Robert Ripley
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Robert LeRoy Ripley (December 25, 1893 - May 27, 1949)[1] was a cartoonist, entrepreneur, and amateur anthropologist who created the world famous Ripley's Believe It or Not! newspaper panel series, featuring odd but true facts from around the world. Subjects covered in Ripley's cartoons and text ranged from sports feats to little known facts about unusual and exotic sites, but what ensured the concept's popularity may have been that Ripley also included items submitted by readers, who supplied photographs of a wide variety of small town American trivia, ranging from unusually shaped vegetables to oddly marked domestic animals, all documented by photographs and then engagingly depicted by Ripley's prolific pen.
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Born in Santa Rosa, California, Ripley was an aspiring professional baseball player from 1906 until he was injured in 1913. At the same time, he also found steady work as a cartoonist, first at the San Francisco Bulletin and then at the San Francisco Chronicle. He moved to New York in 1912, where he published his first comic for the New York Globe and simultaneously tried out for the New York Giants.
After the injury put an end to his athletic hopes, Ripley turned to a full-time career as a professional cartoonist and writer. He later expanded his work into other media as well. His background in sports contributed to his interest in featuring sports contest records in his graphical work: a 1918 series he wrote and drew for the New York Globe was called Champs and Chumps and in 1920 he produced feature material about the Olympics, held in Antwerp, Belgium. Champs and Chumps -- with its limited focus on sports oddities -- was soon replaced by the more general title Believe it or Not!, and with this change of name and focus, Ripley's career took off.
In 1919 Ripley married Beatrice Roberts. He made his first trip around the world in 1922, delineating a travel journal in installments, and this ushered in a new topic for his cartoons -- unusual and exotic foreign locales and cultures. Because he took the veracity of his work quite seriously, in 1923 Ripley hired the researcher and linguist Norbert Pearlroth as his full-time assistant. That same year his feature moved to the New York Post.
Throughout the 1920s, Ripley continued to broaden the scope of his work and his popularity increased accordingly. In 1925 he published both a travel journal and a guide to the game of handball; the next year he became the New York state handball champion and wrote a book on boxing. With a proven track record as a versatile writer and artist, he attracted the attention of the publishing mogul William Randolph Hearst's King Features Syndicate, and in 1929 Believe It or Not! made its syndicated debut in seventeen papers worldwide. The success of the series assured, Ripley capitalized on his fame to branch out into other media. The first book collection of his newspaper panel series was published.
On 3 November 1929, he drew a panel in his syndicated cartoon saying "Believe It or Not, America has no national anthem." [2] In 1931, John Philip Sousa published his opinion in favor, stating that "it is the spirit of the music that inspires" as much as it is Key’s "soul-stirring" words. By a law signed on 3 March 1931 by President Herbert Hoover, "The Star-Spangled Banner" was adopted as the national anthem of the United States.
The 1930s saw Ripley expand his presence into other media. In 1930, he began an eighteen-year run on radio and a nineteen-year association with the show's producer, Doug Storer. Funding for his celebrated travels around the world were provided by the Hearst organization, and Ripley recorded live radio shows from underwater, the sky, caves, snake pits and foreign countries. The next year he hosted the first of a series of two dozen Believe It or Not! theatrical short films for Warner Brothers Vitaphone, and King Features published a second collected volume of Believe it or Not! panels. He also appeared in a Vitaphone musical short, Seasons Greetings (1931), with Ruth Etting, Joe Penner, Ted Husing, Thelma White, Ray Collins, and others. After a trip to Asia in 1932, Ripley opened his first museum, the Odditorium, in Chicago in 1933. The concept was a success, and by the end of the decade, there were Odditoriums in San Diego, Dallas, Cleveland, San Francisco, and New York City -- and Ripley had been voted the most popular man in America[3], received an honorary degree from Dartmouth College, and could legitimately claim to have visited 201 foreign countries.
During World War II, Ripley concentrated on charity efforts rather than world travel, but after the war, he again expanded his media efforts. In 1948, the year of the 20th anniversary of the Believe it or Not! cartoon series, the Believe it or Not! radio show drew to a close and was replaced with a Believe it or Not! television series, a rather bold move on Ripley's part, given the small number of Americans with access to television at that early time in the medium's development. Ripley only completed thirteen episodes of the series when he became incapacitated by severe health problems. He reportedly passed out during the filming of his final show. His health worsened, and on 27 May, at age 58, he succumbed to a heart attack. He was buried in his home town of Santa Rosa, in the Oddfellows Lawn Cemetery, which is adjacent to the Santa Rosa Rural Cemetery.
Ripley is often regarded as an extraordinary individual. His cartoon series was estimated to have 80 million readers worldwide and it was said that he received more mail than the President of the United States. He became a wealthy man, with homes in New York and Florida, but he always retained close ties to his home town of Santa Rosa, California, and he made a point of bringing attention to The Church of the One Tree, a church built entirely from the wood of a single 300 ft (91.4 m) tall redwood tree, which stands on the north side of Juilliard Park in downtown Santa Rosa.
Some have called Ripley a liar and accused him of exaggerating the facts, but throughout the years, he always gave appropriate sources. He claimed to be able to "prove every statement he made."[4], and the major reason he could make such a claim was that behind him stood the work of the indefatigable professional fact researcher, Norbert Pearlroth, who assembled Believe it or Not!s vast array of odd historical, geographical, and scientific facts and also verified the small-town claims submitted by readers. Pearlroth, who spoke 11 languages, spent 52 years as the feature's researcher, working in the New York Public Library ten hours a day, six days a week, finding and verifying unusual facts for Ripley and, after Ripley's death, for the King Features syndicate editors who took over management of the Believe it or Not!' panel.
