| The History of Comics to 1937 |
During the 18th and 19th centuries, comic
strips were not very popular. Some caricatures and small cartoons did exist
but were politically directed. In the late 19th century, the modern comic
strip came into existence and gained almost instant popularity. On
May 5, 1895, the first comic strip appeared in the New York Sunday World
. Drawn by Richard Felton Outcault, Hogan's Alley became the first
American cartoon strip This cartoon strip later became known as The
Yellow Kid because of the main characters' long, dirty yellow
night-shirt . This comic strip was the first comic of its kind to use the
balloon type element that contained the words that characters spoke.
Outcault soon left the New York Sunday World and printed his comic
strip in the New York Journal. The Yellow Kid became proof that comic
strips sold in newspapers, and soon became a must in all newspapers. Other early popular comic strips were Outcault's Buster Brown, Carl Emil Schultze's Foxy Grandpa, Wimdsor McCay's Little Nemo in Slumberland, and Charles William Kahles's Hairbreadth Harry . The first successful daily comic strip, Mutt and Jeff appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle on November 15, 1907 . The first comic book was called The Funnies which was printed in 1929 . There were thirteen issues, and its pages were in full color and were the size of a tabloid newspaper. The first comic book to sell in an actual new-stand was called Famous Funnies, and appeared in 1934 . Most
comic book of this time were humoristic and had themes that portrayed
children and pets . The three main types of comics, detective, science
fiction, and jungle comics, of the 1930's were
represented by Dick Tracy, Flash Gordan, and Tarzan.
These three comics were the most popular of the time and were the turning
point in comic book history |
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By Denise Logsdon |