Australian cartoonist
Leslie Lumsdon (16 October 1912 – 1977) was a popular Australian cartoonist for the Newcastle Morning Herald.
Personal life
He was born on 16 October 1912 in Abermain, New South Wales.[1] He married his wife Vera on 1 July 1938.[1]
Career
His first job was working at his parents' corner store.[2] Then he got a job at the advertising department at the Hustler's store in Maitland.[2] During World War II he worked in the Newcastle camouflage unit.[3] He spent two years in New Guinea where he made extra money drawing postcards which were popular with American troops.[2]
In 1942 his first cartoon strips on Basil appeared in the South Coast Times and Wollongong Argus,[4] the Muswellbrook Chronicle[5] and the Gippsland Times.[6] From July 1944 a mouthless boy named Nipper began to appear in cartoons published by the Burnie Advocate.[7]
In 1946 he was hired by the Newcastle Herald as a cartoonist.[3] He was a popular artist who once emptied seventeen pens signing autographs at a Newcastle Show.[2]
He retired from the Newcastle Morning Herald in 1977 and died later that year.[2]
Casper the Cat
His most famous drawing was Casper the black cat.[2] There was public outcry when he drew Casper being drowned in the Newcastle Harbour after failing to pick a Melbourne cup winner.[2] He published five volumes of cartoons that included Casper.[3]
Exhibitions
- Artists and cartoonists in black and white in 1999 in the S. H. Ervin Gallery, National Trust of Australia (NSW), Sydney, NSW [8]
- 50 years of the newspaper cartoon in Australia in 1973 at the Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, SA [8]
- Fifty Years of Australian Cartooning, 11 September 1964 - 19 September 1964, Blaxland Gallery, Sydney, New South Wales [8]
- Lake Macquarie City Library, Speers Point, New South Wales[8]
- National Trust of Australia (NSW), Sydney, NSW[8]
References