The Patriot Files Forums  

Go Back   The Patriot Files Forums > General > General Posts

Post New Thread  Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 01-22-2003, 07:01 PM
thedrifter thedrifter is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Apr 2002
Posts: 4,601
Distinctions
VOM 
Cool Bill Mauldin, of WW II Fame of Willie & Joe, died today

Bill Mauldin, of WW II Fame of Willie & Joe, died today
Comment on the passing of Bill Mauldin

His contributions to GI's psyche & sense of humor can never be adequately
gaged.. My WW II Marine Father, really loved you..
thank you Bill, and God speed... our prayers for your family...(s)
"ColonelDan" Dan Cedusky, Champaign IL

Posted on Wed, Jan. 22, 2003

Bill Mauldin, Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist, dies at 81

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (AP) - Bill Mauldin, the Pulitzer Prize-winning
cartoonist who portrayed World War II reality laced with humor, died
Wednesday. He was 81.

Mauldin, one of the 20th century's pre-eminent editorial cartoonists, died
of complications from Alzheimer's disease, including pneumonia, at a Newport
Beach nursing home, said Andy Mauldin, 54, of Santa Fe, N.M., one of the
cartoonist's seven sons.

``It's really good that he's not suffering anymore,'' he said. ``He had a
terrible struggle.''

His characters Willie and Joe, a laconic pair of unshaven, mud-encrusted
dogfaces, slogged their way through Italy and other parts of battle-scarred
Europe, surviving the enemy and the elements while caustically and
sarcastically harpooning the unctuous and pompous.

They were the vessels that Mauldin, a young Army rifleman, filled with wry
understatement to portray the tedium and treachery of war, entertaining and
endearing himself to millions of fellow soldiers in the war and to Americans
at home.

``He had powerful helping influence on people with his sense of humor,''
Andy Mauldin said. ``Whatever you are going through, it helps if you can
find something to smile about.''

In his classic book ``Up Front,'' Mauldin wrote that the expressions on Joe
and Willie are ``those of infantry soldiers who have been in the war for a
couple of years.''

``If he is looking very weary and resigned to the fact that he is probably
going to die before it is over, and if he has a deep, almost hopeless desire
to go home and forget it all; if he looks with dull, uncomprehending eyes at
the fresh-faced kid who is talking about all the joys of battle and killing
Germans, then he comes from the same infantry as Joe and Willie,'' he wrote.

Mauldin called himself ``as independent as a hog on ice,'' and his
nonconformist approach brought him a face-to-face upbraiding from Gen.
George Patton. Mauldin continued to draw what he wanted.

In 1945, at age 23, his series ``Up Front With Mauldin'' won him the first
of his two Pulitzer Prizes for editorial cartooning.

Mauldin won the second in 1959, while he was an editorial cartoonist for the
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, for depicting Soviet novelist Boris Pasternak
saying to another gulag prisoner: ``I won the Nobel Prize for literature.
What was your crime?''

Mauldin wrote and drew 16 books and acted in two movies, including John
Huston's 1951 production of ``The Red Badge of Courage'' starring real-life
war hero Audie Murphy.

Mauldin was born in Mountain Park, N.M., and spent much of his life in the
West. A teacher in high school helped him nurture his art talent, and he
attended the Academy of Fine Art in Chicago, learning from such teachers as
cartoonist Vaughn Shoemaker, a Pulitzer Prize-winner for the Chicago Daily
News.

Mauldin enlisted in 1940 and, assigned as a rifleman to the 180th Infantry,
started drawing cartoons depicting training camp for the Division News, the
newspaper for the 45th Division.

Once Mauldin's 45th Division shipped overseas, Stars and Stripes, the
servicewide newspaper, began publishing his drawings.

Author David Halberstam wrote: ``One senses that if a war reporter who had
been with Hannibal or Napoleon saw Mauldin's work he would know immediately
that the work was right.''

After the war, Mauldin freelanced for a time. He joined the Post-Dispatch in
1958, then switched to the Chicago Sun-Times in 1962.

It was at the Sun-Times that he drew one of his most poignant and famous
cartoons on the day of President John F. Kennedy's assassination. The
drawing showed a grieving Abraham Lincoln, his hands covering his face, at
the Lincoln Memorial.

In recent years, as Mauldin battled Alzheimer's, thousands of veterans,
widows and other well-wishers have sent him letters, offering thanks and
stories of survival.

