Comic History Comic Strips Editorial cartooning Profiles

Wayback Whensday-Jackie & Ollie

Profiling Jackie Ormes and Ollie Harrington.

Dark Laughter by Ollie Harrington and Patty-Jo ‘n’ Ginger by Jackie Ormes – October 10, 1953

In an era when Black women were largely erased from the comics page, Jackie Ormes picked up her pen and rewrote the rules. As the first nationally syndicated Black female cartoonist,

Ormes shattered racial and gender stereotypes through her bold, stylish, and socially conscious characters, paving the way for generations of Black creators.

Torchy in Heartbeats by Jackie Ormes – May 8, 1954

Gee NY for Shine My Crown gives us a brief profile of cartoonist Jackie Ormes.

Torchy Brown, made headlines in 1937. A fearless, fashionable teen from Mississippi, Torchy sang and danced her way to Harlem, echoing the journey of many during the Great Migration, when millions of African Americans moved north in search of opportunity and freedom.

In 1945, Ormes launched her groundbreaking strip “Patty-Jo ‘n’ Ginger,” which tackled everything from segregation and education to war and women’s rights, all through the voice of a perceptive little girl named Patty-Jo.

Jive Gray by Ollie Harrington – November 15, 1941

And that’s when I discovered the work of Oliver Wendell Harrington, who sometimes signed his work as “Old” Harrington or “Ol” Harrington or “Ollie” Harrington. He did many, many political cartoons during his very long career, but the first I saw of his work was a comic strip, “Jive Gray”.

A very brief profile of Ollie Harrington by Aashirs nani for Street Prophets but with links to more.

I haven’t found a compilation of the Jive Gray storyline, though. It stopped abruptly in 1951. The top of this page is general boilerplate. The part about Ollie Harrington and Jive Gray starts below the line. You can see political cartoons on this page, including a very early Jive Gray strip. And here is a perspective of Jive Gray and Old Harrington in depth. 

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Comments 7

  1. The blurring of Panel cartoons at the bottom, when that is where the captions are, thus making them unreadable is really a negative feature. I’ve no idea why this happens here with regularity, but I do wish that when that blurring ruins the item being shown, that it stop. Please take this into consideration.

    1. Again – right click and open in a new tab to see the full cartoon with caption.
      And slightly larger.

      1. It seems naïve to suppose that everyone is reading Daily Cartoonist on a computer. I read it on an iPad Pro, and there is no right-click functionality.

    2. I have to admit to not using iPads, but with iPhones instead of right clicking just press (lightly) on the image for a second and the image will appear in a new tab/window.

  2. I was about to say the same thing, D.D.

  3. Thanks for sharing these. When I was researching my books on the Negro leagues, I was too often distracted in my Chicago Defender and Pittsburgh Courier perusals by some wonderful work by Black cartoonists and comic strip artists.

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