Tag Archives: Joe Simon

We’re From the Finger Lakes — Bet You Didn’t Know!

An ElderHostel guest at Watson Homestead told me that she had been on the Greek island of Corfu, when a voice behind her said, “Now there’s someone from Rochester, New York.” She turned around, and it was Mitch Miller – oboist, Columbia Records mogul, host of the wildly popular Sing-Along Gang on early 60s TV. When she asked him how he had known, he said, “I recognized the accent.”

In his line, Mitch must have had a superbly-trained ear, and he’d had plenty of time to study the accent. Born in Rochester, he went to East High, then Eastman School of Music, then played with the R.P.O. until lifting his sights to New York City.

So Mitch was a card carrying Finger Laker. Of course we know about such luminaries as Glenn Curtiss, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, and Susan B. Anthony, but who ELSE hails from the Lakes Country?

*Multimillionaire John D. Rockefeller was born (much poorer) in Richford, outside Owego.

*Twilight Zone creator Rod Serling was born in Syracuse. He then grew up in Binghamton, but summered almost every year of his adult life in Interlaken, and named his company Cayuga Productions.

*Cab Calloway was born in Rochester on the Fourth of July, four years ahead of Christmas baby Mitch Miller. Famed for his scatting vocals, Cab was a renowned big band leader, back in the days when jazz was jingling and swing was king.

*While making his way from Vermont to Illinois, Stephen A. Douglas paused for three years to attend Canandaigua Academy and begin the study of law. He beat out Abe Lincoln for a senate seat in 1858, and two years later was the only presidential candidate (out of four) with strong support in every part of the country. But this time it wasn’t enough to beat Lincoln, or to hold off the Civil War.

*President Millard Fillmore was born in Moravia, and grew up in Cayuga County except for an unhappy apprenticeship in Sparta. President Chester A. Arthur lived for a short spell in York (Livingston County). Curiously, they each became president on the deaths of their predecessors, and did not serve a second term.

*Many an aspiring president started out young by figuring ways to finagle “Robert’s Rules of Order.” General Henry M. Robert married and settled in Owego in 1901, when he retired from the army. He died 22 years later in Hornell.

*Like Mitch Miller and Cab Calloway, Joe Simon was born in Rochester. He went to high school there and then worked as a cartoonist for one of the city newspapers, then moved to Syracuse and did the same there. Moving to New York City at the age of 23, he fell into the brand-new field of comic books. He worked there for decades and had many accomplishments – but most memorably of all, he created Captain America.

*Daniel Shays fought at Lexington, and Bunker Hill, and Saratoga, but never got paid. Broke, indebted, and behind on taxes, he helped create the United States – by leading a rebellion in 1786. It failed, but it scared George Washington and other national leaders so much that they drafted a new constitution to strengthen the federal government and prevent (or crush) insurrections. We’ve been using it ever since. Pardoned, pensioned, unhappy and alcoholic, Shays drifted westward and finished his days in Sparta.

*By the way, Rochester must have had something very beneficial in its water way back when. All born within a six-year period, Cab Calloway lived to be 86, Joe Simon 98, and Mitch Miller 99!

Comic Books — The Finger Lakes Connection

I was intrigued, on September 17, to learn that it was the birthday of Jack Byrne (1902-1972). Not that I’d ever heard of him before, but he interested me because: he was a prominent figure in early comic books; he was born in Corning; and he was the brother of Olive Byrne, who also played a role in the “Golden Age” of comics.

Jack Byrne wrote action and adventure stories, largely for “pulp” magazines, and often for Fiction House. Fiction expanded into comic books in 1938, just months after Supermen first appeared in Action Comics # 1. They were never giants in the comics world, though they had a major hit with Sheena, Queen of the Jungle, and also brought out the first science fiction comic book. Jack became an editor, in charge of the comics line from 1945 until they gave it up nine years later.

Besides Sheena, women took the lead in a great many other Fiction House comics, which might tie in with the fact that Jack’s Corning-born mother (Edith Byrne) and aunt (Margaret Sanger) were two of the most prominent and aggressive feminists in the first half of the century.

So how about sister Olive, also born in Corning? She became the not-quite bigamous partner of Dr. William Moulton Marston, who would later create Wonder Woman. The two lived with Marston’s legal wife, all bringing up the children of both mothers, all writing for income. In place of a wedding ring, Olive wore two broad flat bracelets, which Marston worked into Wonder Woman’s appearance. He created the strong dynamic woman with inspiration from Edith, Olive, Sanger, and his own wife Elizabeth Holloway Marston. (He died young, by the way, in 1947, but the two women lived together until Olive’s death more than forty years later.)

The Finger Lakes have other comic book connections too. Dick Ayers lived in Pulteney and attended Hammondsport High School for a couple of years in the 1930s… film critic Charles Champlin remembered him as “a skinny kid with glasses, red hair, and a magic pencil.” Teacher Stan Smith got him his first paid commission, illustrating a menu for the Pied Piper Restaurant on Keuka Lake. After World War II Dick created tens of thousands of pages of comic book art, working on such characters as Sergeant Fury, Fantastic Four, the original Ghost Rider, and far too many cowboys to count.

Frank Kelly Freas was born in Hornell, but his art career was mostly in science fiction. He did do a few comic books, including one for Fiction House (I wonder if he and Jack Byrne ever knew they were both from Steuben?), plus four years at MAD magazine.

Then there’s Joe Simon… born (1913) and brought up in Rochester, schooled there, did artwork for newspapers both there and in Syracuse. He gravitated to New York City, doing art for newspapers, magazines, and… soon… the brand-new comic books. One day in 1940 he sketched a brand-new hero and, after experimenting with several unsatisfying names, called him – Captain America. He went on to many other comics firsts (often in partnership with Jack Kirby… their dads were both tailors), but “Cap” is perhaps his most enduring legacy.

Since Captain America is so closely tied to World War II, publishers continually struggle
for semi-plausible days to get him into our own time. In a 2011 “reboot,” the Captain finds himself a man out of time, having leapt from 1945 to the Obama era. In need of guidance, Captain America searches out the elderly “General Simon,” who had been present when weedy Steve Rogers drank the super-soldier serum to embark on his new life. After doing the best he could to help, General Simon passed away. Joe died the same year, at the age of 98.