Johnny Gruelle is best known for creating
the world famous rag doll characters, Raggedy Ann and Andy. While the Raggedys were the indisputable centerpiece of
Gruelle's career, in his heart of hearts, Johnny was a dyed-in-the-wool freelance artist, who felt most at home at his drawing
board, crafting illustrations and features for newspapers and magazines.
John Barton Gruelle was born in Arcola, Illinois in 1880. At the age of two, his family
moved to Indianapolis, where his father, R.B. Gruelle, became known as one of the Hoosier Group of Impressionist artists.
By his early teens, John Gruelle already knew he was a cartoonist. During a train-hopping adventure to Cleveland, Ohio
in 1894, his caricature of a beat cop named Tom McGinty so impressed the officer that he supposedly offered to stake Gruelle
while the boy sought cartooning work at a local newspaper. As it turned out Gruelle did not stay on in Cleveland (although
he would return to live there years later). But after this experience, a career spent painting landscapes and portraits
like those his father rendered seemed far less appealing than one spent turning out pithy little funnies for a living.
In 1901 the 20-year-old Gruelle landed his first
newspaper job, at an Indianapolis tabloid called the People. There he worked for several months creating rough-hewn
"chalk-plate" portraits. By April 1902, Gruelle had moved on to the more mainstream Indianapolis Sun, while
managing also to do work for the Detroit-based Peninsular Engraving Company.
In June 1903, Gruelle was hired at the brand-new Indianapolis Star as the paper's first
assistant illustrator. His three years at the Star were interrupted by nine-months spent at the rival Indianapolis Sentinel.
Once back at the Star, in 1905, Gruelle accepted a freelancing job with World Color Printing Company of St. Louis to produce
four-color Sunday comics, a connection he continued after relocating to Cleveland in 1906 to work for the Cleveland Press
and the Newspaper Enterprise Association. During these years, Gruelle would turn out as many as ten cartoons each week,
his style steadily growing more expert and refined.
.
Although most of his early newspaper work was aimed at adults, by 1908, Gruelle had begun producing features
for children. After winning a national comic drawing contest, Gruelle went to work for The New York Herald in early
1911. Although he would continue creating for adults, his most important audience became children, whom he kept entertained
with colorful "Mr. Twee Deedle" Sunday comic pages. Once "Mr. Twee Deedle" was in print, it wasn't long
before Gruelle was receiving commissions from a broad array of monthly and weekly magazines. His distinctive cartoons,
illustrations, and illustrated stories appeared regularly in well-known publications including John Martin's Book, Physical
Culture, Illustrated Sunday Magazine, McCall's, The Ladies' World, and Judge.It was his illustrating work that led him to
create a distinctive, whimsical design for a doll named "Raggedy Ann," which he patented and trademarked in 1915.
Gruelle was soon pitching book ideas, and ultimately, he connected with the P.F. Volland Company, a juvenile publisher in
Chicago. In 1918 Volland published Gruelle's Raggedy Ann Stories and also introduced
a matching character doll, and the rest is history. More Raggedy books and dolls followed, and Gruelle eventually became
known as "The Raggedy Ann Man."
Johnny eventually entered the arena of juvenile book illustrating and writing and achieved fame as creator
of Raggedy Ann and Andy. However, Gruelle's newspaper and magazine work remained vital outlets for him, providing him
not only with welcome income, but also a forum in which to explore an extensive range of illustrating and writing interests,
in full view of hundreds of thousands of readers of all ages and persuasions.
In 1922, Gruelle's serialized "Adventures
of Raggedy Ann and Andy" stories premiered in newspapers across the country.
He continued providing artwork to adult magazines such as Life, Cosmopolitan, and College Humor, and kept up with his illustrated
juvenile features, which appeared in Woman's World and Good Housekeeping. In 1929, Gruelle's full-color Sunday comic
"Brutus" began what would be a nine-year run, and by 1934, his illustrated "Raggedy Ann" newspaper proverbs
were in national syndication.
By
the time of his death in 1938, Gruelle's Raggedy characters, dolls, and books were known throughout the world. However,
his fanciful newspaper and magazine works had also kept Americans amused for nearly four decades, and Gruelle had become extremely
well-regarded in cartooning and illustrating circles. Throughout his life, and in his heart of hearts, Johnny Gruelle was
ever and always -- an artist.
©2001
Patricia Hall