Charles Schulz

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Charles Schulz - Source: www.commons.wikimedia.orgCharles Schulz - Source: www.flickr.com/photos/wouterkiel/Charles Schulz - Source: www.flickr.com/photos/jaycross/Charles Schulz - Source: www.flickr.com/photos/jaycross/Charles Schulz - Source: www.pbs.org

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  • Charles Schulz - Source: www.commons.wikimedia.org
  • Charles Schulz - Source: www.flickr.com/photos/wouterkiel/
  • Charles Schulz - Source: www.flickr.com/photos/jaycross/
  • Charles Schulz - Source: www.flickr.com/photos/jaycross/
  • Charles Schulz - Source: www.pbs.org

Charles Schulz
Cartoonist / Peanuts Creator
Born: 1922 Minneapolis, MN
Died: 2000 Santa Rosa, CA

Charles Schulz was an American cartoonist best known worldwide for his Peanuts comic strip.

Born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on November 26, 1922, Charles M. Schulz was the only child of Dena and Carl Schulz. From birth, comics played an important role in Schulz’s life. At just two days old, an uncle nicknamed him “Sparky” after the horse Spark Plug from the Barney Google comic strip, and throughout his youth he and his father shared a Sunday morning ritual reading the funnies.

Schulz always knew he wanted to be a cartoonist and was very proud when Ripley’s newspaper feature, Believe it or Not, published his drawing of the family dog in 1937.

Schulz put his artistic ambitions on hold during World War II while serving as a machine-gun squad leader, though he regularly sketched episodes of daily army life in his sketchbook. Following his discharge in 1945, Schulz returned to St. Paul to pursue a cartooning career. Between 1947 Charles Schulz on the ice at his skating rink in Santa Rosa, California, in 1969 and 1950, he drew a weekly comic panel for the St. Paul Pioneer Press and also sold seventeen comic gags to The Saturday Evening Post. After many rejection slips, Schulz finally realized his dream of creating a nationally-syndicated daily comic strip when Peanuts debuted in seven newspapers on October 2, 1950. By 1965, Schulz was twice honored with the Reuben Award by the National Cartoonists Society for his talents, and Peanuts was an international success.

The Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center in Santa Rosa, California, opened in his honor in August 2002, with the mission of preserving, displaying, and interpreting the art of this legendary cartoonist.

Sourced from Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center

American Masters on Charles Schulz
 

American Masters I Good Ol' Charles Schultz sourced from PBS

 Interview With Charles Schulz

 

Interview With Peanuts Creator Charles Schultz sourced from Siffil8

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