Pritchard, Harmon, 1890-1938.
Harmon Pritchard was born Herman Prichep on April 16, 1890, in New York. His parents Wililam and Lena, were Jewish immigrants from Poland. Pritchard graduated from Townsend Harris High School and attended City College of New York for two and a half years, before attending the Pace Institute of Accounting, from which he graduated in 1916. In 1915, Pritchard married Jessie Roth, and they settled in New York. They had two children, Wilbur in 1923 and Hubert in 1927. Pritchard tried many different occupations, and he worked in retail, as a co-manager of a bakery, and as a paper salesman, always going back to accounting or bookkeeping. In 1920, Pritchard spent a year in California, whetting his taste for the American West, but he returned to New York in 1921. When the Depression begin in 1930, Pritchard was out of a job for two years, eventually finding work with the State of New York Tax Bureau. At this time, Pritchard began to use his skill at drawing. He found some work as an illustrator for Western Pulp magazines. Between 1929 and 1937, his work was sold at the Gallery Robertson-Deschamps, located at 16 E. 48 Street in New York. When the Rodeo came to Madison Square Garden in 1932, Pritchard approached the manager, requesting permission to draw the animals. He was refused, and told to go work in the stockyards if he liked animals so much. His son remembers that is exactly what he did, returning late at night complaining of the noise and the smells. He took some samples of his work back to the Manager of the Rodeo and received permission to draw at the Rodeo. He became the Rodeo Artist, and sold watercolors, etchings, and drawings in the lobby of Madison Square Garden. During the shows, Pritchard would sit in one of the "bronco stalls, in full regalia, and draw." Pritchard also tried his hand at writing short stories. He wrote with a woman called Myrtle Juliet Foster, and many of their stories were published in various Western Pulp magazines, including Western Rangers. Pritchard also tried, unsuccessfully, to sell a comic strip called "Sammy Stuart: Boy of the Golden West." Despite his fascination with the American West, Pritchard visited only twice. He lived in California for a year, and in 1936 spent some time in Centennial, Wyoming. Pritchard created some of his best artwork while living in Wyoming. Also in 1936, he legally changed his name from Herman Prichep to Harmon Pritchard. He had always used this name for his artwork, and he believed the latter name would be better for his career. In September 1938, Pritchard died of leukemia.
From the description of Harmon Pritchard papers, 1933-1984 [manuscript materials] : at the Autry National Center. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 166497538
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