Hubbry Logo
search
logo

Bill Blackbeard

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers

Wikipedia

from Wikipedia

William Elsworth Blackbeard (April 28, 1926 – March 10, 2011), better known as Bill Blackbeard, was a writer-editor and the founder-director of the San Francisco Academy of Comic Art, a comprehensive collection of comic strips and cartoon art from American newspapers. This major collection, consisting of 2.5 million clippings, tearsheets and comic sections, spanning the years 1894 to 1996, has provided source material for numerous books and articles by Blackbeard and other researchers.[1]

Key Information

Biography

[edit]

Born in Lawrence, Indiana, Blackbeard spent his childhood in this rural town northeast of Indianapolis. His grandfather ran a service station; his father, Sydney Blackbeard, was an electrician, and his mother, Thelma, handled the bookkeeping for Sydney's business. When he was eight or nine, the family moved to Newport Beach, California, where he attended high school.[2]

During World War II, Blackbeard served with the 89th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squad, 9th Army, in France, Belgium and Germany. In the post-war years, he went to Fullerton College on the G.I. Bill, studying history, English and American literature. He also worked on the staff of the Torch, the college yearbook.

Books

[edit]
The Smithsonian Collection of Newspaper Comics

Blackbeard vigorously defended comic strips as worthy of study. "The comic strip is the only wholly indigenous American art form. . . . Only the tasteless and uninformed consider comic art trivial." He described comic books, by contrast, as "meretricious dreck," which may have marginalized him in the broader field of comic art.[1][3][4][5]

As a freelance writer, Blackbeard wrote, edited or contributed to more than 200 books on cartoons and comic strips, including 100 Years of Comic Strips, the Krazy & Ignatz series (Eclipse/Fantagraphics) and NBM's 18-volume Wash Tubbs and Captain Easy. His contributions to various magazines has been documented by illustrator John Adcock, who commented:

When Bill Blackbeard began chronicling the comic strip there was no appreciation of comic strips by academics and institutions. Comics were still an untouchable subject for adults. The study of comic strips was considered to be the domain of morons and illiterates. Most critical articles on the comics, as Bill noted more than once, appeared in the lowly form of the zine, with low distribution and a small readership. Bill Blackbeard considered the best of the comic strips to be the equal of great art, cinema and literature, and spent his highly productive life trying to convince the world that the subject was worthy of their attention.[6]

In 1977, Blackbeard and the jazz critic Martin Williams collaborated on The Smithsonian Collection of Newspaper Comics, regarded by the comics community as a major work in the field because it provides an authoritative overview of the 20th century's leading strips.[7]

San Francisco Academy of Comic Art

[edit]

Finding that libraries were discarding bound newspapers after microfilming, Blackbeard established the San Francisco Academy of Comic Art in 1968 as a non-profit organization and began collecting newspapers from California libraries, expanding his scope to institutions nationwide. Blackbeard and his wife Barbara, married in 1966, were forced out of several San Francisco addresses by the growth of Bill's collections. The Academy found its longest lasting home in a Spanish stucco home at 2850 Ulloa Street in San Francisco's quiet residential Sunset district.[8] The scope of this collection was detailed by Jeet Heer:

In the early 1960s, Blackbeard, then a middle-aged World War II vet and pulp fiction enthusiast, noted that local libraries were microfilming their newspaper collections and throwing away the paper versions, on the grounds that the paper copies took up too much space and were going to crumble quickly. Blackbeard immediately understood the dangers this presented to anyone interested in using newspapers as a source and in particular how this would make it impossible to preserve the history of comic strips. A newspaper tearsheet for a comic strip could be reprinted and give readers a good idea of what the strip looked like, something that was impossible from microfilm. Blackbeard asked his local library if he could have the newspapers they were throwing away. He was told that as a private citizen he wouldn’t be allowed to but they could be donated to an institution. Blackbeard’s solution was to make himself into an institution, becoming the Founder-Director of the San Francisco Academy of Comics Art in 1968. Newly incorporated, Blackbeard was in a position to save and salvage as many newspapers as he could get his hands on before they were sent to the rubbish pile. Working with a strong network of comics fans, he got the word out to libraries all across North America that the San Francisco Academy of Comics Art was where they should send those large bound volumes of newspapers. Blackbeard’s network included two retired bus drivers (Gale Paulson and George Cushing) who criss-crossed the continent on Ryder Trucks (loaned from another friend) packed to the gills with yellowing newsprint.[9]

