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Jay Norwood Darling Edit Profile

also known as Ding Darling

cartoonist conservationist wildlife artist

Jay Norwood Darling was an American political cartoonist, who became one of the most well-known men of his era, conservationist, and wildlife artist. Also, he won two Pulitzer Prizes. Jay was famous for his witty commentary on the many different subjects that concerned the nation.

Background

Jay Norwood Darling was born on October 21, 1876, in Norwood Township, Michigan, United States; the son of Marcellus Warner Darling and of Clara Woolson.

Although his middle name came from his birthplace, he considered himself an Iowan from the time he moved to the state with his parents and brother, in 1886. His early days in Sioux City, surrounded by unspoiled prairie and seemingly limitless wildlife, created in Darling a passion to protect nature’s bounty.

Education

In 1900, Darling graduated from Beloit College in Beloit, Wisconsin, United States, a year behind his class. Rumor had it that he had been dismissed because he had drawn comical cartoons of the faculty for the college yearbook. Years later, when his alma mater awarded the famous Darling an honorary doctorate, he set the record straight, saying he had flunked nearly every course that year. Even so, the cartoons he drew were indeed impertinent in the eyes of the strait-laced faculty who appeared in them, so Darling veiled his identity by signing the offending illustrations “Ding,” a contraction of his last name. Less than 20 years later “Ding” was a nationally famous cartoonist.

Darling was as bright as he was fun-loving. He excelled in biology, the major he pursued in preparation for medical school. A Beloit biology professor also revealed Darling the interdependence of all living things a principle that profoundly influenced Darling throughout the remainder of his life.

Career

To save money for medical school, Darling joined the Sioux City Journal as a cub reporter. He may have been given the position because he was experienced with a camera when newspaper photography was in its infancy. He was a self-trained artist who, from a tender age, had carried a small sketchpad and pencil with him and compulsively drew what he saw. Darling was assigned to cover a newsworthy Sioux City trial and to get a photo of one of the lawyers involved. The cantankerous attorney spotted the reporter and his camera and chased him from the room. Young Darling was able to outrun his subject, but returned to the newspaper office without a photo. He found in his desk a likeness he had earlier sketched of the attorney and showed it to his editor, who ran the drawing with Darling’s story. Although neither man could have foreseen it, that experience directed Darling’s career path from medicine to political cartooning.

The Journal enjoyed wide circulation, and as Darling’s work became more sophisticated, it also attracted the attention of other Iowa publishers. Darling, however, was most interested in working for Gardner Cowles of the Des Moines Register and Leader, who had joined with Harvey Ingham to try to breathe life into the failing Register and Leader. Darling joined the Des Moines papers, in 1906. As his work became even more widely appreciated, major daily newspapers made him offers. In 1911 he joined the New York Globe. Except for the lifelong relationships he established with movers and shakers of the early 20th century, the New York interlude was unhappy for Darling. Editors at the Globe, unlike those at the Register and Leader, urged Darling to create political cartoons consistent with the newspaper’s editorial views.

When, following extended negotiations, he agreed to return to the Register and Leader, in 1913. In 1916 the New York Herald Tribune offered to syndicate Darling’s cartoons. Because the Register and Leader then had no such syndicate, Darling accepted the offer on the condition that he would spend only limited time in New York. Thus Darling remained an Iowan and a mainstay at the Register and Leader as he also benefited from a national following.

With his financial condition and national reputation secure, Darling devoted his attention to a wide range of interests and commenced a second career devoted to the conservation of natural resources. He helped organize the Iowa division of the Izaak Walton League. In 1931 he was appointed to the Iowa State Fish and Game Commission. The following year, to provide more scientifically trained conservationists, Darling proposed a cooperative arrangement including Iowa State College, now Iowa State University, the Fish and Game Commission, and himself to launch the nation’s first Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit at Iowa State. Darling personally pledged $3,000 per year for three years in the depth of the Great Depression to give life to his successful experiment. Darling took up etching as a hobby and became an acknowledged expert. Today, his etchings are prized by collectors of wildlife art.

Early in 1934, President Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed Darling and Aldo Leopold, along with Tom Beck, editor of Collier’s magazine, to what became known as the Beck Committee to study dwindling waterfowl numbers and how to restore them. The committee’s report was scathing in its criticism of the U.S. Bureau of Biological Survey, the forerunner of the Fish and Wildlife Service.

