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1949 Dyer Comic Pictorial Map of Tennessee

ChuckleTennessee-dyer-1949-2
$112.50
'Chuckle' Map of Tennessee. - Main View
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1949 Dyer Comic Pictorial Map of Tennessee

ChuckleTennessee-dyer-1949-2

Natural wonders and the Manhattan Project.

Title


'Chuckle' Map of Tennessee.
  1949 (undated)     9 x 30 in (22.86 x 76.2 cm)     1 : 1125000

Description


This is a c. 1949 Bill Dyer humorous pictorial map of Tennessee marking, with a bold question mark, a key research site of the Manhattan Project.
A Closer Look
Doubling as a highway map, the map is lavishly elaborated with cartoonish vignettes marking key landmarks, such as the University of Tennessee or the state capitol building in Nashville. One such, the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, which played a critical role in the Manhattan Project, appears only as a big white building with a gigantic black question mark. Most illustrations are meant to provide amusement: A 'wild turkey' near Grimsley fires two pistols with abandon, a miner rides a minecart near Huntsville, and a bear stands behind a tourist as they both gaze at the Great Smoky Mountains. People are seen dancing, playing music, sunbathing, hunting, and enjoying Tennessee's natural beauty.
Publication History and Census
This map was created by Bill Dyer and published by the Division of State Information of the Department of Conservation c. 1949. The newly opened American Museum of Atomic Energy is included in the places to visit above the map (see Image 2), allowing us to assign this map a c. 1949 date. We note a single example cataloged in OCLC, at the Tennessee State Library and Archives, and another example in the David Rumsey Map Collection.

Cartographer


William Haskel 'Bill' Dyer (December 12, 1912 - October 30, 1976) was an American cartoonist and artist best known for his comics in the Knoxville News-Sentinel. Born in Johnson City, Tennessee, Dyer began drawing at the age of six or seven and never took a formal drawing class in his life. He simply had natural talent. Dyer attended Science Hill High School, where his art teachers appreciated and fostered his talent, before earning a football scholarship to Washington and Lee University. He became an All-Southern Conference tackle while at Washington and Lee, but still had to work at a bookstore to pay for room and board. Scholarships during the Great Depression, particularly in the early 1930s, only paid for tuition. While at Washington and Lee, Dyer majored in journalism and also drew cartoons for the student newspaper. After graduating in 1935, he began working at the Knoxville News-Sentinel, after the late John H. Sorrells, then the executive editor of Scripps-Howard, which still owns the Knoxville News-Sentinel to this day, suggested to the then editor of the News-Sentinel Marshall McNeil, that he should hire Dyer because he admired and liked his work. Dyer started in the sports department at the News-Sentinel and covered high school football, sometimes reporting on the same games that he officiated, though it was never reported in a story with his byline that he had also been a referee at the game. Eventually, Dyer's editor, Loye W. Miller, recognized Dyer at one of the games while he was officiating, and the following game the News-Sentinel's story covering the game bore Dyer's byline. After Loye confronted Dyer about this, his only response was 'How could you cover it better than from down there on the field?' Thus, Dyer continued covering high school football games in this way until he was called up to serve in the U.S. Navy during World War II, for whom he created propaganda posters. After the war, Dyer returned to the News-Sentinel and wanted to cover University of Tennessee football, but all the writing spots were already filled. His editor suggested that he come up with some sort of cartoon to describe the games, and thus the Dyergram was born. The Dyergram, perhaps Dyer's most beloved cartoon, was a series of four illustrations of a football field that chronicled each play of the game by quarter and grew to be the most popular feature in the sports section. His work was also featured on Sundays in a half page five-column-wide comic entitled 'What Life' that provided a view of an event, or a series of events, from the previous week. Another feature in the Sunday paper was called the 'Nameless Cartoon' and was a contest in which readers competed to submit the best title for that week's cartoon and would receive the original cartoon and $2. Dyer also was available to create cartoons for other stories in the paper outside the sports section. Dyer would receive an article and be free to create the comic as he saw fit because 'Bill's own idea is better 99 times out of 100'. Over the course of his career, Dyer also taught cartooning at the University of Tennessee at night (although he stopped doing so out of a realization that he was training people that could potentially come asking around for his job), created the cover for the University of Tennessee's football brochure, and every year he created the Christmas card sent out by the University of Tennessee Athletic Association. Dyer married his wife Elizabeth on December 8, 1936, with whom he had two children, a son and a daughter. More by this mapmaker...

Condition


Good. Light wear and toning along original fold lines. Verso repairs to fold separations. Slight loss at fold intersections. Closed tear extending 1 inch into printed area not effecting the map of Tennessee professionally repaired on verso. Suggested road trip itineraries printed on verso. Some loss along border not effecting map of Tennessee.

References


Rumsey 11079.003. OCLC 1042252697.