During three decades of acquisition, Blackbeard accumulated 75 tons of material, which filled both the upstairs rooms and the ground-floor garage. In 1997, he learned that the owner of the home was not going to renew his lease, necessitating a new location for the SFACA collection.[2]

Blackbeard then entered into negotiations with Lucy Shelton Caswell, curator of Ohio State University's Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum (then known as the Cartoon Research Library).[10] In January 1998, six semi-trailer trucks moved the collection from California to Ohio. The Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum offered this description of Blackbeard's collection:

Materials in the collection include clipped comic strips, single comic pages, complete Sunday comic sections, and entire newspapers. The focus of the first two years of work on this collection, supported by grants from the Getty Foundation, the Scripps Howard Foundation and the Charles D. Farber Memorial Foundation, has been to establish a chronological run of each comic feature, either by amassing a group of clippings, or by identifying each feature's location in the collection of Sunday comic sections. The distinction between comic clippings and comic sections is significant. The collector's original intent was to establish a complete run, from beginning to end, of every comic feature to have appeared in an American newspaper. In most cases, this meant clipping examples of each feature from various newspapers, for two reasons. First, no single newspaper could have run every comic feature. Second, any given newspaper might print a feature for a certain length of time, and then drop it, either temporarily or permanently. Newspaper strikes and mail strikes could also interfere with the continuous run of a feature in a given publication. However, some features were never clipped from the original comic sections in which they appeared. The collector recognized that many of the early comic sections, dating from the 1890s to the 1920s, were extremely rare, and should be kept intact. In addition to the comic art they contain, many feature elaborate headers, marginal illustrations and illustrated advertisements, all forming part of the overall design of the publication.[7]

Double Fold

[edit]

It was Blackbeard who told Nicholson Baker about "fraudulent" studies used by libraries to justify their massive destruction of books and newspapers, information documented by Baker in his book Double Fold: Libraries and the Assault on Paper (2001), a National Book Critics Circle Award Winner. Baker, who devoted the preface of that book to his discussions with Blackbeard, later commented:

The thing about Blackbeard—he is like so many collectors in that he saved something terribly important, but he was single-minded: he saved things with a razor. He had no interest in the women’s sections, in the magazine sections, in the beautiful photographs that had nothing to do with comics.[1]

According to Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum curator Jenny E. Robb, Blackbeard left bound volumes intact in later years.[1]

Later life and death

[edit]

After he sold the collection to Ohio State in 1997, Blackbeard moved from San Francisco to Santa Cruz, California, where his wife liked to surf.[11] He continued to contribute to books and indulge his interests, in addition to comic strips, in pulp magazines, old films and penny dreadfuls.

Blackbeard died on March 10, 2011, in Watsonville, California, at age eighty-four.[1]

Awards

[edit]

Blackbeard received a 2004 Eisner Award for Krazy & Ignatz, the archival series of Krazy Kat Sunday pages that included additional work and biographical information on George Herriman .

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Sources

[edit]
[edit]

