Formerly | Public Ledger Syndicate |
---|---|
Company type | Subsidiary |
Industry | Print syndication |
Founded | 1915 |
Founder | Cyrus H. K. Curtis |
Defunct | c. 1950 |
Headquarters | Independence Square[1], , United States |
Key people | George Fairchild Kearney |
Products | Comic strips, newspaper columns, editorial cartoons |
Owner | Public Ledger (Philadelphia) |
The Public Ledger Syndicate (known simply as the Ledger Syndicate) was a syndication company operated by the Philadelphia Public Ledger that was in business from 1915 to circa 1950 (outlasting the newspaper itself, which ceased publishing in 1942). The Ledger Syndicate distributed comic strips, panels, and columns to the United States and the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, Sweden, New Zealand, and Australia.[citation needed] The syndicate also distributed material from the Curtis Publishing Company's (the Public Ledger's corporate parent) other publications, including The Saturday Evening Post, Ladies' Home Journal, and The Country Gentleman.[2]
From 1933 to 1941, the Ledger Syndicate was a key contributor to the burgeoning comic book industry, with many of the company's strips published in both the seminal Funnies on Parade, and what popular culture historians consider the first true American comic book, Famous Funnies.
For whatever reason, the Ledger Syndicate favored comic strips with alliterative titles, including Babe Bunting, Daffy Demonstrations, Deb Days, Dizzy Dramas, Hairbreadth Harry, Modish Mitzi, and Somebody's Stenog.
Hudson
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).