Frank McKinney (Kin) Hubbard created the comic strip character Abe Martin which first appeared in the Indianapolis News on December 17, 1904. The comic's setting was the fictitious town of Bloom Center in Brown County, Indiana. Hubbard created more characters and the comic strip was eventually syndicated as was his news column "Short Furrows." Books of Abe Martin sayings were published.Hubbard is seated at a drawing table working on a sketch. He is wearing a vest over a striped shirt
No newspaper comic character enjoys a larger international audience than Garfield. While newspaper c...
McCutcheon moved to Chicago after graduation from college and began work in the art department for t...
Narrative by Junebug Clark: Caption is from December 30, 1982, Farmington, Michigan. Type written ph...
Abe Martin, a folksy Brown County cartoon character created by Frank McKinney “Kin” Hubbard, first a...
In those early years the Hoosier Salon was open to artists who had lived in Indiana for at least one...
Cartoonist Billy Ireland drew this self-caricature, which was from "Accountants Reports and Exhibits...
The newspaper comic strip was well established in the United States by World War I. It had become a ...
Cowboy artist Fred Harmon, at left, visited his friend, Bill Freyse, in March of 1949. Harmon create...
The George Arents Research Library for Special Collections at Syracuse University has an extensive c...
Writer/humorist George Ade (1866-1944) and McCutcheon were friends and collaborators for over 50 yea...
From 1917 through the mid-1920s, Roy Grove was a cartoonist with the Newspaper Enterprise Associatio...
Benjamin Franklin Hammond [1883-1970] worked as a cartoonist for the Wichita Eagle from 1912 to 1965...
For just over a hundred years, the front page of the Des Moines Register featured a daily editorial ...
Mittie Elizabeth Creekmore Welty mailed the comic strip from Jackson, Mississippi, to Hubert Creekmo...
Titled "Mac' is Division Playboy, Created By Beebe Corporal," this newspaper article gives informati...
No newspaper comic character enjoys a larger international audience than Garfield. While newspaper c...
McCutcheon moved to Chicago after graduation from college and began work in the art department for t...
Narrative by Junebug Clark: Caption is from December 30, 1982, Farmington, Michigan. Type written ph...
Abe Martin, a folksy Brown County cartoon character created by Frank McKinney “Kin” Hubbard, first a...
In those early years the Hoosier Salon was open to artists who had lived in Indiana for at least one...
Cartoonist Billy Ireland drew this self-caricature, which was from "Accountants Reports and Exhibits...
The newspaper comic strip was well established in the United States by World War I. It had become a ...
Cowboy artist Fred Harmon, at left, visited his friend, Bill Freyse, in March of 1949. Harmon create...
The George Arents Research Library for Special Collections at Syracuse University has an extensive c...
Writer/humorist George Ade (1866-1944) and McCutcheon were friends and collaborators for over 50 yea...
From 1917 through the mid-1920s, Roy Grove was a cartoonist with the Newspaper Enterprise Associatio...
Benjamin Franklin Hammond [1883-1970] worked as a cartoonist for the Wichita Eagle from 1912 to 1965...
For just over a hundred years, the front page of the Des Moines Register featured a daily editorial ...
Mittie Elizabeth Creekmore Welty mailed the comic strip from Jackson, Mississippi, to Hubert Creekmo...
Titled "Mac' is Division Playboy, Created By Beebe Corporal," this newspaper article gives informati...
No newspaper comic character enjoys a larger international audience than Garfield. While newspaper c...
McCutcheon moved to Chicago after graduation from college and began work in the art department for t...
Narrative by Junebug Clark: Caption is from December 30, 1982, Farmington, Michigan. Type written ph...