Raeburn van Buren

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"Now will you stop calling me a clay pigeon?" Raeburn van Buren's cartoon of lions at the New York Public Library's Fifth Avenue entrance.
"Now will you stop calling me a clay pigeon?" Raeburn van Buren's cartoon of lions at the New York Public Library's Fifth Avenue entrance.

Raeburn van Buren (January 12, 1891-December 29, 1987) was an American magazine and comic strip illustrator best known for his work on the syndicated Abbie an' Slats.

Born in Pueblo, Colorado, van Buren, a distant relative of US President Martin van Buren, began his career as an artist for the Kansas City Star, moving to New York in 1913 where he illustrated for Puck, Life and The Saturday Evening Post.

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[edit] World War I

Van Buren served in the old Seventh Regiment (107th Infantry) of the 27th "New York Empire" Division in World War I. He was art editor of the Division's magazine The Gas Attack. The New York Times compared his artwork in the magazine with that of the famous British illustrator, Bruce Bairnsfather. After military service, he drew cartoons for The New Yorker and Esquire. His artistry and illustrative flair were evident even in his cartoons. As a freelance illustrator, he contributed to numerous magazines, including Collier's, Redbook and McCall's. He was a founder of the National Society of Magazine Illustrators.

[edit] Abbie an' Slats

He began drawing Abbie an' Slats in 1937. The strip followed the experiences of a rural spinster raising her young cousin, a streetwise urban child. It was the idea of Al Capp, who intended to start a second strip to build upon the success of his popular Li'l Abner. Instead of drawing it himself, Capp recruited van Buren. Initially, van Buren turned him down but was soon lured by the prospect of steady work. The strip was carried in 400 newspapers but did not equal the popularity of Li'l Abner. Capp abandoned the strip in 1945, turning the writing chores over to his brother Elliot Caplin. Van Buren stayed on the strip, and it ended with his retirement in 1971.

[edit] Name mix-up

Letter to Raeburn van Buren commenting on name confusion (November 30, 1984).
Letter to Raeburn van Buren commenting on name confusion (November 30, 1984).

In 1984, Van Buren sent a gift to "Dear Abby" columnist Abigail Van Buren (Pauline Phillips), she wrote back on November 30, 1984, thanking him and then commented on the name similarity:

Yes, I remember our meeting very well. I also recall that every once in a while we'd get our mail mixed up... I at one time (when I first began, I spelled my name "ABBIE"... Then it became even more confusing because of the VAN BUREN... remember?) Abbie and Slats... and the Van Buren. I selected my own name... so perhaps it was an unconscious choice, with you in mind all the while. Be well, Darling One... and stay well. And I hope to heaven you're dangerous!

Van Buren lived in Great Neck, Long Island. With the Gold Key Award, he was honored in 1979 as a member of the National Cartoonists Society Hall of Fame. When he died in 1988 at North Shore Community Hospital in Manhasset, Long Island, after suffering an injury in a fall, he was 96 years old.

[edit] Books

Van Buren's wartime experiences are chronicled in the book Duty, Honor, Privilege: New York's Silk Stocking Regiment the Breaking of the Hindenburg Line by his grand-nephew Stephen L. Harris. Beginning with Abbie an' Slats and Becky (Saalfield, 1940), his comic strip was collected in several books.

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