Grokipedia

from Grokipedia
Bill Blackbeard (April 28, 1926 – March 10, 2011) was an American comic strip historian, archivist, and collector known for his pioneering efforts to preserve the original artwork and historical legacy of American newspaper comic strips. [1] [2] In the mid-20th century, as libraries across the United States discarded bound volumes of newspapers in favor of microfilm, Blackbeard systematically rescued hundreds of thousands of fragile pages containing daily and Sunday comic strips, preventing the loss of irreplaceable source material from the medium's early decades. [3] [1] He founded the San Francisco Academy of Comic Art in 1968 as a nonprofit organization dedicated to this preservation mission, amassing an enormous collection that eventually included millions of comic strip clippings, bound volumes, and related materials stored in his home. [3] [2] Blackbeard traveled extensively to acquire discarded newspaper archives from institutions including the Library of Congress, personally clipping, organizing, and indexing the material to make it accessible for study and reproduction. [3] In 1998, facing space constraints, he transferred the bulk of his collection—estimated at over 75 tons—to the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum at Ohio State University, where it remains a foundational resource for scholars of graphic narrative and popular culture. [3] [2] Blackbeard also advanced recognition of newspaper comics as a legitimate art form through his editorial and scholarly work, most notably co-editing the landmark The Smithsonian Collection of Newspaper Comics (1977) with Martin Williams, which showcased the artistic and cultural significance of early strips in high-quality reproductions. [1] [2] He edited numerous reprint volumes and contributed historical essays, introductions, and source material to projects featuring artists such as Winsor McCay, George Herriman, and E. C. Segar, ensuring that classic works reached new audiences. [2] [3] Through his tireless advocacy, Blackbeard effectively provided the comics medium with its historical memory and established the foundation for modern appreciation and academic study of the American newspaper strip. [1] [2]

Early Life

Childhood and Early Interest in Comics

William Elsworth Blackbeard was born on April 28, 1926, in Lawrence, Indiana. [4] [5] His grandfather operated a service station, his father Sidney Blackbeard worked as an electrician, and his mother Thelma handled bookkeeping for her husband's business. [4] [6] When he was eight or nine years old, around 1935, his family relocated to Newport Beach, California. [7] [5] At age 12, Blackbeard discovered a garage brimming with stacks of old newspapers containing colorful Sunday comics sections, some dating back to 1923, which he took home. [6] This find sparked his lifelong passion for newspaper comic strips, leading him to scour neighborhood caches for more discarded papers. [4] He later reflected on the moment: "Once I discovered this, I had no other interest in life than finding these caches of newspapers." [4] From childhood onward, Blackbeard maintained an exclusive focus on newspaper strips, regarding comic books as inferior and dismissing many superhero titles as "meretricious dreck" or "psychotic." [1] This early preference for the art form of newspaper comics laid the foundation for his later collecting pursuits.

Military Service and Education

Bill Blackbeard served in the United States Army during World War II as a member of the 89th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squad, 9th Army, participating in operations in France, Belgium, and Germany. [8] After his discharge, he attended Fullerton College under the G.I. Bill, where he studied literature and history. [5] Sources also indicate his coursework included English and American literature. [4] When his G.I. Bill benefits expired, Blackbeard left college and began a career as a freelance writer, contributing fiction to pulp magazines, including Weird Tales, and nonfiction to various other periodicals. [4] His education in literature and history provided a foundation for his later research into comic strips.

Career in Comics Preservation

Founding the San Francisco Academy of Comic Art

In 1968, Bill Blackbeard founded the San Francisco Academy of Comic Art as a nonprofit organization specifically to accept donations of bound newspaper volumes that libraries were discarding after microfilming, thereby legally enabling libraries to transfer materials they could not otherwise donate to private individuals.[9][10] This step addressed a critical gap in preservation he had identified in the mid-1960s, when research for a planned comprehensive history of American comic strips—initially contracted by Oxford University Press but never completed—revealed that no institution maintained retrievable primary sources of full newspaper comic runs.[11][9] The academy operated primarily from Blackbeard's home at 2850 Ulloa Street in San Francisco's Sunset District, which he shared with his wife Barbara; the collection quickly filled the garage, basement, and multiple rooms of the house as materials accumulated.[10][3] Blackbeard relied on volunteers to help manage operations, while bound volumes were collected and transported across North America in Ryder trucks frequently driven by retired bus drivers.[9][10]

