The Stripper's Guide blog discusses the history of the American newspaper comic strip.
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Wednesday, November 09, 2005
F. Opper's Howson Lott
In the period 1909-1914 the incredibly prolific Fred Opper was producing a number of miscellaneous quasi-daily strips, the well-known Happy Hooligan Sunday page, plus the more obscure Sunday strip Howson Lott. Howson Lott ('house on lot') began as a satire of the new trend of the middle-class to move out to the country. Opper ended up using this strip as sort of a catch-all for various characters; Maud the mule showed up on occasion, the King of the Cannibal Islands was a semi-regular (as seen on this sample), even good old Alphonse and Gaston were liable to pop in.
By 1914 the title character was often absent as can be seen on this example, which features a regular character named Cousin Willie. Even the title has changed - Opper did this frequently, giving us poor historians fits trying to figure out when the series begins and ends.
Note that Opper does a bit of a daring turn here. We see Cousin Willie making eyes at a black girl, and we also see Willie being 'subjugated' by a black man. I'll bet you a dollar that this strip did not run in Southern papers that week!
Was "Howson Lott" always a full page Sunday strip? It's just that the "Spokane Daily Chronicle" (which has a to me fascinating array of comics around 1910) ran a 6-panel strip of it on Wednesday Janauary 25, 1911: http://tinyurl.com/n8g2cu
ReplyDeleteHi Fram --
ReplyDeleteNo, it was more often a half-pager.
--Allan
Where was Howson Lott published? In what newspaper(s)?
ReplyDeleteIn the Hearst newspapers and their clients.
ReplyDelete--Allan
Thanks very much, Allan.
ReplyDeleteI've just come across a couple of references to a friend living in the Dublin Mountains but working in Dublin City, as "Howson's Lott" in my grandparents' letters from 1911, so either it was in some Dublin (or possibly English) paper or the cartoonist elder brother of my grandmother had introduced them to the cartoons - he was back and forth between the US and Ireland, as were many Irish people at the time (you get the impression that the Celtic, Majestic, etc were the Ryanair of the time).
ReplyDelete