press, who early in the 90s turned the business over to that newspaper. Its Fargo branch had been placed at Bismarck, N. D., by C. T. Bowsfield in 1890 and was purchased by the Northwestern in June 1891, when it was moved to Fargo. The Sioux Falls office had originally been located in Aberdeen, S. D. The Indiana Newspaper Union had been founded by W. D. Pratt in 1881.

5. A short time later John H. Perry, president of the American Press Association, organized the Publishers' Autocaster Service, a syndicate supplying a mat service of news features, editorials, cartoons, comic strips and local advertising layouts with a casting box for the publisher to make his own stereotype plates. At one time the Autocaster syndicate was supplying some 1,500 daily and weekly papers with its service.

6. Fish was born in New York in 1870. During his school days at Neenah, Wis., he published an amateur newspaper, "Wisconsin Boys," and later served as a carrier boy and apprentice on the Neenah Weekly Gazette. As a student at Lake Forest academy he installed a job printing press and printed the Lake Forest university student paper, the Stentor. In 1887-88 he operated a job printing plant in Neenah, Wis., became manager of the Lincoln office of the Western Newspaper Union in 1893, a stockholder and director of the company in 1897, auditor in 1899, secretary in 1904, vice president and general manager in 1916 and president in 1918.

7. In 1893 the New York World was the first American newspaper to add a colored supplement to its Sunday edition, including some comic pictures by R. F. Outcault (later the creator of "Buster Brown"), picturing: child life in "Hogan's Alley." In experimenting with color effects, it was decided to print the dress of the leading character in bright yellow. When Hearst made his raid on the World staff in 1895 and took over Outcault and his creation, "The Kid of Hogan's Alley," the World engaged George B. Luks, later a noted painter, to continue the "Yellow Kid" in its Sunday edition. Advertisements of the rival "Yellow Kids" in the World and the Journal plastered every billboard in New York. This war of the comic strips, together with the sensationalism of both papers, led the editor of another New York newspaper to coin the term "yellow journalism," which survives to this day. [the World was not the first American newspaper to add a color supplement -- it was the third, after the Chicago Inter-Ocean and the New York Recorder. Also, the reason the kid was colored yellow being an experimental spot for printing ink is generally now considered to be a tall tale, probably first told by Moses Koenigsberg -- Allan]

8. The Meyer Both company was organized in Chicago in 1900 by two young artists, Oscar Meyer and William C. Both, to syndicate drawings for advertisements of men's clothing. By 1903 their business had become so successful that a matrix department was installed to furnish mats instead of cuts to subscribers to their service which had been expanded to include all lines of display advertising. It is now the largest newspaper advertising syndicate service in the world.

9. Brainard was a Coloradoan, born in Denver in 1865. He worked as a reporter on newspapers in Denver, St. Louis and Chicago, then went to Harvard, from which he was graduated in 1900. For the next five years he practiced law in Omaha, Neb., and in Creede and Cripple Creek, Colo. Going to New York he worked on the staff of the World and other papers. He turned next to advertising and entered the publishing business by founding his own firm, the C. T. Brainard company. He joined Pearson's Publishing company in 1909 and two years later went to the McClure Syndicate of which he was president and treasurer until his death in 1935.

10. Lardner came on to New York but no specific terms were discussed and the ex-Tribune humorist returned to Chicago. Soon afterwards Wheeler heard that a competitor was bidding for Gardner's services and sent him a wire saying he would be glad to come to Chicago to close the contract. Whereupon he received this characteristic reply from Lardner: "If you knew anything about contracts you would realize that we have one made in the presence of six witnesses in the Waldorf bar, three of whom were sober." This was the only contract that Lardner ever had with the Bell Syndicate. He continued to write weekly articles for ten or twelve years in addition to covering world's series baseball games, international yacht races, national conventions and other outstanding events.