``You have managed to capture the irony, double standards and outright
insanity of Army life,'' one man wrote, ``in a way that allows us to laugh
at ourselves and our leaders and keep moving forward in the face of
adversity.''

He also had a steady stream of visitors who had fought in WWII.

``They tried to pay him back for support he had given them,'' Andy Mauldin
said.

The campaign to recognize the cartoonist was sparked by veteran Jay
Gruenfeld, who spent years wondering what happened to the man who had made
him laugh in a foxhole under fire. He sought out Mauldin and then wrote to
veterans organizations and contacted newspaper columnists urging people to
remember him.

Mauldin is survived by former wives Jean Mauldin of Los Angeles and
Christine Lund of Santa Fe, N.M.; sons Bruce, 59, of Dallas; Tim, 57, of Los
Angeles; Andy, 54, of Santa Fe; David, 51, of Santa Fe; John, 49, of
Albuquerque, N.M.; Nat, 48, of Los Angeles; and Sam, 16, of Santa Fe.

His former wife Natalie Mauldin died in 1971. His daughter, Kaja Mauldin,
20, died in 2001.

Funeral arrangements were pending, with burial planned in Arlington National
Cemetery.

Sempers,

Roger


United We Stand
God Bless America

Remember our POW/MIA's
I'll never forget!
__________________
IN LOVING MEMORY OF MY HUSBAND
SSgt. Roger A.
One Proud Marine
1961-1977
68/69
Once A Marine............Always A Marine.............

http://www.geocities.com/thedrifter001/
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
Sponsored Links
  #2  
Old 01-22-2003, 07:34 PM
cstfe cstfe is offline
Junior Member
 

Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 17
Default

I'm really sorry to hear that Bill Mauldin died, for some reason I guess he'd go on forever.

My cousin was in Europe in WW2 and I bought all of Mauldins books for him, the cartoon he loved and laughed at the most was when Willie and Joe are looking at a farm house without a roof, there are bomb holes all over the fields and his trees were badly damaged.

Willie says to Joe
"Tell him not to feel too bad, his trees is pruned, his ground is plowed and his house is air conditioned."

Bill Maudlin was truly a man of his time. He could make us laugh and cry at the same time.

God Bless Bill

Esther
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 01-22-2003, 10:23 PM
Keith_Hixson's Avatar
Keith_Hixson Keith_Hixson is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Washington, the state
Posts: 5,022
Distinctions
VOM Contributor 
Post Salute!

May He Rest in Peace.


Keith
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 01-23-2003, 05:20 AM
Boats's Avatar
Boats Boats is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Sauk Village, IL
Posts: 21,828
Default

It's sad to say that the WWII soldier's are moving on. My Dad was WWII and his brother. Going to the military festivities I see more and more are not showing up. Either they are sick or have passed on.

For those of us who've had relatives or friends that have served in earlier conflicts it will be up to us to remember what they've done. They will be missed and I'm sure gratefull to their contribution of serving this great nation.

I can hear taps playing for all of them.
__________________
Boats

O Almighty Lord God, who neither slumberest nor sleepest; Protect and assist, we beseech thee, all those who at home or abroad, by land, by sea, or in the air, are serving this country, that they, being armed with thy defence, may be preserved evermore in all perils; and being filled with wisdom and girded with strength, may do their duty to thy honour and glory; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

"IN GOD WE TRUST"
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 01-23-2003, 06:03 AM
DMZ-LT DMZ-LT is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Atlanta , Ga
Posts: 5,599
Distinctions
VOM Contributor 
Thumbs up

My dad was a WWII VET , he died awhile ago. Last weekend while visiting xgrunt I got to talk to his Dad again. He was in Europe and was captured right after the Bulge. I could have listened for hours as he showed me and shared his pictures , his medals and his memories. I hope I get to hug him again and thank him for his service. I gave him a book that Andy Rooney wrote about WWII, dedicated to the guys that didn't make it home from that war.
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 01-23-2003, 08:01 AM
JeffL JeffL is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 699
Default Chicago Tribune Article

From the Los Angeles Times

Prize-winning cartoonist Bill Mauldin dies
Depicted the horrors of World War II, often with sharp-edged humor
By Mike Anton
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

January 23, 2003, 8:13 AM CST

LOS ANGELES -- Bill Mauldin, the Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist whose characters -- two downtrodden GIs, Willie and Joe -- spoke to a generation of soldiers who fought in World War II, died early Wednesday. He was 81.