Later in 1934, when Darling, a Republican, accepted President Roosevelt’s appointment as chief of the Biological Survey, he extended the Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit concept nationwide. He came down hard on game hogs, hired devoted conservationists, greatly expanded the National Wildlife Refuge system, pushed legislation approving the “Duck Stamp,” and designed the first stamp in the series. The continuing Duck Stamp program has funded the purchase of more than five million acres of fragile waterfowl habitat at an inflation-adjusted cost of nearly $2 billion.

When he resigned as chief of the Biological Survey in 1935, Darling returned to Des Moines with plans to consolidate the political influence of the many organizations supporting conservation. His efforts resulted in the founding of the National Wildlife Federation, the largest and most successful organization of its kind, and he served as president during the first three years of its existence.

Following Darling’s death in 1962, friends, family members, and public figures created the J. N. “Ding” Darling Foundation to extend Darling’s conservation values. The foundation has focused its resources on conservation education and the protection of natural resources. The expansion and protection of the nation’s wildlife refuge system constitute one of Darling’s most important legacies. The refuge on Sanibel Island, Florida, where Darling wintered for many years, was named for him in 1967. The J. N. “Ding” Darling National Wildlife Refuge, whose land Darling fought to protect from developers, attracts more than 800,000 visitors each year.

Achievements

  • By the mid-1930s “Ding” was recognized by his peers as the most influential political cartoonist in the nation.

    Darling gave his cartoon collection to the University of Iowa, although he believed that "yesterday's cartoons" were "cold potatoes".

    After his death, the Sanibel Wildlife Refuge was renamed in his honor, in 1967.

Politics

In politics, Jay Darling was generally conservative. In 1932 he attended the Republican National Convention as a Platform Committee delegate.

A strong admirer of Herbert Hoover, Darling defended him against his critics. Hoover was depicted as an orphan who overcame that handicap in Darling's first cartoon, which appeared on May 6, 1923.

Views

Most important to Jay Darling were issues of wildlife exploitation and the destruction of irreplaceable waterfowl habitat. As an early pioneer for wildlife conservation, he worked this theme into his cartoons and influenced a nation.

Quotations: "I shudder when I recall how the long-eared, sleep-walking public has disregarded the screeching siren's warning of dangers ahead, while inflationary policies, political debauchery, and smothering taxation carry our beloved country to the brink of national bankruptcy just as sure as God made little red apples".

"Land, water, and vegetation are just that dependent on one another. Without these three primary elements in natural balance, we can have neither fish nor game, wildflowers nor trees, labor nor capital, nor sustaining habitat for humans".

Jay wrote, “If I could put together all the virgin landscapes which I knew in my youth, and show what has happened to them in one generation, it would be the best object lesson in conservation that could be printed”.

Jay wrote, “The people of Iowa think more to the square inch than the people of New York think to the square mile”.

Membership

An avid conservationist, Darling was the founder and first president of the National Wildlife Federation and was instrumental in the development of the Cooperative Fish & Wildlife Research Unit Program and the Federal Duck Stamp program.

  • On December 13, 1934, Jay Darling was elected as a member of the Boone and Crockett Club, a wildlife conservation organization.

    Boone and Crockett Club

Personality

After a serious illness, Jay Darling lost the use of his right arm in 1914 - 1916, but he taught himself to draw with his left hand. The nerve problem was then surgically corrected.

Interests

  • Politicians

    Herbert Hoover

  • Sport & Clubs

    Hunting, fishing

Connections

On October 31, 1906, Jay N. Darling married Genevieve Pendleton. They had two children, Mary Darling Koss and John Pendleton Darling.

Father:
Marcellus Warner Darling

Mother:
Clara R. Woolson Darling

Wife:
Genevieve Pendleton Darling

Daughter:
Mary Darling Koss

Son:
John Pendleton Darling

Brother:
Frank Woolson Darling

opponent:
Franklin Delano Roosevelt

Franklin Delano Roosevelt, often referred to by his initials FDR, was an American statesman and political leader who served as the 32nd president of the United States from 1933 until his death in 1945.

Friend:
Theodore Roosevelt, Jr.

Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. was an American statesman, conservationist and writer, who served as the 26th president of the United States from 1901 to 1909.