AP Newsfeatures
AP Newsfeatures, also AP Features, was the cartoon and comic strip division of Associated Press, which syndicated strips from 1930 to the early 1960s.
History
Origins
In February 1930, I. M. Kendrick, executive assistant to AP president Kent Cooper, announced a March 17, 1930, launch for the Associated Press Feature Service, with an initial nine units, including a daily news cartoon, various comic strips and several panels. With the expansion of the Associated Press Feature Service to include a comprehensive comic strip and cartoon service for evening papers, AP that April announced plans to provide a similar service for morning papers. Cooper commented:The 1930 launch
The first nine features:Gloria, a daily "pretty girl" strip with continuity, by Julian Ollendorf Homer Hoopee, a daily family strip by Fred Locher Colonel Gilfeather, an imitation of Our Boarding House in a daily three-column panel by Dick Dorgan Scorchy Smith, an aviation-adventure strip by John Terry Rollo Rollingstone, a daily strip by Bruce BarrModest Maidens, a two-column "pretty girl" panel by Don Flowers- news cartoon by Lance Nolly
- three-column village life feature by Oscar Hitt
- two-column cartoon by Aleyn Burtis
Flowers also created Oh, Diana!, which was continued by Bill Champe and Phil Berube after Flowers left AP for King Features. Virginia Clark was drawing Oh, Diana! in 1947. Flowers' other AP creation, Modest Maidens, was taken over by AP staff artist Jay Alan.
AP carried a set number of strips, so a new strip was not added until one was dropped. When the Oaky Doaks daily debuted on June 17, 1935, it replaced Harold Detje's Be Scientific with Ol' Doc Dabble which ran from June 6, 1932, until June 15, 1935. In a similar fashion, when Milton Caniff learned of an opening while he was working on AP spot illustrations, he spent the weekend drawing samples, and Caniff's strip career was launched when his Dickie Dare began in 1933. The following year, Dickie Dare was taken over by Coulton Waugh.
In 1944, Charles Elsworth Honce became the assistant general manager of all AP special services, overseeing AP Newsfeatures and World Wide Photos, and that same year M. J. Wing stepped in as the general editor of AP Newsfeatures.
The strips variously carried the tag "AP Newsfeatures," "AP Features" or in some cases, "The A.P."
AP Sunday comics
Over a decade passed before AP finally introduced Sunday strips on March 7, 1942, in the New York Post. The initial line-up:- The Adventures of Patsy
- Dickie Dare
- Homer Hoopee
- Modest Maidens
- Neighborly Neighbors
- Oaky Doaks
- Scorchy Smith
- Sport Slants
- Strictly Private
- Things To Come
The Associated Press discontinued distribution of comic strips in 1961.
AP Newsfeatures strips and panels
- The Adventures of Patsy originally by Mel Graff Be Scientific with Ol' Doc Dabble by Harold Detje Beautyettes by Aldine Swank Colonel Gilfeather / Mister Gilfeather / The Gay Thirties, originally by Richard W. Dorgan — as Colonel Gilfeather, appeared in about 80 newspapers; title later changed by Al Capp and then again by Milton CaniffDickie Dare originally by Milton Caniff and then Coulton Waugh Don't Do That by Sylvia Robbins Gloria by Julian Ollendorff Homer Hoopee, originally by Fred Locher & Rand Taylor, then by Phil BerubeHow Christmas Began by Sylvia Robbins It Happens That Way Sometimes by Oscar Hitt Junior's Viewpoint by C. Mozier Li'l Chief Hot-Shot by Frank Stevens Little Moonfolks by Rome Siemon Modest Maidens by Don Flowers and then Jay AlanNeighborly Neighbors originally by Oscar Hitt and then John Milt Morris The Nerve of Some People by Ed Sullivan Oaky Doaks Oh, Diana! originally by Don Flowers and then Bill Champe, Phil Berube, and Virginia ClarkPuffy the Pig by Don Flowers, then by W. A. Kolliker, Milton Caniff, and Mel GraffRollo Rollingstone originally by Bruce Barr and then Tom Paprocki Scorchy Smith originally by John Terry See for Yourself by George Wunder Sport Slants by Tom Paprocki Spur Line by Bud Sagendorf Strictly Private / Peter Plink by Quin Hall Things To Come originally by Hank Barrow, then by Jim Bresnan