Labels:


Comments:
excellent!
A single sentence there constitutes the only information I've been able to read on the origin of the Publisher's Syndicate, for which, correct me if I'm wrong, Allen Saunders managed the comics department. It's usually only mentioned in passing under the Hall syndicate, with which it was later merged. (Pogo, Feiffer etc...)
 
Whoa! Syndicates are coming fast and furious now!
Appreciate the editorial correction; always interesting to see how early historical mistakes are made.
Hey - how 'bout following this up with a post of your old Hogan's Alley Comic Strip Barons "cards".
D.D.Degg
 
Any chance you would know of the printing plates they used? Western Newspaper Union?
 
Post a Comment

Thursday, June 30, 2016

 

Ink-Slinger Profiles by Alex Jay: E. Burton Johnson




1903

Evan Burton Johnson was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on January 21, 1881, according to his World War I and II draft cards. Johnson’s parents were Peter and Nellie.

Johnson grew up in Bridgeton, New Jersey. The Bridgeton Evening News, May 14, 1896, said Johnson was one of twenty students to graduate from Bridgeton High School. In the graduation program, Johnson’s presentation was “One Hour in a Railway Station.”

The Evening News, June 2, 1897, said Johnson contributed a pen-and-ink drawing to the fourth annual art exhibition by pupils of Miss Brewster. The following year, the Evening News, August 30, 1898, said: “Evan B. Johnson, of the Art Department of the Philadelphia ‘Ledger,’ is at home on his vacation.”

The Philadelphia Inquirer (Pennsylvania), March 4, 1900, published a piece of verse, “My Wooing”, by E. Burton Johnson.

In the 1900 U.S. Federal Census, Johnson was the second of three children. He was a news reporter and his father was a glass blower. The family resided in Bridgeton, New Jersey. At some point, Johnson moved to Chicago.

Johnson was on the art staff of the Chicago Inter Ocean. He participated in Second Annual Loan & Sale Exhibition of the Newspaper Artists of Chicago at the Art Institute, which ran from March 9 to 22, 1903. The Muse, April 1903 reviewed the exhibition and said: “Evan B. Johnson of the Inter Ocean presents some good wash drawings…”

The 1904 St. Louis, Missouri, city directory listed artist Johnson at 1221 North Grand Avenue. In the 1906 Denver, Colorado, city directory, Johnson resided at 1453 California and was an artist at the Times. Johnson also contributed sports cartoons to the Denver Rocky Mountain News.


Johnson’s editorial cartoons appeared in newspapers such as the Salt Lake Tribune (Salt Lake City, Utah), December 8, 1907.


At some point Johnson returned to the East Coast. According to American Newspaper Comics (2012), Johnson produced Scientific Sam—Have You Met Him? for Press Publishing. The strip ran from August 16 to October 6, 1909.

Johnson married in 1909. The Evening News, September 13, 1919, recounted his marriage in its column, Ten Years Ago in Bridgeton: “Announcement was made of the marriage of…Evan B. Johnson, another Bridgeton boy, at New York, where he was cartoonist on the Journal.”

The 1910 Trenton, New Jersey, city directory said the cartoonist resided at the Lovell.

Johnson was the subject of a national news story when he was released early from prison. The Sacramento Union (California), March 27, 1914, reported Johnson’s plight.

In May, 1913. Evan Burton Johnson, newspaper cartoonist and writer running wild on a “bat,” got off a Southern Pacific train at Stockton to get a drink. He was en route from Los Angeles to San Francisco. His fare had been paid and he had a few dollars in his pocket.
On May 26, 1913, Johnson pleaded guilty to cashing a worthless check on a saloonkeeper in Stockton and was sentenced to serve four years at hard labor in Folsom prison.
On June 3, 1913, the cartoonist began a fight to establish his innocence and regain his liberty after prison doors had clanged behind him.

On March 28, 1914, tomorrow morning, Johnson will be released from Folsom prison, his sentence having been commuted by Governor Hiram Johnson.

