| Pre-Golden Age |
Before
comic books, there were comic strips. In 1892, James Swinnerton published
the first newspaper comic strip ever called "The Little Bears and Tigers,"
run by the San Francisco Examiner. The first successful comic
series, though, was Richard Outcault's "Down in Hogan's Alley," which
debuted July 7, 1895, in
Joseph Pulitzer's New York World as a single
picture of life in an urban slum. Its central character was "The Yellow Kid,
who was bald, impish tyke with a knowing grin
The first strip to make regular use of speech
balloons was Rudolph Dirks's "The More comic strips followed. Soon, newspapers had sections dedicated to the things, featuring the adventures and escapades of Dick Tracy, Popeye the Sailor Man, Flash Gorden, Charlie Brown, and many more characters. Later on, a select collection of these strips were reprinted in magazine format, becoming the first comic book in recorded history
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By Nate Raymond |