Edd Ashe, born Edmund Marion Ashe Jr., (August 11, 1908 - September 4, 1986) was a creator of comic strips and a comic book artist in the United States.[1] He wrote the strip Guy Fortune that ran in the Pittsburgh Courier from August 19, 1950, until October 22, 1955. He also illustrated The American Weekly.[2]

He was born in Norwalk, Connecticut.[2] His father was an artist and head of Carnegie Tech's art department.[3]

He was a white Golden Age comic book artist.[4] He and Nathaniel Nitkin created Bomber Burns.[5]

His second marriage was to Beatrice Bishop in 1941. She was the daughter of a prominent hotelier on Long Island and died February 8, 1983.[2]

Guy Fortune

The Guy Fortune comic strip was about a secret agent who was African American. It was pioneering.[6] A 1955 strip features Fortune in Pakistan teaching a young prince baseball.[7]

References

  1. Congress, The Library of. "LC Linked Data Service: Authorities and Vocabularies (Library of Congress)". id.loc.gov.
  2. 1 2 3 "Catalog". www.pulpartists.com.
  3. "Edd Ashe". lambiek.net.
  4. Jackson, Tim (April 21, 2016). Pioneering Cartoonists of Color. Univ. Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781496804808 via Google Books.
  5. Mougin, Lou (10 January 2020). Secondary Superheroes of Golden Age Comics. McFarland. ISBN 9781476638607.
  6. "Vintage Black Heroes - Guy Fortune | The Museum Of UnCut Funk". museumofuncutfunk.com.
  7. "1 Jan 1955, Page 31 - The Pittsburgh Courier at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com.


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