Dwiggins, Clare Victor, 1874-1958
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Dwiggins, Clare Victor, 1874-1958
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Dwiggins, Clare Victor, 1874-1958
Dwiggins, Clare Victor
Name Components
Name :
Dwiggins, Clare Victor
Clare Victor Dwiggins (Dwig)
Name Components
Name :
Clare Victor Dwiggins (Dwig)
Dwiggins, Clare Victor, 1874-
Name Components
Name :
Dwiggins, Clare Victor, 1874-
Dwiggins, Clare V
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Name :
Dwiggins, Clare V
Dwiggins, Clare Victor (Dwig,
Name Components
Name :
Dwiggins, Clare Victor (Dwig,
Dwig, 1874-1958
Name Components
Name :
Dwig, 1874-1958
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Biographical History
Dwiggins was born in 1874 in Wilmington, OH; in 1890, began work as a cartoonist, drawing for the St. Louis post dispatch, New York journal, Philadelphia inquirer, North American and telegraph, and international syndicate; became art editor for publisher M. Walter Dunne; illustrator for Crankisms (1901), Brevities (1903), and Completed proverbs (1904), all by Lisle De Vaux Matthewman, and for Whimlets (1903) by Samuel I. Stinson; author of Rubáiyát of an egg (1905) and The skull toast book (1904); he died in Oct. 1958.
Biography
Dwiggins was born in 1874 in Wilmington, Ohio; in 1890, began work as a cartoonist, drawing for the St. Louis post dispatch, New York journal, Philadelphia inquirer, North American and telegraph, and international syndicate; became art editor for publisher M. Walter Dunne; illustrator for Lisle De Vaux Matthewman's Crankisms (1901), Brevities (1903), and Completed proverbs (1904), also for Samuel I. Stinson's Whimlets (1903); author of Rubáiyát of an egg (1905) and The skull toast book (1904); He composed a number of nationally syndicated comic strips including, “Ophelia,” “Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer,” “Peter Tumbledown,” “School Days,” “Footprints on the sands of time,” and “Zeke Carsie says”; he died in October 1958.
Clare Victor Dwiggens (1874-1958) was born in Union Township, Ohio in 1874. At the age of sixteen he went to work at an architectural firm. After a year, he hit the hobo trail with a friend and traveled around the country for four years. In 1897, Dwiggens settled in St. Louis where he met and married Bessie Lindsay. He worked as a cartoonist for the Post Dispatch, and was also employed by the Philedelphia Inquirer and the New York World.
Dwiggens found acceptance as a cartoonist in New York. His comic strips were syndicated by McClure, McNaughts and Ledger. His first strip, "School Days," ran for five years in the New York World. Dwiggens was selected by the Mark Twain Estate to draw "Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn" for the McClure Syndicate. This strip ran for ten years. Dwiggens authored and illustrated many other comic strips, wrote a monthly cartoon feature, wrote and illustrated books, and illustrated WWII posters. At the time of his death in 1959 Dwiggens was working on illustrations for the "Rubaiyat."
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/244135844
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no95048187
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/no95048187
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q5126272
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Languages Used
Subjects
Caricatures and cartoons
Cartoonists
Cartoonists
Comic books, strips, etc.
Fine Arts
Illustration of books
Illustrators
Illustrators
World War, 1939-1945
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Occupations
Cartoonists
Illustrators
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United States
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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>