Archibald, Joe, 1898-

Joseph Stopford Archibald was born on September 2, 1898, in Newington, New Hampshire to Alexander and Angelina Archibald. At the age of twelve, he had sold his first cartoon to Judge magazine. By the age of fifteen he had begun his writing career with a prize-winning contribution to the Boston post. Archibald attended Chicago Academy of Fine Art before enlisting in the United States Navy during World War I. During the war, Archibald served as staff cartoonist for a service publication. After his military service, he returned to New England, and became a reporter for several Boston newspapers. In the 1920s Archibald became the sports columnist and a cartoonist for the New York-based McClure Newspaper Syndicate. He married Dorothy Allison Fenton in November, 1927. Archibald worked in a variety of positions ranging from editorial art director for several publishing companies, to a trick cartoonist entertaining troops during World War II. He published many free-lance stories, and in 1947 published his first book, Rebel halfback. Archibald would eventually publish over fifty books aimed at young boys. Most of these books would be focused on sports and military stories, and included titles such as Touchdown glory, West Point wingback, Right field rookie, and Special Forces trooper. He also worked on television scripts and appeared as a guest cartoonist on national television programs. Archibald resided many years in Port Chester, New York, where he was involved in amateur theater and the American Cancer Society. He died March 1, 1986 in Barrington, New Hampshire at the age of 87.

From the description of Joseph S. Archibald papers, 1962-1967. (University of Oregon Libraries). WorldCat record id: 53148482

...

Publication Date Publishing Account Status Note View

2016-08-12 08:08:04 pm

System Service

published

Details HRT Changes Compare

2016-08-12 08:08:04 pm

System Service

ingest cpf

Initial ingest from EAC-CPF

Pre-Production Data