Other employees who researched the newspaper cartoon series over the years were Lester Byck and Don Wimmer. Others who drew the series after Ripley's death include Joe Campbell (1946‚1956), Art Slogg at, Clem Gretter (1941‚1949), Carl Dorese, Bob Clarke (1943‚1944), Stan Randall, Paul Frehm (1938‚1978) - who became the panel's full time artist in 1949) and his brother Walter Frehm (1948&x20 1A;1989).
Ripley's ideas and legacy live on in Ripley Entertainment, a company bearing his name, which, since 1985 has been owned by the Jim Pattison Group, Canada's 3rd largest privately held company. Ripley Entertainment airs national television shows, features publications of oddities, and has holdings in a variety of public attractions, including Ripley's Aquarium, Ripley's Believe it or Not! Museums, Ripley's Haunted Adventure, Ripley's Mini-Golf and Arcade, Ripley's Movie Theater, Ripley's Sightseeing Trains, Great Wolf Lodge overlooking Niagara Falls, Guinness World Records Attractions, and Louis Tussaud's Wax Museums.
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- Ripley's last TV segment was on the song "Taps", traditionally played at military funerals. He dropped to the floor while the song was played and later died.[citation needed]
- He once attempted to join The Society in Dedham for Apprehending Horse Thieves but was rejected because he did not live in the Dedham, Massachusetts area.[citation needed]
- In the 1930s he was introduced to competitive sport of white water river rafting, which he did a segment on for his radio show. The river rafter who took Ripley on his rafting trip was Barry Goldwater.
- A little boy wrote a letter to him, with a drawing of his dog. He explained the amazing facts that the beagle ate shards of glass and other sharp objects, with no apparent harm to him. Ripley published the drawing and the story. The boy was a very young Charles Schulz, decades later the creator of the comic strip Peanuts, and the beagle was the inspiration of the dog Snoopy. This appearance in Ripley's book was the very first time Schulz's art work was published in comic pages worldwide.[citation needed]
- Ripley had one of the largest automobile collections in the world, yet he never knew how to drive.[citation needed] He also owned a large collection of beer steins, but preferred to drink gin.[citation needed]
- Ripley's life is to be made into a film called Ripley's Believe it or Not. The film will have comedy actor Jim Carrey portraying Ripley.
- 1893 Born in Santa Rosa, California
- 1901 Receives his formal education
- 1906 Becomes a semi-pro in baseball and sells first artwork
- 1908 Quits baseball briefly to support mother and sells first cartoon to Life
- 1909 Moves from the San Francisco Bulletin to the San Francisco Chronicle
- 1912 Creates his last drawing for the San Francisco Chronicle and moves to New York that winter
- 1913 On January 2, writes his first comic for the New York Globe and tries out for the New York Giants, but an injury ends his baseball hopes
- 1914 Takes his first trip to Europe
- 1918 On December 19, publishes Champs and Chumps in the New York Globe
- 1919 Marries Beatrice Roberts
- 1920 Takes his first solo trip to Europe to cover the Olympics, held in Antwerp, Belgium
- 1922 On December 3, takes first trip around the world; writes in installments in his travel journal
- 1923 On April 7, returns to the U.S. and hires researcher and linguist Norbert Pearlroth; the Globe ceases publication and the series moves to the New York Evening News
- 1925 Writes travel journal, handball guide
- 1926 Becomes New York handball champion and writes book on boxing score
- 1929 On July 9, William Randolph Hearst's King Features Syndicate features Believe It or Not! in seventeen papers worldwide
- 1930 Begins an eighteen-year run on radio and a nineteen-year association with show producer Doug Storer; Hearst funds Ripley's travels around the world, where Ripley records live radio shows from underwater, the sky, caves, snake pits and foreign countries
- 1931 Releases movie shorts for Vitaphone, second book of Believe it or Not!
- 1932 Takes trip to the Far East
- 1933 First Odditorium opens in Chicago
- 1934 Does the first radio show broadcast simultaneously around the world and purchases 28-room home in Mamaroneck, New York
- 1935 Odditorium opens in San Diego
- 1936 Odditorium opens in Dallas; Ripley voted most popular man in America[citation needed]
- 1937 Odditorium opens in Cleveland; Peanuts creator Charles Schulz's first published drawing appears in Believe it or Not!
- 1939 Odditoriums open in San Francisco and New York City; Ripley receives honorary degree from Dartmouth College
- 1940 Purchases a 13-room Manhattan apartment; receives two more honorary degrees; number of foreign countries visited through funding by Hearst reaches 201
- 1945 Stops foreign travel to do World War II charity work
- 1946 Purchases a Chinese junk, the Mon Lei (万里)
- 1947 Purchases third home, at Hi Mount, Florida
- 1948 Radio program ends; the 30th anniversary of Believe it or Not! is celebrated at a New York costume party
- 1949 Ripley dies on May 27, shortly after thirteenth telecast of first television show and is buried in Santa Rosa; auction of his estate is held; estate is purchased by John Arthur. He died some other place but buried in his home land. He was 59 years old when he died.
- ^ http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9063760/Robert-LeRoy-Ripley
- ^ Bizarre Magazine Robert L. Ripley. Published February 2006.
- ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/24/arts/design/24ripl.html
- ^ http://www.ripleys.com
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