Jim Hardy (comic Strip)
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Jim Hardy is a 1936-1942 American adventure
comic strip A comic strip is a sequence of drawings, often cartoons, arranged in interrelated panels to display brief humor or form a narrative, often serialized, with text in balloons and captions. Traditionally, throughout the 20th and into the 21st ...
written and drawn by
Dick Moores Richard Arnold Moores (December 12, 1909 – April 22, 1986) was an American cartoonist whose best known work was the comic strip ''Gasoline Alley'', which he worked on for nearly three decades. Biography Moores was born in Lincoln, Nebraska, ...
and distributed by
United Features Syndicate United Feature Syndicate (UFS) is a large American editorial column and comic strip newspaper syndication service based in the United States and established in 1919. Originally part of E. W. Scripps Company, it was part of United Media (along ...
. It was Moores' first solo comic strip work, before he gained renown for his work on ''
Gasoline Alley ''Gasoline Alley'' is a comic strip created by Frank King and distributed by Tribune Content Agency. It centers on the lives of patriarch Walt Wallet, his family, and residents in the town of Gasoline Alley, with storylines reflecting traditio ...
''. The strip told the story of Jim Hardy, a down-on-his-luck "man against the world". In 1940, the strip refocused on a secondary character, Windy, and his horse Paddles. Jim Hardy's last appearance in the strip was on December 16, 1940; the strip was retitled ''Windy and Paddles'' in 1941.


History

Moores worked as Chester Gould's assistant on the popular ''
Dick Tracy ''Dick Tracy'' is an American comic strip featuring Dick Tracy (originally Plainclothes Tracy), a tough and intelligent police detective created by Chester Gould. It made its debut on Sunday, October 4, 1931, in the ''Detroit Mirror'', and it ...
'' crime adventure strip from April 1932 to January 1936. During this time, Moores worked on ideas for strips of his own, sending many submissions to syndicates. According to his own estimation, he "wrestled out maybe twenty-five or thirty ideas for comic strips, mostly about pirates." None of them were accepted. In 1936, Moores managed to sell a strip called ''Jim Conley, Ex-Convict'' to United Features Syndicate. Understanding the success of
hardboiled Hardboiled (or hard-boiled) fiction is a literary genre that shares some of its characters and settings with crime fiction (especially detective fiction and noir fiction). The genre's typical protagonist is a detective who battles the violence o ...
crime comics like ''Dick Tracy'' firsthand, Moores set out to make an even more hardboiled strip by featuring an ex-convict just released from prison. United Features gave Moores a contract and asked him to provide eight weeks of strips. He left his job with Gould, and moved to New York. In the first strip, Conley was released from prison, making a vow to go straight and never return to his old gang. The syndicate's salesman tried to sell the strip to newspapers, but none of them were interested. Moores later wrote, "In a few days reports started to trickle in. Boston wouldn't touch any comic strip with a character in it named 'Conley'. The ex-convict idea bothered editors in Detroit and Washington... For one reason or another nobody wanted it." The syndicate felt the feature could be saved, so they changed the name to ''Jim Hardy, Man Against the World'', and scrubbed the just-released-from-prison opening. In the first strip, Hardy is thrown out of his boarding-house by an unsympathetic landlady, and is immediately conned by a grifter who leaves him with a hefty bill at a restaurant. An old schoolmate who's turned criminal pressures him to join his gang, but Hardy refuses. One of the gang members tries to hold him up on a bus, but ends up shooting the driver, and the bus plunges into the water. Hardy saves a girl on the bus from drowning, and her father gives him a job delivering money to the bank in an armored truck. Naturally, the truck is held up by a crook with a sub-machine gun, and the story rattles on. During the first year, Jim acquired a girlfriend and a kid companion, but this didn't help the strip's popularity. The character drifted between various jobs, finally settling down as a newspaper reporter, battling racketeers and corrupt politicians. A 1940
Big Little Book The Big Little Books, first published during 1932 by the Whitman Publishing Company of Racine, Wisconsin, were small, compact books designed with a captioned illustration opposite each page of text. Other publishers, notably Saalfield, adopted t ...
based on the strip was titled ''Jim Hardy, Ace Reporter''. The comic continued to struggle, without much support from newspapers. Moores later told an interviewer, "''Jim Hardy'' failed because I got most of my ideas watching movies, I kept changing Jim's character trying to get the right combination, but I did learn a lot by mistakes, improved my writing and drawing, and finally toward the end of the strip it wasn't looking so much like ''Tracy''." Towards the end of the strip, Moores introduced Windy, a skinny cowboy who was the caretaker of Paddles, a racehorse, and soon the entire strip began to focus on them. Jim left the strip, which was renamed ''Windy and Paddles''. Moores said that he executed this pivot "because we were struggling and the ship was about to sink." After the strip was cancelled in 1942, Moores went to work for the comics department at Walt Disney Studios, working on the ''
Mickey Mouse Mickey Mouse is an animated cartoon Character (arts), character co-created in 1928 by Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks. The longtime mascot of The Walt Disney Company, Mickey is an Anthropomorphism, anthropomorphic mouse who typically wears red sho ...
'' and ''
Donald Duck Donald Fauntleroy Duck is a cartoon character created by The Walt Disney Company. Donald is an anthropomorphic white duck with a yellow-orange bill, legs, and feet. He typically wears a sailor shirt and cap with a bow tie. Donald is known fo ...
'' comic strip, among others. He teamed up with Disney effects animator Jack Boyd in 1942 to found a company called Telecomics, Inc., which planned to broadcast comic strips on television, including ''Jim Hardy''. The show did reach the air in 1950 as ''NBC Comics'', but with all new stories; ''Jim Hardy'' wasn't included. Moores finally found fame in the late 1950s as the writer and artist of ''Gasoline Alley'' from 1959 until his death in 1986.


Reception

In his ''Encyclopedia of American Comics'', Ron Goulart writes,


Comic book reprints

While ''Jim Hardy'' was not a successful newspaper strip, it found an audience in comic books; the strip was reprinted in United Features' ''Tip Top Comics'' until 1947. There were also several one-shots in ''Comics on Parade'' and ''Sparkler Comics'', and Spotlight Publishers printed a 128-page ''Jim Hardy Comics Book'' in 1944.


Collections

Two hardback collections of ''Jim Hardy'' strips have been published: * ''Jim Hardy: 1936-1937'' (1977), published by Hyperion Press (1977) in the Hyperion Library of Classic American Comic Strips * ''Jim Hardy'' (1989), published by Classic Comic Strips{{cite web , title=Jim Hardy #1 , url=https://www.comics.org/issue/334356/ , website=Grand Comics Database , access-date=9 March 2020


References

American comic strips Adventure comic strips 1936 comics debuts 1942 comics endings