Harrington, Oliver W. 1912–
Oliver W. Harrington 1912–
Cartoonist and essayist
At a Glance…
Joined Thriving Harlem Scene
Left U.S. to Avoid Witch Hunt
Settled Behind Iron Curtain
Renewed American Interest
Selected writings
Sources
Satirist and political cartoonist Oliver Harrington is practically unknown within the United States, except to readers of black newspapers of the 1930s and 1940s. Since the Second World War, however, he has continued to produce a huge body of work, much of which deals with issues of race and class, from his home bases in Paris and later in East Germany. Throughout his career, Harrington has been at the center of the African American intellectual and artistic community, counting among his closest friends such luminaries as writers Richard Wright, Chester Himes, and Langston Hughes.
Although he never gained as much publicity as did several other members of his social circle, Harrington was frequently its focal point. With the publication in the 1990s of both a book of essays and a book of cartoons spanning several decades, Harrington is finally gaining the degree of international notice that those familiar with his work from his early days as a political cartoonist have long believed he deserves.
Harrington was born in Valhalla, New York on Valentine’s Day, 1912. His family life reflected the diversity of its members. His father had come from North Carolina to seek work on the many construction projects underway in the area. His mother was a Hungarian Jew from Budapest. This combination created an interesting household flavor that combined the European and American influences of the two parents. The Valhalla community itself was remarkably diverse, with many different ethnic groups represented. The racial blend was so complete that “Harrington grew up unable to remember which of his friends were white or black,” as M. Thomas Inge wrote in his introduction to Dark Laughter: The Satiric Art of Oliver W. Harrington.
Harrington’s first brushes with racism took place after his family, which included two brothers and a sister, moved to the South Bronx when he was about seven years old. Although his new neighborhood was as racially mixed as his old one, the relations between ethnic groups were not as harmonious. An event that took place at school when Harrington was in sixth grade both shaped his views on racism and provided the spark for his future as an artist.
The teacher, whom Harrington has referred to as Miss McCoy, ordered Harrington and the one other African American boy in the class to the front of the room. She then pointed a finger at the pair and said to rest of the class, “Never, never forget these two belong in the trash.” The class erupted in
Born Oliver Wendell Harrington, February 14, 1912, in Valhalla, NY; son of a day laborer from North Carolina, and Eugenia Turat, a Jewish woman from Budapest, Hungary; emigrated to France, 1951, then to East Germany, 1961; married Helma (a German economist and journalist) Richter; children: Oliver Jr. Education: Attended National Academy of Design; Yale University, BFA, 1940; further study toward MFA at Yale. Politics: Progressive.
Freelance political cartoonist, 1932—; created Bootsie character, 1935; The People’s Voice, art director, 1942-43; Pittsburgh Courier, war correspondent, 1944; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), director of public relations, 1946-47; illustrated The Runaway Elephant, 1950; contributor to several East German publications, 1961—; contributor to Daily World (New York), 1968-late 1970s; Michigan State University, School of Journalism, artist-in-residence, 1994.
Awards: American Institute of Graphic Arts award, for The Runaway Elephant, 1951; Swann Foundation award for special achievement, 1992.
Addresses: Home —Esthenbech Strasse 7, 0-1195 Berlin, Germany. Publisher —University Press of Mississippi, 3825 Ridgewood Rd., Jackson, Ml 39211-6492.
laughter, and Harrington, not surprisingly, was crushed. Over the days that followed, he found that his recovery was aided by drawing pictures of violent accidents involving Miss McCoy. The drawings made him feel so much better that he began to think about becoming a cartoonist.
After graduating from DeWitt Clinton High School in 1929, Harrington moved to Harlem, which was in the later phase of its famous “Renaissance.” There he made the acquaintance of several of the most important black writers in America, and he became particularly close friends with Langston Hughes, who served as a mentor to him. Harrington was able to support himself doing free-lance art work while taking classes at the National Academy of Design. His first professional success came in 1932, when he managed to place political cartoons in two black newspapers, The National News and the New York State Contender.
