Nowadays, most Americans turn to digital media as their main source of news instead of reading printed papers or listening to the radio. Back in the 1950s, daily newspapers were an important part of the daily routine, and comic strips played a role in adding humor and positivity to the daily lives of readers. While these famous strips are still being produced today, their rise to popularity in the postwar era was remarkable.
Read on and be amused by these unforgettable comic strips that started in the 1950s.
This Mort Walker classic was introduced to America back in 1950. Hailed as one of the oldest comic strips, it boasts one of the biggest casts in the history of the artform. Beetle Bailey’s main characters include Private Beetle Bailey, his nemesis Sergeant 1st Class Orville P. Snorkel, Snorkel’s bulldog, and the gorgeous secretary Miss Buxley.
Written and illustrated by Charles M. Schulz, Peanuts is one of the most famous comic strips of all time. Launched in 1950, it features adorable characters like Charlie Brown, Lucy and Linus van Pelt, Snoopy, and Woodstock, among others. Although its original strips lasted only until 2000, its reruns are still widely published nowadays.
Hank Ketcham’s Dennis the Menace follows the story of naughty 5-year-old Dennis Mitchell. Introduced in 1951, the freckled boy instantly became famous thanks to his antics and his lovable relationship with the cranky Mr. Wilson. The comic strip was published in almost 50 countries and in more than 1,000 newspapers.
Bazooka Joe employed a highly effective marketing strategy that made it a huge hit. The misadventures of this eye patch-clad kid and his pals were exposed on wrappers of Bazooka Bubblegum. Successful indeed, the comic strip continued to be a part of children’s (and adult’s) lives until 2012. Since then, it’s only been an episodic attraction of the product’s packaging.