Such is the chronology of the “black letter” days in one year of the life of a talented cartoonist and writer, well known on both sides of the continent. Johnson tells it himself impersonally. He tells how the booze “got him” and then tells of his hopes for the future.

Will Be Free Man Tomorrow.
Johnson will leave Folsom prison tomorrow morning credited with the feat of literally cartooning himself out of the penitentiary and three years of prison life. During his incarceration of less than one year he has drawn at least 200 cartoons trenchantly portraying his views of penal servitude.
His pictorial glimpses of prison life were handled with humor and satire and philosophy. None of his sketches were published, but some of the most powerful found their way to Governor Johnson’s office.

During a visit to Folson [sic] prison last winter the governor interviewed the cartoonist and was interested enough to order an investigation of his case. It was done by Martin Madsen, executive secretary of the governor and a newspaperman himself. Madsen’s investigation disclosed that the avarice of a saloonkeeper and Johnson’s drunken irresponsibility were the primary causes for the worthless check in Stockton. A commutation of sentence to one year, which with credits deducted expires today, was the result of Madsen’s report.

World Anxious to Help Him.

Johnson comes again into the world of men with a chance. He has a berth assured with a big advertising agency in Portland, Ore., and a New York theatrical promoter has offered to produce a three-act drama completed while the writer was in prison.

Johnson was busy while he he was behind the grim walls at Folsom. Several vaudeville playlets were written to supplement “The Millionaire Burglar,” an act conceived by Johnson five years ago and produced in London by Currie Stewart and later in New York.
The story of the crime for which Johnson was convicted is a sordid tale of booze and greed. Johnson was beastly drunk on the train and in bis drunken irrelevancy concluded liquor on the “valley flyer” could be improved on at Stockton. Following out this line of logic he quit the train. Two hours later, broke and boisterous, he was induced to sign a check written by a saloonkeeper, the latter volunteering to fill in the check because Johnson’s scrawl was illegible.

Saloonkeeper Tempter.

Of course the check was not good. It was a check on a Stockton bank—the hank patronized by the saloonkeeper. Johnson was given a chance to make the money good, but he could not. He pleaded guilty and took his medicine and then he found out just how it all had happened and began his fight.

Without money and without friends be figured the quickest way to recognition was to do the things he could do well —that is, cartoon. How well he builded was exhibited by the interest shown in the executive office and his promised release tomorrow.
The San Francisco Chronicle published Johnson’s illustrated story, “How I Cartooned Myself Out of the Penitentiary”, in five weekly installments from May 10 to June 7, 1914.


5/17/1914

On September 12, 1918, Johnson signed his World War I draft card. He and his wife, Edith, lived at 622 West 141 Street, in Manhattan, New York City. Johnson was an artist and advertising writer at Continental Illustrating Company, 2 Rector Street, New York City. His description was tall, medium build with blue eyes and gray hair.

The 1920 census recorded Johnson and his wife in Brooklyn on Bedford Street. He was the proprietor of an advertising company.

The Bronx was advertising writer Johnson’s home, at 1800 Popham Avenue, in the 1925 New York state census.

1927 Mount Vernon, New York, city directory listed Johnson at 284 South Columbus Avenue.

Johnson was a manager in an advertising company as recorded in the 1930 census. He and his wife were at 52 Sherwood Place in Greenburgh, New York.

In the 1940 census, Johnson lived in Brooklyn at 61 Poplar Street. The census indicated the advertising writer was married but it was crossed out. The status of his wife in not known. Johnson’s address was the same on his World War II draft card which said his freelance advertising company was at his home. Johnson named Mrs. Earl Heins of Philadelphia as the person who would always know his address.

The date of Johnson’s passing is not known. The Social Security Applications and Claims Index said a life claim was made February 2, 1955. Johnson’s name has not been found at the Social Security Death Index.