Acquisition and Management of the Collection

Bill Blackbeard acquired bound volumes of historic newspapers from libraries across North America that were deaccessioning them in favor of microfilm replacements. [4] [12] Key sources included the Library of Congress with its extensive warehouses of mint-condition bound files in Alexandria, Virginia, as well as the San Francisco Public Library, Chicago Public Library, Los Angeles Public Library, and other institutions. [4] [12] He personally traveled the country to secure and transport these materials, often using rental trucks to bring them to San Francisco. [4] The collection grew to approximately 75 tons, encompassing about 2.5 million clipped daily comic strips, 350,000 clipped Sunday strips, complete Sunday sections, and bound newspapers spanning from the 1890s to the 1990s. [4] Early efforts focused on hand-clipping comic strips from bound volumes using razors, a process undertaken by Blackbeard, his wife Barbara, and volunteers, after which the clippings were organized into strict chronological runs under each comic strip title. [4] Over time, Blackbeard shifted toward leaving many volumes intact, particularly preserving early Sunday sections from the 1890s to the 1920s whole to maintain their rarity and full-color context for researchers. [4] Materials were stored in dim conditions within filing cabinets and custom shelving to minimize light damage to the fragile newsprint. [4] This archive supplied the primary source material for Blackbeard's publications and reprint projects. [4]

Publications and Editorial Work

Major Anthologies and Books

Bill Blackbeard produced several influential anthologies and books that showcased the history and artistry of American newspaper comics, most drawing extensively from the holdings of the San Francisco Academy of Comic Art. [4] His co-edited work The Smithsonian Collection of Newspaper Comics (1977), prepared with Martin Williams, stands as a landmark overview of the medium, presenting a wide range of strips from their late-19th-century origins through the 1970s and serving as a foundational resource for serious study of comics as cultural history. [6] [4] In 1995, Blackbeard co-edited the two-volume The Comic Strip Century: Celebrating 100 Years of an American Art Form, which further explored the evolution of the art form across its first century. [4] He also authored R.F. Outcault’s The Yellow Kid (1995), a detailed examination of the pioneering comic strip character and its creator. [6] Additional notable titles include The Comic Strip Art of Lyonel Feininger, which collected and introduced the artist's early 20th-century strips The Kin-Der-Kids and Wee Willie Winkie's World, and Sherlock Holmes in America (1981), an illustrated survey of the detective's appearances in American illustration and comics. [13] [14] Overall, Blackbeard contributed to or edited material for over 200 books on cartoons and comic strips, many drawing from his archival resources to preserve and contextualize the medium's heritage. [4] [6]

Archival Reprint Series

Bill Blackbeard contributed significantly to the preservation and dissemination of classic American comic strips through his editorial work on several serialized reprint series dedicated to individual titles. These projects emphasized high-quality reproductions sourced from his San Francisco Academy of Comic Art collection, often supplemented with his introductions, historical commentary, and biographical material to provide scholarly context.[10] He edited the Hyperion Library of Classic American Comic Strips, published in 1977, which comprised nearly two dozen volumes reprinting early runs of foundational strips such as Bud Fisher's A. Mutt (1907-1908), George McManus's Bringing Up Father (1913-1914), Billy DeBeck's Barney Google (1919-1920), Percy Crosby's Skippy (1925-1926), Frank Godwin's Connie (1929-1930), and others including Baron Bean, Thimble Theatre introducing Popeye, and Happy Hooligan. These volumes made rare pre-1930 material widely available for the first time in book form, directly drawing from Blackbeard's preserved archive of clipped newspaper pages.[15][10] Blackbeard oversaw NBM's 12-volume reprint of Milton Caniff's Terry and the Pirates, issued from 1984 to 1987, for which he provided introductions and contextual notes that highlighted the strip's production history and cultural significance.[10][16] He similarly edited NBM's 18-volume The Complete Wash Tubbs & Captain Easy, published from 1987 to 1992, contributing introductions and biographical details on Roy Crane to enrich the presentation of the adventure strip's complete run.[10] Blackbeard edited Fantagraphics' Krazy & Ignatz series, which collected George Herriman's Krazy Kat Sunday pages with additional archival content and biographical information on Herriman; the series won a 2004 Eisner Award.[17][2]

