Mark Trail - Jack Davis, Jack Elrod, Tom Hill, James Allen

Jack Davis, Jack Elrod, Tom Hill, James Allen

In the mid-1940s, Ed Dodd was employed in advertising. Dodd and Jack Elrod met when they were with the Boy Scouts; Dodd was a Scout leader and Elrod was a Scout. In 1946, after Elrod sold Mark Trail to a syndicate, the strip was launched April 16, 1946 in the New York Post. In 1950, Dodd hired Elrod to work as the strip's background artist and letterer. During the late 1940s, the cartoonist Jack Davis worked one summer inking Mark Trail, which he later parodied in Mad as "Mark Trade." In addition to Davis and Elrod, Dodd also hired Tom Hill, Barbara Chen (who did the lettering) and secretary Rhett Carmichael. The strip's popularity grew through the mid-1960s, with Mark Trail appearing in nearly 500 newspapers through the North America Syndicate.

Artist and naturalist Tom Hill, who joined Dodd on Mark Trail in 1946, drew the Sunday strip, devoted to natural history and wildlife education, until 1978. Hill drew most of the daily strip art too after 1950, freeing Dodd to specialize in the scripting. Tom Hill's son, Jack Hill, recalled life at Dodd's studio in the Lost Forest outside Atlanta:

The art studio where Tom Hill (my father), Jack Elrod and Barbara Chen worked was on the second floor, where they had a great view of the Forest. There was also a homesteader, groundskeeper Hubert Hamrick and his family, who lived at Lost Forest and maintained the ranch and animals. Besides native wildlife which abounded on the Forest, there was riding stables, guinea fowl, caged pigeons, a 10-acre fishing lake and of course, Andy, the great Saint Bernard who appeared as Mark’s companion in the comic strip. I would visit Andy every time I went to visit Ed Dodd or to go fishing at the Lost Forest lake. Andy never had the freedom of his fictional counterpart and was kept in a running pen bounded by chain links. Ed’s other dog, Mose, was usually found at his master’s feet as Ed smoked his afternoon pipe. Famous people would visit Lost Forest, such as Marlin Perkins, sharpshooters, big game hunters and newspaper/magazine journalists. Ed Dodd was a personal friend of Daniel Beard, one of the founders of the Boy Scouts in 1910 and a fellow naturalist and illustrator. They both attended the Art Students League in New York City.

Dodd retired in 1978 shortly after the death of Hill. Elrod then continued the strip, adding new characters and taking over the Sunday edition. Based on the complaint of a reader in 1983, Elrod had Mark Trail abandon the trademark pipe that had been part of him from the beginning under likewise pipesmoking Dodd; and in 1993, Mark and Cherry finally married.

In 2010, after years of tutoring, Jack Elrod brought on the assistance of noted artist James Allen. James initially began assisting on the weekly Sunday page continuing the themes of wildlife education and natural history also alerting readers to endangered species and notifications of newly discovered species as well.

With King Features Syndicate receiving letters and emails, not only from fans, but researchers whose work has been cited, James' work has been heralded with bringing new themes, up to date research and finely detailed wildlife art back to the Sunday strip.

Read more about this topic:  Mark Trail

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