—Alex Jay

Labels:


Comments: Post a Comment

Wednesday, June 29, 2016

 

Obscurity of the Day: Ain't It The Truth?


Sam Milai was one of the anchor cartoonists at the black-owned and operated Pittsburgh Courier from the 1930s to 60s. In addition to his long-running series Bucky, Sunnyboy Sam and Your History, he did a few short-lived ones, like Ain't It The Truth?

This panel, which ran in the weekly Courier from December 17 1938 to June 10 1939, was apparently written for Milai by a fellow named Jack Rutledge. I know nothing about him, but he did seem to have a slightly more sophisticated ability to write cartoon comedy than Milai, as displayed in the sample above. That left Milai to do what he did best -- draw delightful cartoons. 

Labels:


Comments: Post a Comment

Tuesday, June 28, 2016

 

Ink-Slinger Profiles by Alex Jay: Herbert Johnson




1914


Herbert Hollingsworth Johnson was born in Sutton, Nebraska, on October 30, 1878, according to his World War II draft card. His full name was found on a family tree at Ancestry.com.

In he 1880 U.S. Federal Census, Johnson was the youngest of two sons born to Joseph, a broker, and Mary. The family resided in Sutton which was their home in the 1885 Nebraska state census. In the state census, Johnson was the second of four brothers. At some point, the Johnson family moved to Lincoln, Nebraska.

In the Evening Public Ledger (Pennsylvania), February 4, 1919, Johnson said he and Clare Briggs both studied at the Western Normal College in Lincoln, Nebraska. At the time, Johnson was fourteen and Briggs, seventeen.

The Omaha World-Herald, (Nebraska), October 18, 1936, said Johnson attended the University of Nebraska.

At the university he became cartoonist for all school publications. Professors at the university recall how Johnson attended a history examination, turned in a paper with several historical cartoons drawn on blank sheets of paper, received a perfect grade for his effort.
The University Missourian, (Columbia, Missouri), May 20, 1914, published Johnson’s account of how he became a cartoonist. Previously, he had been a clerk and stenographer.
“At seventeen,” Mr. Johnson says, “ I drifted into the office of the cartoonist of the Denver Republican, Mr. Wilmarth. He seemed to take it for granted that I was looking for a job, which I was not, at least not a job as an artist; it never occurred to me to show him some of my sketches, which I did.”

Mr. Johnson was hired and began his career as a cartoonist....
Johnson’s early career was recounted in the San Diego Union (California), August 8, 1926.
…Johnson’s first experience in cartooning began with the Denver Republican, and his first “sit” lasted two months. Then he trekked to Chi[ago] looking for a job and later went to Kansas City, where he hooked up with the Journal of that city. Later he returned to Lincoln, Neb., and entered the state university, taking his degree. Then he drifted out to California….

“In California I walked over the greater part of the state, working at all sorts of day labor jobs. I worked as a snow shoveler in the Yosemite valley, shoveled dirt, did teaming, wrangled horse, and one time rode 75 miles in one day and 50 the next, driving 21 herd of horses. I rambled through most of the state.

“In July I moved on to Lake Tahoe, stayed a short time and then wandered on looking for work. Finally I landed as circulation man on the Arizona Daily Citizen at Tucson. This didn’t last long…as the paper changed hands and I had an opportunity to go back to the Kansas City Journal that fall I decided to move again. I remained there a year as the head of the art and engraving department.

“Then I decided to try my fortune in New York, and arrived in that city Jan. 1, 1903. The first week I was there I made five drawings and submitted the batch to Life. When I went back the next morning the office girl told me that one of them had been accepted and that I would receive a check for $45 by mail within a few days. I thought I misunderstood the number of pictures accepted and asked her to repeat it. She replied that one had been accepted. I was dumbfounded. I had an idea that the best I might receive would be about $5. Well, the next week I had some more drawings to submit and sold one for $80. The next week I didn’t sell any, and the week following I sold some more and soon was drawing regularly for that publication.”
In 1905 he moved to Philadelphia, going with the North American and later to the Saturday Evening Post [in 1912]…

American Newspaper Comics (2012) said Johnson produced the Sunday strip, Eph Jackson, for the North American from December 3, 1905 to February 11, 1906.

