George Hager | |
Birth Name: | Luther George Hager |
Birth Date: | March 1885 |
Birth Place: | Indiana |
Spouse: | Beatrice Holbrook Dearborn[1] |
Children: | 1 |
Field: | Drawing |
Training: | Arts Student League, New York and University of Washington, Seattle |
Works: | The Adventures of the Waddles |
George Hager was a Seattle illustrator and editorial cartoonist who worked for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer in the early 20th century. He was the son of another Seattle cartoonist, John Hager. He is known for being the first illustrator to show the Pike Place Market in Seattle.
200px|1907 cartoon depicting the early Pike Place Market in Seattle.
Hager also edited children's page for the Christian Science Monitor He studied art at the University of Washington and the Arts Student League in New York, where another Seattle cartoonist, William Charles McNulty taught. He was also a member of the Seattle Cartoonists' Club, and illustrated several of the men in the club's book, The Cartoon; A Reference Book of Seattle's Successful Men.[2]
Waddles was a duck drawn by Hager for the Christian Science Monitor in the cartoon strip The Adventures of the Waddles. According to the Seattle Daily Times, Waddles was a continuation of his father's duck, associated with the weather man.[3] John Hager had to discontinue his illustrating when his eyes went, and his children ran the Waddles comic strip. John's daughter, Mrs. George Dearborne, wrote the rhyming lines to go with the cartoon, while son George Hager did the illustration.[3] [4]