Percy Crosby - signature     

Major new find re Percy Crosby

Roosevelt's Revenge?

Because it reveals so well the corruption of American institutions, and because it shows so much of the Soviet-style dark underside of the unprecedented four-term administration of Franklin Roosevelt, the story of the life, destruction, and death of renowned cartoonist Percy Crosby ought to be known to every American.  The corruption is of particular interest to this commentator because it so much involves the debasement of the same institutions that we see in the "suicides" of two other important public figures, former Secretary of Defense, James Forrestal, in 1949 and Deputy White House Counsel, Vincent Foster in 1993.  

In all three cases, the highest office in the land is implicated, if not in the crime, at least in the cover-up.  

In all three cases, as in the Soviet Union, the psychiatric profession showed itself to be of service to the state. In the Foster case, Special Prosecutor Kenneth Starr was able to get Dr. Alan L. Berman, the executive director of the American Association of Suicidology, to declare that "to a 100% degree of medical certainty, the death of Vincent Foster was a suicide," in the face of a ton of solid evidence to the contrary.  

In the 1949 Forrestal case, lead psychiatrist, Captain George Raines, alone among the Bethesda Naval Hospital doctors treating him, declared before the review board whose hearings were not made public until 2004, that Forrestal made numerous statements suggesting that he was suicidal, and Raines volunteered that a suicidal-sounding transcription of a poem that turned up among the evidence looked like it was in Forrestal's handwriting, when, in fact, it looks nothing of the sort.  

Percy Crosby was locked up in a mental hospital against his will for the last 16 years of his life.

None of these outrages could have succeeded without the complicity of what may well be America's most corrupt institution, its news media.  In the Foster case, when a witness and his lawyer were able to persuade a panel of three federal judges to order Kenneth Starr to append their letter presenting evidence that thoroughly contradicts Starr's conclusion of suicide to Starr's report, the media completely blacked out the news of this letter's inclusion.  

In the Forrestal case, the head of the National Naval Medical Center, Admiral Morton Willcutts, convened a review board to take testimony from witnesses a day after the body of former Secretary of Defense, James Forrestal, was found 13 stories below a window of the Bethesda Naval Hospital from which he had fallen.  The press had called the death a suicide right off the bat, and when the Navy decided not to release the transcript of the review board's hearings, which had been conducted in secret, they made nothing of it.  In 2004, when the author obtained the Willcutts Report transcript and the Seeley Mudd Manuscript Library of Princeton University announced with a press release that it had posted it on its web site--much of which happens to contradict a conclusion of suicide (which it did not reach)--the American press completely ignored it.

The Press's suppression of the news about what happened to Percy Crosby is probably worst of all, because he was one of their own.  One is reminded of how ABC Nightly News co-anchor, Bob Woodruff, has been virtually erased from public consciousness after he suffered a serious head injury from an explosion in Iraq.  The celebrity-obsessed country would certainly like to be regularly informed on the condition of someone who came into their homes through the television five nights a week, but that wouldn't be any better for the war effort than letting us see the flag-draped coffins at Dover Air Force Base.  So he and they have been airbrushed out of the picture like so many fallen-from-favor Politburo members.  

Also brought to mind is the news treatment of the death of the leading newspaper woman in the country, Katharine Graham, the owner of the Washington Post Company.  We have been told that she died from a fall on a walkway in Sun Valley Idaho, where she was attending a conference, but, to this day, we have not been told either who, if anyone, was with her when she fell, who, if anyone, witnessed her fall, or how she managed to fall so violently as to suffer fatal head injuries.  We have also not been told who found her and called for assistance, in case no one was with her and no one witnessed her fall.  Only the Idaho Statesman in Boise, Idaho, has been so specific as to report that she suffered "extensive intracranial injuries."