Mauldin died at a nursing home in Newport Beach, Calif., where he had lived since mid-2001 while battling Alzheimer's disease. More recently, he had contracted pneumonia. Cause of death was respiratory failure.

A self-described "hillbilly from New Mexico," Mauldin rose from small-town obscurity to popular hero as a baby-faced Army sergeant working for the armed forces newspaper Stars and Stripes in Europe.

His darkly funny and irreverent cartoons captured the mood of a changing military made up of citizen soldiers who questioned the leadership skills of their own officers even as they battled the enemy. Mauldin went on to become one of the best-known and best-loved newspaper cartoonists in America.

Mauldin's Willie and Joe, infantrymen who survived on a diet of ironic humor, were dirty and unshaven, slogging through mud and snow and sleeping in foxholes filled with water. They dodged enemy bullets as well as the poor morale brought on by incompetent officers.

"Beautiful view," says one officer to another while gazing at the French Alps in a Mauldin cartoon. "Is there one for the enlisted men?"

"Joe, yestiddy ya saved my life an' I swore I'd pay ya back," Willie says in another sketch. "Here's my last pair of dry socks."

The caption on a drawing of exhausted soldiers walking hunched over in the rain reads, "Fresh, spirited American troops, flushed with victory, are bringing in thousands of hungry, ragged, battle-weary prisoners." It's hard to tell which are the prisoners.

"I haven't tried to picture this war in a big, broad-minded way. I'm not old enough to understand what it's all about," Mauldin wrote in 1945. "My reactions are those of a young guy who has been exposed to some of it, and I try to put those reactions in my drawings."

Mauldin's characters offered a counterpoint to the clean-cut, gung-ho fighting man put forth by the Army publicity machine. There was no gauzy sentimentality in Willie and Joe, no chest-thumping heroics. They were just doing their job and wanted only to finish it and go home. It was an apt description of America's new military.

"The old professional soldiers didn't care for these new people, these wiseacres who talked backed and didn't show them the proper respect," said Lee Kennett, professor emeritus of history at the University of Georgia and author of "GI: The American Soldier in World War II."

"Mauldin captured the basic attitudes of the GI. He spoke for them in a very clear way."

Mauldin's detractors said he was sowing seeds of discontent. Gen. George S. Patton -- whom Mauldin lampooned in a sketch about his insistence that soldiers be cleanshaven and wear ties, even in combat -- was so infuriated he tried to stop Stars and Stripes from being circulated among his 3rd Army. Patton called in Mauldin, dressed down the sergeant and threatened to throw him in jail.

But Patton's boss -- Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower -- interceded. Eisenhower, himself part of the Army's old guard, thought soldiers needed an outlet to vent their frustrations. He told Patton to leave Mauldin alone.

Mauldin's embrace of the average "dogface" on the front lines earned him the undying love of soldiers. For decades, veterans sought out Mauldin to thank him for helping them get through the war.

While battling Alzheimer's in the Newport Beach nursing home where he died, Mauldin was inundated with visitors and thousands of cards and letters.

"I don't use this word lightly, but he was a genius," said Andy Rooney, the "60 Minutes" correspondent who worked as a reporter for Stars and Stripes during the war. "He was sharp, bitter and funny all at the same time."

Yet Mauldin was often uncomfortable with the adoration showered on him because of Willie and Joe. Despite becoming wealthy and famous, he never abandoned his shy country sensibility.

"Mauldin was obviously special because of Willie and Joe. I guess that's how he will be remembered," said Stephen Hess, author of "Drawn & Quartered: The History of American Political Cartoons."

"But he's more complicated and important to the history of cartooning than that."

Indeed, Mauldin would go on to write and illustrate more than a dozen books and become one of the 20th century's most influential editorial cartoonists, sticking up for the little guy and skewering the powerful.

"Dad's philosophy in his work was always, 'If it's big, hit it,' " said his son, Nat Mauldin, who lives in Los Angeles. "He grew up a little guy. He understood the little guy."

School of hard knocks

William Henry Mauldin was born Oct. 29, 1921, in Mountain Park, N.M., the son of a hard-drinking jack of all trades who moved the family around the Southwest and northern Mexico during the Depression in search of work.

