An earlier short history of Eastern Color, appeared in this blog (now removed) and afterwards added some information from Wikipedia. Wikipedia did have (as of Dec 2011) some major bloopers, basically from not being familiar with the material published. That's not to say I don't have any bloopers....but at least my material is taken mainly from contemporary newspaper accounts, and the focus below is on them as a comic book printing company. I'll be happy to, and want to, update with new information and with\ the names of comic book companies that they printed for.
Eastern Color Printing
formed in August 1928 as a separate company and successor to the newspaper supplement publishing of the Waterbury Republican and Waterbury American.
(per Wikipedia: William B. Pape, VP and principal executive officer of the newspapers)
1928 Per Wikipedia - printed "The Funnies" for Dell from 1928 to 1930. Wikipedia say "published", but they mean "printed".
1933-1941 (Per Wikipedia) printed "Gulf Funnies Weekly"
1933 Spring "Funnies on Parade" published and printed in Waterbury, 32 pages 10,000 copies
1934 Famous Funnies: Series One - first modern style comic book, - available for purchase in chain stores.
1934 July (cover date) Famous Funnies #1 - first modern style newsstand comic book
1937 per Wikipedia - builds new plant to print comic strip supplements for newspapers.
March 1942 Curtiss Way Co. sold to Eastern Color.
Curtiss Way prints covers and binds comic books.
April 1950 Eastern Color prints 1.5 million comics weekly
1954 - Wikipedia cites that Eastern Color prints 40% of all comic books.
1955 - Eastern Color ends their own comic book titles.
June 1960 Sells the Curtiss Way Co. and the Domonel Co.
the Curtiss Way division was publishing magazines and comics, and under the name Domonel for their new owner will continue printing magazines and newspaper inserts. The former Curtiss Way company plants are closed in 1968.
January 1961 Eastern Color named co-conspirator in monopoly controlled by the Greater Buffalo Press.
April 1963 - in Appellant court
April 1967 strike
circa December 1967, Eastern Color prints their last Marvel Comics, with cover date of February 1968
1972 sells Waterbury plant, moves printing to Avon.
1973 Wikipedia says stops printing comic books
October 1973 still printing comics sections - shortens some due to newsprint shortage
October 1974 tax court decision
February 1981 toxic gas released in plant.
March 1983 month old strike settled
February 1987 - wikepedia says fire destroys one of the presses.
1988 - prints comics for 11 newspapers
1989 Wikipedia says loses Sears circular printing account, which was 40% of the business.
July 2001 - the final printing assets were sold, but the name and shell of the company continue to
exist.
March 2002 -files for bankruptcy Wikipedia says closes June 2002
Dec 2003 former CFO, Lackerbee pleads guilty to conspiracy to commit mail fraud
June 2004 former CEO, A. Robert Palmer sentenced - He was President in 1987-1992+
William J. Pape (1873 -1961) founder and owner; President 1931-1955
Chairman of the Board 1957 - 1959
George G. Janosik (1889-1943) secretary: 1931- 1937+
director +1939+
listed as retired in 1942.
born in Budapest, immigrated as a child, business manager for Ticker Publications at least in 1921-1922, and McClure's' Newspaper Syndicate in 1926.
Eric Pape (1899 - 1962) son of William J. Pape
assistant secretary 1931-1937
secretary 1939 -1948+
vice president 1957 - 1959
James Darcey (c1896 - 1964) , treasurer 1930 -1945, 1951-1955+
also on staff of the American-Republican, Inc.
William B. Pape (1899 - 1974) son of William J. Pape
vice president 1931- 1957+, President 1959
treasurer +1942-1944, 1945-1951
Business Manager 1944-1955+
Chairman of the Board
Richard J. Pape grandson of founder CEO 1961-1987
A. Robert Palmer President in 1987-1992+
owners of Eastern Color -1944-1951-
American-Republican, Inc. (which was also co- owned by the Pape family); Eric A. Pape; William B. Pape; E. Robert Stevenson; James H. Darcey; B. H. Dupuy
Eric Pape didn't make it to President of Eastern Color, but he was President of the family owned radio stations in the 1950s instead.
Elias Robert Stevenson (1882 - ?) editor of the newspaper
Benjamin H. Dupuy (c1877 - 1953) superintendent of press room
employees known (and connected to comics):
Maxwell Charles Gaines
Harry Wildenberg
Lev Gleason
comic book companies that were clients
Marvel: 1940s to 1968
IW-Super ?
28 December 2014 (two blog posts from December 14,& 15 2011 combined for clarity. No additional information added. 25 July 2016: information on George Geza Janosik added
Sunday, December 28, 2014
Thursday, July 3, 2014
Mickey Klar Marks at Timely
Mickey Klar Marks left her mark on comics, literally. First, She wrote a lot of text pages which are credited to her. Second, she left her record books to the University of Mississippi, so we know what comic stories she wrote as well, Well sorta, as she didn't list where these stories appeared, but rather when she was paid.
And yes. she was paid for work for Timely. As one can see from the short list below, she didn't write much for Timely, 1 text story in 1946, 9 humor stories in 1948, and 2 text stories in 1949.
Mickey Klar Marks (1914-1986)
Work for Timely
Record book (alphabetically arranged by UofM).
