Background
Pete Tumlinson was born in Glasgow, Montana, one of four sons of, along with Jack, Dick and Robert, of O. G. and Maude Weaver Tumlinson.
Pete Tumlinson was born in Glasgow, Montana, one of four sons of, along with Jack, Dick and Robert, of O. G. and Maude Weaver Tumlinson.
Tumlinson attended Texas Agricultural and Mechanical University, where he originated the cartoon character "Old Sarge", who became an unofficial student mascot adorning the likes of stickers and coffee mugs decades later.
His comics work includes most of the early stories of the Western hero Kid Colt. Early life and career
Tumlinson then did military service in World World War II, serving as a pilot for Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Forces, the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force. His earliest confirmed comic-book work is penciling "I Hate My Husband!", an eight-page story (either co-penciled with or inked by George Klein) in the Timely Comics romance title My Own Romance #7 (July 1949).
Other early credits include stories in such Western-romance comics as Cowboy Romances #3 (March 1950) and, tentatively credited, Rangeland Love #2 (March 1950).
Some sources cr Tumlinson with a small amount of work on the masked-crimefighter series Blonde Phantom in 1948, and in the mythological-superheroine series Venus #6 (August 1949). Atlas Comics
Shortly after this, publisher Martin Goodman"s comics division had gone from being known as Timely Comics to Atlas Comics.
There Tumlinson was the primary artist on Kid Colt, Outlaw from issues #14-24 (May 1951 - January 1953) before turning over the reins, figuratively speaking, to the character"s longtime signature artist, Jack Keller. Tumlinson had previously drawn an anthological Western story, "The Magic of Manitou", for Kid Colt, Outlaw #13 (March 1951).
Later, Tumlinson drew Western stories for Atlas" Outlaw Fighters, Two-Gun Western and Wild Western.
With the popularity of horror comics in the early to mid-1950s, Tumlinson produced a number of horror stories for Atlas titles including Astonishing, Journey into Mystery, Journey Into Unknown Worlds, Marvel Tales, Mystery Tales, Mystic, Strange Tales, and Uncanny Tales. One story, "In the Dead of Night" by writer Hank Chapman and artist Tumlinson, appeared in issue #11 (November 1951) of Suspense, an anthology based on the Columbia Broadcasting System radio program His work in other genres spanned from stories in war comics, such as Battle, to the Biblical story "Cain and Abel" in Bible Tales for Young Folk #5 (March 1954).
Tumlinson"s last recorded comics cr is the four-page story "The Last Chance", in Marvel Tales #141 (December 1955).
Later career and death
Tumlinson left comics after the mid-1950s to work in the book illustration. He was living in Cameron, Texas at the time of his death.
Tumlinson"s art found a latter-day audience in the 1970s, when Marvel Comics reprinted some of his Atlas horror stories. Chronological by earliest original appearance:
"The Manitoba Who Went Back": Journey into Mystery #18 (October 1954)
Giant-Size Werewolf #3 (January 1975)
"Emily": Marvel Tales #128 (November 1954)
Chamber of Chills #14 (January 1975)
"Greed": Astonishing #36 (December 1954)
Weird Wonder Tales #5 (August 1974)
"One Manitoba"s Leprechaun" (tentatively identified as Tumlinson): Marvel Tales #146 (May 1956)
Weird Wonder Tales #20 (January 1977).