Nationality Australian Period 1913-1952 | Name Jimmy Bancks Role Cartoonist | |
![]() | ||
Born James Charles Bancks10 May 1889Enmore, New South Wales, Australia ( 1889-05-10 ) Occupation Comic book/strip artist, commercial artist, book illustrator, Died July 1, 1952, Point Piper, Sydney, Australia Books The Golden Years of Ginger Meggs: The Best of J.C. Bancks, 1921-1952 |
James Charles Bancks (10 May 1889 – 1 July 1952) was an Australian cartoonist best known for his comic strip Ginger Meggs.
Contents
Biography
James Charles Bancks was born in Enmore, New South Wales, Australia on 10 May 1889, the son of an Irish railway worker, John Spencer Bancks. Bancks left school at the age of 14 and found employment with a finance company. His first illustrations were accepted and published by The Comic Australian in 1913, followed by The Arrow in 1914. This encouraged Bancks to submit work to The Bulletin, where he was offered a permanent position, which he accepted and remained until 1922. Throughout this period he was studying art under Dattilo Rubbo and Julian Ashton and supplying freelance cartoons to the Sunday Sun.
He created Ginger (later Ginger Meggs) for the Sunday Sun and Sun News-Pictorial. Bancks created The Blimps for the Melbourne Sun in 1923, and this daily strip ran until 1925, the year when he launched Mr. Melbourne Day by Day for the Melbourne Sun-Pictorial.
Personal
On 15 October 1931 Bancks married Jessie Nita Tait (daughter of theatrical entrepreneur, Edward 'E.J.' Tait (1878-1947)) at Darling Point. Jessie died in childbirth on 22 November 1936. In 1938 he married Patricia Quinan in Yuma, Arizona in the United States. They adopted a daughter, the artist Sheena Bancks, who married the actor Michael Latimer.
Bancks died on 1 July 1952, from a heart attack at his home in Point Piper, New South Wales.
On July 26, 1997, the Mayor of Hornsby, New South Wales, formally named a park in Hornsby after Bancks's character Ginger Meggs. The area had an association with Bancks because he used to spend time there in his childhood. The park is located in Valley Road, adjacent to a creek that was named Jimmy Bancks Creek.