Johnson was counted twice in the 1900 census. The cartoonist was named in his parents’ household in Lincoln, Nebraska, at 1705 M Street. Johnson resided in Kansas, Missouri, at 920 Locust Street.

In the 1910 census, Johnson was a resident of Philadelphia and lived at 6333 Drexel Road. He married Helen two years ago and had an eight-month-old daughter. His mother-in-law was part of the household.

Johnson’s address was unchanged in the 1920 census. The cartoonist had two daughters, Herberta and Katherine.

In the 1930 and 1940 censuses, Johnson and family were residents of Huntingdon Valley, Pennsylvania, at 232 Second Street Pike. Johnson continued cartooning at the Saturday Evening Post.

On April 27, 1942, Johnson signed his World War II draft card. He and his wife resided on Morningside Farm in Huntingdon Valley. The card did not name an employer; Johnson was probably retired.

According to the family tree, Johnson passed away December 6, 1946 in Abington, Pennsylvania.



Herbert Johnson


Further Reading
Sutton Nebraska Museum
Herbert Johnson—Sutton’s Political Cartoonist

University of Missouri Bulletin

Volume 15, Number 20, July 1914
Journalism Week, 1914
The Power of the Cartoon

New York Tribune
February 6, 1916
The Cartoonist’s Art

The Toronto World
March 31, 1918
The Women’s Art Association

Cartoons by Herbert Johnson


—Alex Jay

Labels:


Comments: Post a Comment

Monday, June 27, 2016

 

Heritage Auction Items

It's time for another weekly Heritage Auction of items from my collection. This time the Heritage folks went heavy on the Platinum comic books, plus a smattering of other neat items. With a big holiday weekend coming up, I'm guessing that some bargains will be had while many folks are busy celebrating the 4th by eating too many hot dogs and drinking too much beer. Here's the link to the items on Heritage's website, and here are my very informative annotations regarding the items they are offering:

One more big beautiful batch of weekly syndicate proof books, this one is 147 books from NEA (Alley Oop, Robotman, etc) and covering January 2000 - October 2002

A set of 4 highly detailed 2-D metal sculptures of famous Italian comics characters in original boxes. This was a gift to me from Martin Mystere writer and comics scholar Alfredo Castelli of Italy.

A giant batch -- in fact a comic book storage box full -- of duck books from Gladstone -- there should be a number of complete runs of various titles in there




A group of four harder to find Platinum books -- Dolly Dimples and Bobby Bounce by Grace Drayton, Tailspin Tommy, Smitty in very rare dustjacket (not pictured), and a rare original content Cupples & Leon, Tom & Jerry the Jolly Plumbers drawn in a delightful animated cartoon style.


Another four scarcer Platinums -- Freckles & His Friends Famous Funnies, Captain and the Kids Famous Comics, Skeezix and Pal (from Gasoline Alley), and Gasoline Alley (not pictured)

2 platinum books from the Treasure Box series -- Reglar Fellers and Smitty



 A group of six harder to find Platinum books, these ones mostly in the fragile oversized category -- Hawkshaw the Detective, Hans und Fritz, Latest Adventures of Foxy Grandpa, Harold Teen Color & Paint Book, The Story of Happy Hooligan, and a coverless copy of the rare and valuable 1907 Newlyweds and their Baby.



