Theodore Roosevelt, Cartoons, and Me
by Rick Marschall
by Rick Marschall
Many cartoonists – and toymakers – have adopted the
Teddy Bear through the years. It was first depicted by
Clifford Berryman, who made it his “mascot.” |
All of these “Crowded Life
in Comics” memoirs are personal, by definition, and this week a little more so.
The occasion – or excuse – is the 100th anniversary of the death
Theodore Roosevelt, another prime interest in my life.
Roosevelt was an early hero
of mine. I began collecting books by him and about him; they now number more
than 350. I collected memorabilia, and now have a fair collection of
autographs, buttons, posters, and ephemera. I conducted all the research I
could, including eventually getting to know his daughter “Princess Alice,” born
in 1884; and today I know several latter descendants.
I have written two books
about TR. TR in ‘12 is an expanded exhibition catalog about the Bull
Moose campaign for the presidency. BULLY! is a full-length, 100,000-word
biography illustrated exclusively with cartoons – vintage cartoons from
Roosevelt’s day.
The latter project, and
several exhibitions, were at the intersections of my two early and major
pursuits as a budding historian and collector. I remember, as a kid, obsessing
about old comics and ol’ Roosevelt, sometimes realizing that I was alternately specializing
and not multi-tasking. (Plus which, I had other hobbies too, and a predictable
proclivity for penury due to these addictions.)
One nexus was the cartoons
about Roosevelt and his time. Being attracted to early humor magazines with a fanaticism
I employed in acquiring old Sunday funnies, comic post cards, reprint books,
song sheets, and such, I was able to acquire runs of the magazines Puck,
Judge, Life, and others. For week after week – year after
glorious year – there were cartoons about Roosevelt in their pages. And other
presidents, also-rans, and celebrities. Fads and fancies from the Civil War to
the First World War and beyond. Glorious colors; stale humor; social changes;
forgotten cartoonists; great ads; masterpieces lost to history. I collected
other magazines and runs of newspapers, too; not only the Sunday comics.
… all of which fed the
collector monster possessing my “mind” but nurturing my heart too – however the
metaphor should go – and its passion for history; for popular culture, which I
suppose is my specialty.
Percy Crosby drew his
famous character Skippy, paying tribute to patriotism,
the Plattsburgh
soldiers’ training camp, and his friend TR Jr.
|
Enough. I will share here a
few of the Roosevelt cartoons I collected through the years. Not clippings or
reproductions, but original art I have been blessed to acquire through the
years. Enjoy.
And speaking of being
blessed, I hope that readers or their children might also experience what I did
in this aspect of a “crowded life.” To call it turning a hobby into a
profession is true, but prosaic – and most prosaic things do not reflect the
passion and joy involved. Discovering the past by holding artifacts from
the past, not merely reading books or articles or charts or graphs, makes them more
interesting. It makes history more interesting. And I think it makes us all
more interesting too.
The great Homer Davenport
drew strong anti-Roosevelt cartoons
when he worked for Hearst early in his
career, but later was
an effective ally, and close friend
|
Berryman constantly was
asked to draw the Teddy Bear. This crayon
sketch, possibly for a lecture
appearance, is 30 inches tall.
|
A 1911 caricature of TR by his
friend and admirer James Montgomery Flagg
|
Clifford Berryman of the
Washington Star was present as cartoonist
or illustrator at every phase
of TR’s life, even depicting him greeting voters.
|
Clifford Berryman sketched the ubiquity of Roosevelt in his professional
life… and TR’s presence on the national political scene
|
◖◗
22
I accidentally rejected a comment from strand – here it is!
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed Rick Marshall's article and collection of Theodore Roosevelt cartoons this a.m. As TR would say, "Deelighted."
I just saw this. Thank you for the kind words!
Delete