After that, assignments began to flow in steadily. Harrington became a regular contributor to many of the best-known black newspapers in the United States, including the New York Amsterdam News, the Pittsburgh Courier, and the Baltimore Afro-American. In 1935, Harrington began drawing Dark Laughter — a single-panel cartoon—for the Amsterdam News. In December of that year, Harrington’s most famous character, Bootsie, made his debut in that strip. Bootsie was an ordinary African American man contending with racism in everyday American society. Bootsie became immensely popular, and Harrington’s name was quickly added to the list of top black cartoonists in the nation. The Bootsie character continued to appear in various publications for nearly three decades.
Harrington enrolled in Yale University’s School of the Fine Arts in 1936, to study painting and art history, while continuing to support himself through his cartooning. He earned his BFA degree from that institution in 1940. In 1942, Harrington landed his first full-time job, working as art director for The People’s Voice, a progressive weekly newspaper founded by clergyman Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. He brought Bootsie and Dark Laughter with him and contributed editorial cartoons and miscellaneous illustrations as well. The following year, Harrington left the Voice to work primarily for the Pittsburgh Courier, where his duties were more varied and challenging. At the Courier he introduced Jive Gray, an adventure comic strip that addressed World War II from an African American perspective.
In January of 1944, the Courier sent Harrington abroad to cover the war in North Africa and Europe. While reporting in Italy, he met National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) executive Walter White. White was so impressed that after the war’s end, he invited Harrington to develop a public relations department for the organization. Harrington took on the job in 1946, and late in the year he debated U.S. Attorney General Tom Clark on the topic of “The Struggle for Justice as a World Force.” During the debate, he took Clark to task for failing to come up with a single conviction despite a much-publicized massive federal investigation of a lynching in Monroe, Georgia.
Harrington left the NAACP in 1947, and returned to drawing full-time. During the next few years he continued drawing Bootsie, as well as a steady stream of political and sports cartoons. He also tried his hand at book illustration, including the pictures for 1950’s The Runaway Elephant, a well-received children’s book by Ellen F. Tarry. Around this time, Harrington came under the scrutiny of the House Un-American Activities Committee, whose hunt for communists was reaching the peak of its fervor. Harrington’s visibility as a spokesman for the NAACP—and the aggressive position on civil rights he had taken while there—had made him a magnet for the committee’s attention. In order to avoid discrediting the NAACP by having a former official branded a communist, Harrington opted to leave the country in 1951.
Paris, at the time of Harrington’s arrival, was bustling with black American expatriates. The community of black intellectuals and artists that had gathered in the city included the likes of writers Richard Wright and Chester Himes, and painter Beauford Delaney. The center of the group’s social life was the Café Tournon. In his autobiography, My Life of Absurdity, Himes described Harrington as being “the center of the American community on the Left Bank in Paris, white and black, and he was the greatest [fictional womanizer] Lothario in the history of the whole Latin Quarter.”
During his stay in Paris, Harrington supported himself primarily by contributing cartoons to the Courier and the Chicago Defender through the mail. His American presence was also maintained by the appearance of an anthology of his cartoons in 1958. The book, Bootsie and Others, was published by Dodd, Mead & Company, and included an admiring introduction by Langston Hughes.
The happy calm in Paris came to a jarring end with the sudden death of Wright—with whom Harrington had become extremely close—in 1960. Shortly thereafter, Harrington wrote an article for Ebony entitled “The Last Days of Richard Wright,” in which he outlined the suspicious circumstances surrounding Wright’s death. With Wright gone, Paris was no longer as appealing to Harrington, and in 1961, he travelled to East Berlin. There he explored an offer from Aufbau Publishers; they wanted Harrington to illustrate a series of English-language classics. While Harrington was in East Berlin, the wall dividing the city was erected, and he unexpectedly found himself trapped there without the proper paperwork to leave.
Rather than struggle to find a way out of East Germany, Harrington realized that his prospects for work there were actually quite good, so he settled in to stay. The communist audience appreciated his political cartoons dealing with racism and poverty, and he became a regular contributor to some of East Germany’s most popular magazines, including Eulenspiegel and Das Magazine. Harrington’s take on U.S. affairs especially appealed to East German students and intellectuals, and he developed a loyal cult following among those groups. In 1964 Harrington met Helma Richter, a radio journalist, and the two eventually got married and had a son, Oliver, Jr. Bootsie was finally put into retirement in 1963, but Harrington continued churning out political cartoons for a variety of publications.