Mauldin's childhood was marked by his bickering parents and the family's scrabble for cash. He was a rebellious kid, a scrawny brawler who rarely won a fight, and was known to his teachers as a smart aleck.

But he was also a voracious reader -- something his mother encouraged.

"He is one of the most phenomenally self-educated people I've ever met," said Jon Gordon, a longtime family friend and attorney who managed Mauldin's business affairs. "He got an entire classics education simply by reading. He was a self-taught mechanic. He built his own machine tools. If he wanted to learn how to do something, he'd order a book and learn how to do it."

At 13, Mauldin saw an ad for a correspondence course in cartooning in Popular Mechanics magazine that claimed the profession could earn one as much as $100,000 a year. Worried that his parents' crumbling marriage could leave him and his older brother, Sidney, to fend for themselves, Mauldin borrowed the $20 tuition from his grandmother and enrolled.

Mauldin's first published work was in his Alamogordo, N.M., high school newspaper -- comic sketches of some of his teachers, none of whom recognized themselves. He then tried advertising, sending an unsolicited sketch to an animal medicine company that depicted two children grieving over a dog's grave. The company said it couldn't use it but sent Mauldin a dollar anyway.

At 17, living in Phoenix with his by-then-divorced mother, Mauldin was kicked out of a high school biology class for sticking a lighted cigarette in the mouth of a skeleton. He never made up the credit so he didn't graduate. Instead, he left home and enrolled in the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts. Again, Mauldin's grandmother came through, lending him the $300 tuition.

He found work illustrating restaurant menus and political posters and drawing gag cartoons. But the money was meager, and Mauldin couldn't break through to the better-paying national magazines.

In 1940, at age 18, Mauldin enlisted in the National Guard, enticed by the steady paycheck. Within days, his unit was federalized and Mauldin was suddenly in the Army. He quickly made his mark as a guy who didn't conform to authority.

"I was a smartass, always expressing my opinion," Mauldin said later. "So I got on the wrong side of the company commander ... who kept assigning me to KP and latrine duty."

While training for the infantry in Oklahoma, he got a job drawing cartoons for the 45th Division's newspaper. Mauldin later called his early work "latrine humor." In 1943, he was shipped to Italy and assigned to Stars and Stripes. It was there, in the crucible of war, that Willie and Joe began to take shape.

On the front lines

Mauldin got his material from the front lines, where he was wounded and awarded a Purple Heart. His biggest difficulty, though, was obtaining supplies. He was constantly scrounging for pens, brushes, ink and paper.

"The best paper I found to draw on was the double-thick photo prints," he said later. "I would rip a picture of Mussolini off the wall, or Hitler, and draw on the back."

Mauldin intended to kill off Willie and Joe in a final sketch at war's end but was persuaded by editors not to. Instead, they came home with him.

Mauldin entered the war unknown and broke. He left it famous and well off. In 1945, at age 23, he won a Pulitzer Prize, the first of two, for his wartime cartoons. His work was syndicated in more than 300 newspapers. His book "Up Front," a collection of cartoons, was a best seller. He also was astute enough to retain the copyright to his wartime cartoons.

But like many returning veterans, Mauldin had difficulty readjusting. Willie and Joe's caustic take on civilian life just didn't work.

"I really didn't know who they were anymore," Mauldin said in 1995. "They lost their identity as soon as the war was over. They were a flop at home, and I stopped drawing them."

His celebrity also was a problem. The distractions of fame clouded his artistic vision. He lamented that it left him out of touch with the average man.

"I have sat up late at night sometimes, counting my dollars and bemoaning the quirks of a fate that rewarded me ... [with] success that damn near ruined my cartoons," he wrote in "Back Home," published in 1947.

It would take Mauldin a decade to reinvent himself. He quit cartooning for several years and wrote magazine articles and books, including one from the front in Korea.

In 1950, he went to Hollywood and worked briefly behind and in front of the camera, including a role in John Huston's adaptation of "The Red Badge of Courage." Later, he turned to politics, losing a 1956 race for Congress as a Democrat in New York state.

In 1958, he returned to cartooning full time on the editorial pages of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. There, Mauldin brought a strong liberal point of view to the issues of the day, particularly civil rights.

Within a year, he had won his second Pulitzer for a drawing on the Soviet crackdown on author Boris Pasternak. "I won the Nobel Prize for literature," one Siberian prisoner tells another in the caption. "What was your crime?"

