It requires little more than an amateur's imagination to picture in the mind's eye the stalwart and hairy historians of the Stone Age jotting down their literature upon the Bedford stones, or hewing the trees that were in time to carbonize into our great coal fields.
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John Tinney McCutcheon (May 6, 1870 – June 10, 1949) was an American newspaper political cartoonist who was known as the "Dean of American Cartoonists".
McCutcheon was born near South Raub, Tippecanoe County, Indiana to Captain John Barr McCutcheon and Clara Glick McCutcheon. He was the younger brother of novelist George Barr McCutcheon, writer of the Graustark books. His son, Shaw McCutcheon was an editorial cartoonist.
He received the Pulitzer Prize for Cartoons in 1932.