Later in the decade, Harrington was invited to provide drawings and cartoons for the New York Daily World, a communist newspaper formerly known as The Worker, after a friend of his had been named as its new editor. The Daily World published a collection of Harrington’s work called Soul Shots in 1972. To celebrate the release of that book, Harrington made his first visit to the United States since leaving the country more than 20 years earlier. He also gave a series of lectures during the trip. Upon his return to Europe, Harrington wrote “Look Homeward, Baby,” a piece for Freedomways magazine in which he compared how America looked to him upon his return to his memories of 1940s Harlem.
Through the rest of the 1970s and the 1980s, Harrington drew cartoons in East Germany while remaining almost completely obscure in the United States. The exceptions were occasional essays published in left-wing journals. These included two reviews of books by fellow black cartoonists for Freedomways: 1974’s “Through Black Eyes” and “Like Most of Us Kids” in 1976.
Harrington did not set foot on American soil again until 1991, when he was brought over by Walter O. Evans, a Detroit surgeon and collector of African American art. During that visit, Harrington delivered a speech at Detroit’s Wayne State University called “Why I Left America,” which, as one would suspect from the title, detailed the circumstances under which he first emigrated 40 years earlier. His visits have been more frequent since then.
Harrington’s life and work were the subject of two different books published by the University Press of Mississippi in 1993. Dark Laughter: The Satiric Art of Oliver W. Harrington is a collection of cartoons spanning his entire career. Why I Left America and Other Essays contains nine articles written by Harrington over the course of his career. It also includes a foreword by Julia Wright, Richard’s daughter. Both books contain introductions with detailed biographical information by M. Thomas Inge, a professor at Randolph Macon College in Virginia.
The publication of those two books revived interest in Harrington’s career among some sectors of the American public. In 1994, Michigan State University invited Harrington to spend a semester as artist-in-residence at its school of journalism. During his semester there, Harrington led a seminar that focused on the role political cartoons play in journalism. Harrington began the spring semester course by “showing students that political cartoons and journalism is all the same thing and has been for several thousand years,” he told a reporter for Emerge.
In spite of his newfound status in the United States, Harrington chose to continue living in Germany, and he returned there following his stint at Michigan State. The rediscovery of his art by the American mainstream art audience has sparked new interest in the work of other African American cartoonists as well. As Professor Inge noted in his introduction to Dark Laughter, “The story of the African American cartoonist and the American newspaper is largely an invisible history which remains to be recovered.” It is likely that the re-emergence of Oliver Harrington’s six decades of work will serve as an important step toward that recovery.
Nonfiction
Why I Left America and Other Essays, University Press of Mississippi, 1993.
Cartoon Anthologies
Bootsie and Others, Dodd, Mead & Company, 1958.
Soul Shots, Daily World, 1972.
Dark Laughter: The Satiric Art of Oliver W. Harrington, University Press of Mississippi, 1993.
Books
Harrington, Oliver W., Why I Left America and Other Essays, University Press of Mississippi, 1993.
Dark Laughter: The Satiric Art of Oliver W. Harrington, University Press of Mississippi, 1993.
Periodicals
Editor & Publisher, November 28, 1992, p. 28.
Emerge, May 1994, p. 14.
New York Times Book Review, December 19,1993, p. 20.
Publishers Weekly, September 6, 1993, p. 75.
—Robert R. Jacobson
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
A Mississippi Journal interview with Lester Spell, D.V.M.
Magazine article from: The Mississippi Business Journal; 5/18/1998; ; 700+ words
; Mississippi's Commissioner of Agriculture and...was worth about $20 billion to the Mississippi economy. In his leadership role, Spell...challenges regulating and promoting Mississippi agriculture and commerce involves...
|
|
The Mississippi Terminator; Haley Barbour takes on Ronnie Musgrove.(OPED)
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times; 10/22/2003; 700+ words
; ...SPECIAL TO THE WASHINGTON TIMES While Mississippi's race for governor may not get as...elected" by the Democrat-controlled Mississippi legislature. Mr. Musgrove's challenger...at about $700 million. * Distorting Mississippi's job numbers: In recent television...
|
|
Not Mississippi? Does it matter when conventions go out of state?