Annie Oakley: Cooking Without Gas 1948 8 pp
Annie Oakley: Garden Rodeo 1948 7pp
Heads In The Clouds 1949 3pp text
Millie Does It Up Brown 1948 7pp
Mitzi: Dean Mitizi 1948 10pp
Mitzi: Lydia Sees Red 1948 7pp
Mitzi: The Overnight Garden 1948 9pp
Nellie the Nurse: Nellie Cures All 1948 7pp
Nellie the Nurse: The Taxi Ambulance 1948 8pp
Nellie the Nurse: The Victor Doesn't Always Win 1948 7pp
Shred of Evidence 1949 6pp text
The Wrong Foot 1946 6pp text
Using www.atlastales.com and www.comics.org
we see Marks credited with
Junior Miss #37 December 1949 Operation Romance 5pp illustrated story
we can also find
A Shred of Evidence 2pp text story code# 5315 Tex Taylor #8 December 1949
Heads In The Clouds 1pp text story code#6065 Georgie Comics #24 November 1949
reprinted in Georgie Comics #32 August 1951
Can anyone else figure out which stories these are?
Mickey Klar Marks left her mark on comics, literally. First, She wrote a lot of text pages which are credited to her. Second, she left her record books to the University of Mississippi, so we know what comic stories she wrote as well, Well sorta, as she didn't list where these stories appeared, but rather when she was paid.
And yes. she was paid for work for Timely. As one can see from the short list below, she didn't write much for Timely, 1 text story in 1946, 9 humor stories in 1948, and 2 text stories in 1949.
Mickey Klar Marks (1914-1986)
Work for Timely
Record book (alphabetically arranged by UofM).
Annie Oakley: Cooking Without Gas 1948 8 pp
Annie Oakley: Garden Rodeo 1948 7pp
Heads In The Clouds 1949 3pp text
Millie Does It Up Brown 1948 7pp
Mitzi: Dean Mitizi 1948 10pp
Mitzi: Lydia Sees Red 1948 7pp
Mitzi: The Overnight Garden 1948 9pp
Nellie the Nurse: Nellie Cures All 1948 7pp
Nellie the Nurse: The Taxi Ambulance 1948 8pp
Nellie the Nurse: The Victor Doesn't Always Win 1948 7pp
Shred of Evidence 1949 6pp text
The Wrong Foot 1946 6pp text
Using www.atlastales.com and www.comics.org
we see Marks credited with
Junior Miss #37 December 1949 Operation Romance 5pp illustrated story
we can also find
A Shred of Evidence 2pp text story code# 5315 Tex Taylor #8 December 1949
Heads In The Clouds 1pp text story code#6065 Georgie Comics #24 November 1949
reprinted in Georgie Comics #32 August 1951
Can anyone else figure out which stories these are?
Monday, March 10, 2014
Current longest running series in Comics
When I first starting reading comics, most comics publishers would put their numbers on the front cover - and would encourage you to start collecting the series. This led to comic shops with back issues, so that one could buy issues they missed. I recall buying comics with numbering in the 300s, inspiring me to think that maybe one day I would get those earlier numbers. How things have changed.
From the March 2014 Diamond catalogue for comics to be sold in May.
Longest running series:
Marvel
Avengers #30
Dark Horse
BPRD Hell on Earth #119
DC
Scooby-Doo, Where Are You #45
(Looney Tunes published bi-monthly, and not out this month)
IDW
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #34
image
Spawn #243
Witchblade #175
Savage Dragon #197
the Walking Dead #127
Invincible #112
and others over 100 issues
AC:
Femforce #167
Antartic Press:
Gold Digger #212
Ninja High School solicited an issue recently
Archie:
Archie #656
Archie Double Digest #251
Sonic The Hedgehog #261
and other bi-monthly titles not offered this month
Bongo:
no Simpson Comics offered this month
Zenescope:
Grimm Fairy Tales #97 (sure to make 100)
It's possible I missed some, but obviously the trend is toward mini-series and away from long running
comics. It may make very good economic sense for the company, but it does make long consecutive runs of a title much less likely for a collector to collect. Therefore a massive change, and likely to deeply affect "the hobby".
personal note: so where have I been?
1) moved from the east coast to the Rocky Mountains
2) various illnesses and surgeries, an illness that saps the energy being the worst
3) annoyance at doing research and having folks re-write an article as their own.
And how has your year gone?
From the March 2014 Diamond catalogue for comics to be sold in May.
Longest running series:
Marvel
Avengers #30
Dark Horse
BPRD Hell on Earth #119
DC
Scooby-Doo, Where Are You #45
(Looney Tunes published bi-monthly, and not out this month)
IDW
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #34
image
Spawn #243
Witchblade #175
Savage Dragon #197
the Walking Dead #127
Invincible #112
and others over 100 issues
AC:
Femforce #167
Antartic Press:
Gold Digger #212
Ninja High School solicited an issue recently
Archie:
Archie #656
Archie Double Digest #251
Sonic The Hedgehog #261
and other bi-monthly titles not offered this month
Bongo:
no Simpson Comics offered this month
Zenescope:
Grimm Fairy Tales #97 (sure to make 100)
It's possible I missed some, but obviously the trend is toward mini-series and away from long running
comics. It may make very good economic sense for the company, but it does make long consecutive runs of a title much less likely for a collector to collect. Therefore a massive change, and likely to deeply affect "the hobby".
personal note: so where have I been?
1) moved from the east coast to the Rocky Mountains
2) various illnesses and surgeries, an illness that saps the energy being the worst
3) annoyance at doing research and having folks re-write an article as their own.
And how has your year gone?