Above is a 50 plus year old photo of cartoonists at the Saturday Evening Post's humor editor's office. That's Martha Blanchard, fourth from left. The photo was nicked from gag cartoonist Eli Stein at his Eli Stein Cartoons blog. (From left: Harry Mace, Bill Yates, Gus Lundberg, Martha Blanchard, Herb Green, Jeff Monahan, Jerry Marcus, Saturday Evening Post humor editor Marione Nickles, Jack Tyrrell, John Norment, Dave Hirsch, Mrs. Fritz Wilkinson (wife of cartoonist Wilkinson), Peter Porges, Bob Schroeter, Mort Temes.)
Today: a profile and many samples of the work of prolific cartoonist and illustrator Martha Blanchard, courtesy of Dick Buchanan.
Martha Blanchard's cartoons appeared in all of the top markets. She was also a book illustrator. A member of the Art Students League and the National Cartoonists Society, she was a fixture in the New York City post-war cartooning circles. In 1970, she had just finished a new collection for Dell titled "Husbands and Lovers," when she passed away suddenly in her studio at 59 Fifth Avenue. The cause was a coronary occlusion. She was 54 years old.
Dick 
Buchanan writes about this rare female career cartoonist and shows 
twenty five of her cartoons below. Thanks and take it away, Dick. 
 ---
  MARTHA BLANCHARD
   GAG CARTOONS 1947 - 1964
      
        Martha Blanchard. This Week Magazine, November 20, 1949.
  Martha Blanchard was one the most successful women gag cartoonist of 
the 1950’s and 1960’s, an era where the number of women cartoonists 
would fit in the hand of a baby.
  Blanchard studied at the 
Art Students League. Her studio/home was in New York’s Greenwich 
Village, just a few blocks north of Washington Square. She sold her 
first cartoon in 1947. Her work appeared in many of the day’s leading 
magazines, including Collier’s, American Magazine, Look, Pictorial 
Review and Punch.  She was a prominent contributor to The Saturday 
Evening Post for two decades. 
  Blanchard’s cartoons usually 
depicted the plight of the young single woman and young marrieds in the 
1950’s. Rather than the decidedly misogynist gags about women which 
pervaded the era,
Blanchard’s drawings often were ones to which women could actually relate. 
  Blanchard also illustrated several books, including Jean Kerr’s Please
 Don’t Eat the Daisies, Dear Rabbi and Husbands & Lovers, a 
paperback collection of her gag cartoons. In her spare time, she drew 
caricatures at local veteran’s hospitals.
1.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  The Saturday Evening Post  December 13, 1947. 
2. MARTHA BLANCHARD. The Saturday Evening Post February 21, 1948.
3. MARTHA BLANCHARD. The Saturday Evening Post May 30, 1949.
4. MARTHA BLANCHARD. The Saturday Evening Post August 27, 1949.
 
5.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  The Saturday Evening Post  June 20, 1950.
6.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  The Saturday Evening Post  July 8, 1950.
7.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  This Week Magazine  November 20, 1949.
8.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  The Saturday Evening Post  January 27, 1951.
9.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  The Saturday Evening Post  November 22, 1952.
10.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  The Saturday Evening Post  September 13, 1952.
11. MARTHA BLANCHARD  Collier’s  August 7, 1953.
12.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  Pictorial Review  June 21, 1953.
13.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  The Saturday Evening Post  July 25, 1954.
14.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  Collier’s  April 29, 1955.
15.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  The Saturday Evening Post  March 23, 1957.
16.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  The Saturday Evening Post  April 27, 1957.
17.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  Punch  August 6, 1958.
18.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  Punch  August 13, 1958.
19.  MARTHA BLANCHARD,  Look Magazine  January 31, 1961.
20.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  1000 Jokes  Magazine  June – August, 1959.
21.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  1000 Jokes Magazine  August - October, 1962.
22.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  For Laughing Out Loud  January – March, 1962.
23.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  American Legion Magazine  October, 1963.
24.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  Look Magazine  June 16, 1964.
25.  MARTHA BLANCHARD.  True Magazine  April, 1964.
 

























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