I have asked Heritage to withdraw this lot and reconsider the EXTREME rarity of some of the items. But in case they don't, this is a major collector alert. Along with the three Gulf Funny Weekly sections and the very rare Buttons & Fatty in the Funnies (fragile format and had very limited distribution) are two VERY IMPORTANT early original content comic books. We've talked about the rarity, mystery and importance of The Funnies on this blog at length, and this is the only copy I have ever been able to lay my hands on despite a quarter century of looking. PLUS, included with it comes a large batch of color and black and white photocopies of issues contributed to me for research purposes by other collectors. Second is a copy of Comic Cuts, also so rare it's the only one I've been able to find. It is said to be the direct predecessor of the DC comics line in that Major Wheeler-Nicholson was inspired by this short-lived series to start his foray into comics publishing. What can I say except FIND ANOTHER COPY -- GOOD LUCK!


Very early Platinum hardcover comic, and not listed in Overstreet, The Billy Prunes Cartoons reprints a series of rollicking traveling salesman comics that appeared in the Minneapolis Journal in 1903-1904. Really fun stuff, and of course exceedingly rare.


The Animated Cerebus Portfolio is a collection of 45 color plates by Dave Sim; a delight for aardvark fans.


Jack Kirby's 1972 Gods portfolio, in original sleeve, from back when no one had ever heard of a cartoon art portfolio.


A really neat activity set that allows kids to create their own customized comic strips based on a bunch of pre-drawn characters. A cool idea, but it sure didn't catch on, because I've never seen another. The art is unsigned but really attractive; reminds me a bit of McCay though it isn't him.

Little Jimmy Picture & Story Book, another hard to find Platimun item by Jimmy Swinnerton; really nice condition, and not colored in. 


The great Clare Briggs in a very early book appearance -- 1913. This very large book is scarce but not ridiculously so; however, it is usually found in extremely beaten up and ragged condition. Other than a little bit of handling soiling, this copy is in stunning beautiful shape. 



Not only is The Dumbunnies by Albertine Randall Wheelan a very hard to find Platinum book, this copy is incredible -- almost like it just came off the shelf at the bookstore. 



A collection of 5 Cupples and Leon Bringing Up Father books, including a very sharp copy of the hard to find #24.


A collection of 6 Cupples & Leon Platinum books -- the big deal here is VEP's Clancy The Cop Second Series, which is both in beautiful condition and very scarce.



A group of 5 cartoon instruction related items, including Cartoon & Story Illustration by Robert Peterson, E.C. Matthews Modern Cartoon Course, Lockwood Art School Art Catalogue with a great Nate Collier cover, The Kiddie Cartoonist by Milt Hammer (which actually should qualify as a comic reprint book) and the public service bulletin How Comic Strips Are Made by cartoonist Russ Winterbotham, which is very scarce. 




Heritage has characterized this lot as a bunch of coloring books, which made me do a full Homer Simpson "D'oh" plus face slap. They are actually mostly comic strip reprint books that try to get extra marketing mileage by offering the rugrats a suggestion to color in the pictures after they're done reading. Heritage threw in a 1970s Popeye item (it's kinda neat -- daily comics printed at full original art size), but the rest are fine additions to any really good Platinum collection. I'm not going to describe them all, but I want to highlight a real full-caps RARITY that they threw in without any realization of what it is. I would not be going too far to say that The New York Herald Comic Section Paint Book, which is full of 1915 Herald strips (Mr. Tweedeedle by Gruelle, Snapshot Sam, Colonel Corn, Verbeek's Terrors of the Tiny Tads, etc), might actually be unique. I have never seen or even heard of another copy. It is a small and very unassuming little book that you will likely never have another chance to own in this lifetime. 


Back before the internet made practically every rare book at least somewhat accessible, Rube Goldberg's Chasing The Blues was considered so rare that the folks who ran his estate once offered me a four figure sum for my copy, since they could not locate one for their archives. Well, I guess I should have taken them up on that offer. Today they pop up once in awhile. However, my copy does still have the singular quality that it was originally owned, and doodled in, by long-time King Features cartoonist J.P. Arnot!

Comments: Post a Comment

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

Subscribe to
Posts [Atom]