Controversies and Collaborations

Criticism of Preservation Methods

Blackbeard's early preservation efforts centered on using a razor to clip comic strips from bound newspaper volumes obtained from libraries, frequently discarding the remaining portions of the papers, including women's pages, magazine sections, and photographs unrelated to comics. [5] Nicholson Baker, reflecting on these practices, remarked that Blackbeard "saved things with a razor" and "had no interest in the women's sections, in the magazine sections, in the beautiful photographs that had nothing to do with comics," his tone described as pained during a telephone interview. [5] Baker's comments underscore a critique of Blackbeard's single-minded concentration on comic strips, which led to the destruction of broader historical context embedded in the discarded non-comics material. [5] This approach prioritized comics preservation over maintaining the integrity of entire newspaper issues as historical artifacts. [5] In later years, Blackbeard altered his techniques, electing to leave bound volumes intact instead of disassembling them for clipping. [5] These early methods nonetheless enabled the large-scale rescue of comic strips from potential destruction. [5]

Contribution to Double Fold

Bill Blackbeard's extensive experience rescuing discarded newspaper volumes from libraries provided crucial information to Nicholson Baker during the writing of Double Fold: Libraries and the Assault on Paper (2001). [18] [9] Blackbeard shared his observations on the widespread practice of microfilming bound newspapers and then destroying the originals, including details about library studies that justified such destruction on the grounds of inevitable paper brittleness and space constraints, which Baker characterized as "fraudulent" in the book. [18] These discussions stemmed from Blackbeard's decades of salvaging material that libraries deemed expendable after microfilming, offering Baker a firsthand counterpoint to institutional preservation rationales. The conversations with Blackbeard formed the basis for the preface of Double Fold, where Baker recounts his encounters with him and credits Blackbeard as a guiding influence and key source in exposing the flaws in library microfilming policies. [5] Blackbeard appeared in the book as a "combination wise man, spiritual teacher and desert prophet," embodying resistance to the discard practices he had long opposed. [18] Double Fold won the National Book Critics Circle Award for nonfiction in 2001. [5] This collaboration highlighted the broader library practices Blackbeard had criticized through his preservation efforts. [9]

Later Life and Legacy

Transfer of the Collection

In January 1998, Bill Blackbeard transferred the bulk of the San Francisco Academy of Comic Art collection to Ohio State University’s Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum after his landlord refused to renew the lease. [4] [19] The collection, totaling 75 tons of material, required six semi-trailer trucks for transport from California to Ohio. [19] [20] Blackbeard retained selected runs of key comic strips, including all works by George Herriman, Milt Gross features, Popeye, Barney Google, certain Dick Tracy sequences, Little Nemo in Slumberland, and Captain Easy Sunday pages. The transferred portion forms a core research resource at the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum. [19] Following the transfer, Blackbeard relocated with his wife Barbara to Santa Cruz, California. [21]

Death and Impact on Comics Scholarship

Bill Blackbeard died on March 10, 2011, at the age of 84 in Watsonville, California, at the Country Villa Watsonville East Nursing Home. [6] [5] Widely credited with saving American newspaper comic strips from destruction, he rescued vast quantities of original tear sheets and bound volumes that libraries were discarding after microfilming during the mid-20th century. [4] His efforts preserved millions of comic strip examples that would otherwise have been permanently lost, enabling the survival of primary source material for early and mid-20th-century American comics. [6] Blackbeard has been described as "the only absolutely indispensable figure in the history of comics scholarship for the last quarter century—and will undoubtedly retain the title for well into this century and beyond." [4] By systematically collecting and promoting comic strips, he shifted them from disposable ephemera to recognized objects of legitimate cultural, historical, and aesthetic value. [4] His work helped legitimize the academic study of comics as part of American history and popular culture, transforming the field from marginal to a serious area of scholarly inquiry. [6] The bulk of his collection, transferred to the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum at Ohio State University, remains foundational for research in comics, popular culture, and graphic narrative. [21] It constitutes one of the library's most highly used holdings and has supported extensive scholarship, with his materials supplying content for over 200 reprint books. [4] Art Spiegelman described him as "the granddaddy that gave us all access" to the past of the art form, underscoring how Blackbeard's preservation work provided essential resources for subsequent generations of creators and researchers. [5]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.