"He was an excellent writer, as strong with the words as he was with the drawings," said Mike Peters, a cartoonist for the Dayton Daily News. "That's what made him so special."

Peters was a 13-year-old budding illustrator when his mother, an employee of the company that owned the Post-Dispatch, introduced him to Mauldin. Peters was invited to watch Mauldin at work, sketching his signature dark lines with the sharpened back end of a paint brush.

"It was like watching one of the old masters at work," said Peters, who later won a Pulitzer Prize and credits Mauldin with landing him his first newspaper job.

In 1962, Mauldin moved to the Chicago Sun-Times, where he got a lucrative syndication deal. He would stay there three decades, pumping out cartoons from ideas that came to him each morning while soaking in a hot bath. He retired in 1991 after injuring his left hand, his drawing hand, while working on a vintage Army jeep.

It was in Chicago that Mauldin drew what many consider to be his most memorable cartoon: Abraham Lincoln, as depicted in the Lincoln Memorial, head in hands and weeping on the day President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in 1963. It was a superb example of his ability to touch the masses.

"What made him great was the uncommon -- almost intuitive -- feeling he had for the common man," said James F. Hoge Jr., now editor of the journal Foreign Affairs, who was Mauldin's editor at the Sun-Times during the 1970s. "He didn't change when he became famous. He knew what he was, and what he was was a man of common virtues."

An avid outdoorsman who loved to tinker with old cars, Mauldin lived well below his means.

Nat Mauldin, the cartoonist's son from his second marriage, said that when he was growing up in Chicago, the family car was "a plain Buick station wagon -- no whitewall tires, no power windows. We didn't have a color TV until 1970."

For years, Mauldin owned just one suit. But he sent his kids to private school and indulged his hobbies, photography and flying.

Mauldin's iconic image belied a messy personal life. He was married three times and divorced twice. His second wife, who struggled with severe depression, died in an car crash. He was father to eight children by his three wives: Bruce, Tim, Andrew, David, John, Nat, Kaja and Sam. All but Kaja survive him. He is also survived by brother Sidney, 13 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.

To millions of veterans, Mauldin was simply one of them: a soldier, but one who fought World War II with a pen instead of a rifle.

For decades, veterans reached out to Mauldin, calling him on the phone, stopping by unannounced at the New Mexico home where he lived for many years, sending him letters and copies of books asking for signatures. The stuff piled up -- unopened -- in a spare bedroom.

"By necessity, he had become quite reclusive," said Jon Gordon, his friend and attorney. "Because he became a folk hero at such a young age, there were people who thought they owned a piece of him. He kind of bristled at that. His feeling was, 'I want to live my own life.' He didn't share a lot of people's glorification of the war. He felt that a lot of people misinterpreted who he was and what he really stood for."

Gordon said that when a TV network invited Mauldin to visit American troops preparing for the Gulf War in Saudi Arabia, he was asked what impressed him most about the nation's high-tech military. The little tripods that soldiers had nowadays to help them fill sandbags -- those, Mauldin said, would have come in handy during World War II.

It was what Willie and Joe would have said.
Copyright ? 2003, The Los Angeles Times
__________________

Jeff
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 01-23-2003, 08:30 AM
billr billr is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Dec 1969
Posts: 172
Default

One of Bill Mauldin's many "right on target" cartoons. From Stars and Stripes - 1944

The caption reads:

"Just give me the aspirin. I already got a Purple Heart."
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 01-23-2003, 09:09 AM
JeffL JeffL is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 699
Default

"Me future is settled, Willie. I'm gonna be a perfessor on types o' European soil."
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1860 cartouche.jpg (83.1 KB, 66 views)
__________________

Jeff
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
4th Annual Rhode Island Aviation Hall of Fame induction dinner SparrowHawk62 Navy 0 11-01-2006 09:28 AM
Rider bill - to immigrant bill - NO vet homeless or Hungry Margaret Diann General Posts 8 01-09-2004 08:20 PM
?All American? to be Honored at College Football Hall of Fame thedrifter Marines 0 06-10-2003 06:06 AM
My Platoon Sergeant Died Today DMZ-LT Vietnam 6 02-19-2003 06:56 AM
Bill Mauldin, of WW II Fame of Willie & Joe, died today thedrifter Veterans Memorials 2 01-22-2003 10:23 PM

All times are GMT -7. The time now is 11:25 PM.


Powered by vBulletin, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.