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John T McCutcheon

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Name
  
John McCutcheon

Siblings
  
George Barr McCutcheon

Children
  
Shaw McCutcheon

Education
  
Role
  
Political cartoonist


John T. McCutcheon John T McCutcheon American cartoonist Britannicacom

Died
  
June 10, 1949, Lake Forest, Illinois, United States

Parents
  
John Barr McCutcheon, Clara Glick

Awards
  
Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning

John T. McCutcheon


John Tinney McCutcheon (May 6, 1870 – June 10, 1949) was a Pulitzer Prize-winning American newspaper political cartoonist who was known as the "Dean of American Cartoonists".

Contents

John T. McCutcheon John T McCutcheon Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Biography

John T. McCutcheon On Decoration Day by John T McCutcheon Fanboycom

McCutcheon was born near South Raub, Tippecanoe County, Indiana to Captain John Barr McCutcheon and Clara Glick McCutcheon. He was the younger brother of novelist George Barr McCutcheon, writer of the Graustark books. His son, Shaw McCutcheon was an editorial cartoonist.

John T. McCutcheon Draw Your Own Conclusions Political Cartooning Then and

He attended Purdue University, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity, and graduated in 1889 with a Bachelor of Science degree. At Purdue, he worked with typographer Bruce Rogers on the student newspaper and yearbook. On the Purdue campus, McCutcheon is memorialized in a coeducational dormitory, John T. McCutcheon Hall. The lobby displays an original of one of his drawings, a nearly life-size drawing of a young man.

Career

John T. McCutcheon Rosebud Archives The Colors John T McCutcheon

McCutcheon moved to Chicago, Illinois, where he worked at the Chicago Morning News (later named the Chicago Record) and then at the Chicago Tribune from 1903 until his retirement in 1946. In 1907, his famous cartoon, "Injun Summer," was first published. It would make annual appearances in the Tribune for decades.

John T. McCutcheon Draw Your Own Conclusions Political Cartooning Then and

During World War I, McCutcheon worked as a correspondent and combat artist, flying over battlefields in a bi-plane to research and then provide artwork about the war for publication.

John T. McCutcheon John T McCutcheon American cartoonist Britannicacom

From 1916 to 1979 the McCutcheon family owned Blue Lagoon Island, a cay off Nassau in the Bahamas. In 1917, McCutcheon married Evelyn Shaw, the daughter of his friend Howard Van Doren Shaw, despite being twenty-four years older. McCutcheon introduced Carl Sandburg to the Bahamian song The John B. Sails which subsequently became a standard.

John T. McCutcheon Rosebud Archives Injun Summer John T McCutcheon

He was the first President of the Chicago Zoological Society from 1921 until 1948, overseeing the construction, opening and early years of Brookfield Zoo. There was talk of renaming the zoo after him, but he refused the offer. He enjoyed traveling the world throughout his life.

Awards

McCutcheon received the Pulitzer Prize for Cartoons in 1932 for his Depression-era cartoon about a victim of bank failure. McCutcheon High School in his home county Tippecanoe is named in his honor.

Travel Plaza 1, Mile Post 22 at Portage, Indiana of the Indiana Toll Road is named after John T. McCutcheon.

McCutcheon died in Lake Forest, Illinois.

Works

  • Cartoons: A Selection of One Hundred Drawings (1903); with introduction by George Ade
  • Army Song Book. Washington, DC: War Department Commission on Training Camp Activities, 1918.
  • Bird Center Cartoons; A Chronicle of Social Happenings at Bird Center Illinois, 1904.
  • The Mysterious Stranger and Other Cartoons, 1905.
  • Injun Summer, 1907.
  • T.R. in Cartoons, 1910.
  • Doing the Grand Canyon, illustrated, with cartoons by the author, published by Fred Harvey, 1922.
  • The Island Song Book, illustrated with photographs and cartoons by the author. Self-published, 1927.
  • Drawn from Memory: The Autobiography of John T. McCutcheon, Bobbs-Merrill, 1950.
  • Slow Ball Cartoonist: The Extraordinary Life of Indiana Native and Pulitzer Prize Winner John T. McCutcheon of the Chicago Tribune, ISBN 9781557537300, Purdue University Press, 2016
  • References

    John T. McCutcheon Wikipedia