Magazine article from: The Mississippi Business Journal; 11/29/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...Craig Ray, tourism director for the Mississippi Development Authority (MDA), was...encourage in-state groups to stay in Mississippi for three reasons: to reinvest in our...meetings represent big bucks. "The Mississippi Gulf Coast reports that conventioneers...
|
|
Mississippi Chemical lists common stock on New York Stock Exchange
Magazine article from: The Mississippi Business Journal; 10/14/1996; ; 700+ words
; Mississippi Chemical Corp. has joined a small circle of Mississippi-based companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange...in Jackson, of the company's NYSE membership. Mississippi Chemical shares, which formerly traded on the NASDAQ...
|
|
Mississippi nursing programs.(2008 Book of Lists)
Magazine article from: Mississippi Business Journal; 12/31/2007; 700+ words
; Mississippi Nursing Programs Institution, Address...Meridian, MS 39307 484-8743 Betty Davis Mississippi College (601) 925-3278 P.O. Box...39058-4037 Dr. Mary Jean Padgett Mississippi Delta Community College (662) 246...
|
|
Mississippi Hills Heritage Area Alliance presenting findings
Magazine article from: The Mississippi Business Journal; 5/30/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...of economic vitality in the Northeast Mississippi region, so is diversification. That...presentations June 13-17 in six Northeast Mississippi communities will underscore the relevance of heritage tourism via "Building the Mississippi Hills Heritage Area: Strategies for...
|
|
Mississippi wages are lower, but so is the cost of living
Magazine article from: The Mississippi Business Journal; 8/10/1998; ; 700+ words
; Mississippi may get tired of hearing about being...the cost of living is also lower in Mississippi. So while state residents make less...the money stretches further, too. Mississippi is also seeing low unemployment rates...
|
|
Mississippi lobbyists continue to be well paid
Magazine article from: The Mississippi Business Journal; 6/22/1998; ; 700+ words
; Compensation for Mississippi lobbyists totaled almost $5 million...Browning-Ferris Industries of Mississippi -- earned him a spot in the top...as they would a team of lawyers. Mississippi Power Co. paid seven lobbyists...
|
|
Mississippi Sportswear sees uniform success, expansion
Magazine article from: The Mississippi Business Journal; 3/17/2003; ; 700+ words
; KOSCIUSKO - What's the deal with Mississippi Sportswear? While other manufacturers...causing layoffs and plants closings, Mississippi Sportswear is adding to its payroll...vice president and general manager at Mississippi Sportswear. John Archer, president...
|
|
Mississippi Power CEO optimistic about economic development
Magazine article from: The Mississippi Business Journal; 5/3/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...January of this year Anthony Topazi became Mississippi Power Company's 10th president and...no stranger to the Southern Company, Mississippi Power's parent company. Topazi began...I graduated," he said. He came to Mississippi after a stint as executive vice president...
|
|
Mississippi River
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
MISSISSIPPI RIVER MISSISSIPPI RIVER. One of the major rivers of North America, the Mississippi River has been a focal point in American history, commerce, agriculture, literature, and environmental awareness. The length of the Mississippi...
|
|
Mississippi River Basin
Book article from: Water:Science and Issues
Mississippi River Basin The Mississippi River is North America's longest and largest river in terms...meters per second (811,530 cubic feet per second). The Mississippi flows 3,763 kilometers (2,333 miles) from Lake Itasca...
|
|
Mississippi
Encyclopedia entry from: Gale Encyclopedia of U.S. Economic History
MISSISSIPPI The words "Mississippi" and "delta" are closely associated in the public's mind with Mississippi history. The delta region indeed dominated the cotton-growing economy that was the mainstay of life in the state for many decades...
|
|
First Mississippi Corporation
Book article from: International Directory of Company Histories
First Mississippi Corporation P.O. Box 1249 Jackson, Mississipp...2869 Industrial Organic Chemicals Nec First Mississippi Corporation is the largest company chartered in Mississippi and the only company from that state to be listed...
|
|
Mississippi Chemical Corporation
Book article from: International Directory of Company Histories
Mississippi Chemical Corporation 3622 Highway 49 East P.O. Box 388 Yazoo City, Mississippi 39194-0388 U.S.A. Telephone: (662...formed as a farmers ’ cooperative, Mississippi Chemical Corporation is now a multi-million...
|