Margarita (cartoonist)
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Margaret McCrohan Ahern (February 16, 1921 – August 27, 1999) was an American cartoonist and illustrator. She was educated at Providence High School, the Harrison Art School, and the
Chicago Academy of Fine Arts The School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) is a private art school associated with the Art Institute of Chicago (AIC) in Chicago, Illinois. Tracing its history to an art students' cooperative founded in 1866, which grew into the museum an ...
. Ahern worked for the Chicago Archdiocese's ''
New World The term ''New World'' is often used to mean the majority of Earth's Western Hemisphere, specifically the Americas."America." ''The Oxford Companion to the English Language'' (). McArthur, Tom, ed., 1992. New York: Oxford University Press, p. ...
'' newspaper (later the ''Chicago Catholic''), as well as the 1950s WGN television show, ''Cartuno''. She drew the monthly strips, ''Beano'', from 1948 to 1999, and ''Angelo'', from 1951 to 1954 for ''The Waifs' Messenger'', but is best known as the author and cartoonist for An Altar Boy Named Speck, which was syndicated by the National Catholic News Service (later known simply as Catholic News Service), from 1954 to 1979. Speck was featured in books published separately as: ''Speck, the Altar Boy'' (Hanover House, 1958), ''Presenting Speck, the Altar Boy'' (Hanover House, 1960), and ''A Speck of Trouble; New Escapades of the Inimitable and Irresistible Speck, the Altar Boy'' (Doubleday, 1964). Under the pseudonym Margarita, Ahern was also the creator of the comic strip ''Little Reggie'' (syndicated by Western Newspaper Union) and, under the pseudonym Peg O'Connell, ''Our Parish'', which was syndicated and then collected in ''Our Parish'' (John Knox Press, 1968). She died in 1999.


References


External links


Margaret Ahern biography on Lambiek Comiclopedia
American female comics artists American women cartoonists American women illustrators 1999 deaths 1921 births American comic strip cartoonists 20th-century American women artists 20th-century American people Artists from New York City School of the Art Institute of Chicago alumni Christian comics creators {{US-illustrator-stub