But let us not stray too far from the story of the once rich, famous, and influential newspaper cartoonist, Percy Crosby.  Here are some key excerpts from a brief story of his life, which can be found on the web site maintained by his daughter, Joan Tibbetts, at http://www.skippy.com:

During his career as a celebrity American artist and author, Percy Crosby crusaded against corruption and stood up to the likes of Al Capone and his henchmen when American citizens were too frightened to speak out. He used his Irish humor and gift of satire to lampoon politicians, President Roosevelt, the Ku Klux Klan, and fought for civil liberties, child labor laws, rights of veterans, and freedom of the press. Although he made a profound impression with millions of Americans, primarily through Skippy, the loveable and mischievous cartoon character who became a household word, Percy Crosby was unable to prevent retaliation by those who coveted control of Skippy for their commercial gain, and wanted him silenced. Percy Crosby was falsely imprisoned in a New York mental hospital for the last 16 years of his life, following years of harassment by the IRS. He referred to this period of his life as a "political witch hunt". During this time, Crosby's famous Skippy trademark and its valuable goodwill was pirated by a bankrupt peanut butter company, which later merged with a Fortune 500 company, making a fortune in illicit sales under the Skippy brand name....

Lord, Day & Lord, then a prestigious Wall Street firm, valued Crosby's estate in early 1932 in excess of $3 million dollars, and advised Crosby to incorporate under his famous Skippy trade name to protect the "immense good will" he had created, from unauthorized uses. Skippy, Inc. was incorporated in Delaware on May 11,1932, and Lord, Day & Lord partners became Skippy officers, directors, the named incorporators, and trustee for Crosby's infant children....

Roosevelt became president in 1932, with his" New Deal" program that was the beginning of big government. Crosby voted for FDR in 1932, but soon became one of his most vocal critics after FDR's attempt to "pack the Supreme Court", when the Court ruled in 1935 that the NRA (National Industrial Recovery Act) was unconstitutional. The Court's landmark decision, A.L.A.

Schechter Poultry Co. v. United States

(aka the "Sick Chicken" case) found that the NRA codes of fair competition allowing large trade associations to write and enforce their own laws was unprecedented. Percy Crosby referred to the NRA as Roosevelt's "New Russian Administration", unaware that it was by means of the NRA peanut butter code that a bankrupt California food packer (Rosefield) would steal Skippy and make a fortune....

Dale Crosby, secretary of Skippy, Inc. and a stockholder, advised Lord, Day & Lord in April 1934 that the IRS was asking a lot of questions about Skippy's business. By 1936 she reported that the IRS was "swarming like hornets" and wanted records for an audit. Skippy's tax lawyer suspected the audit was due to Percy Crosby's political crusade and beliefs. In 1937 Crosby drew a political cartoon, entitled "Paying the Price", showing the slain figure of Justice lying on the ground with a giant boot on her chest, captioned "One Man Rule".

Crosby sent copies of the cartoon to the Supreme Court and all members of Congress, which depicted Roosevelt's attempt to "pack the Supreme Court" after its unanimous decision against the NRA. Roosevelt was reputedly furious, and already sensitive to public outrage at his "court packing" plan. The IRS claimed Skippy, Inc. was incorporated by Percy Crosby to evade taxes and filed liens for $47,000, which was published nationally and reported during congressional hearings on tax evasion. Crosby fought back with prominent newspaper ads denying liability, and Lord, Day & Lord filed protest briefs, to no avail. He was forced to discontinue his publications under "The Freedom Press", which he founded in 1932, and had to sell valuable real estate at distress prices to pay the IRS debt and penalty fines. In 1939 his wife filed for divorce and took custody of the four young Crosby children. The bitter divorce proceedings were publicized to portray the creator of Skippy as selfish and cruel. The children never saw their father again. Crosby moved to New York City, began drinking heavily, and was hospitalized in 1940 for severe stress. He married Carolyn Soper, a hospital dietician, who, unlike his former wife, Dale Crosby, had little education or business experience. Crosby's friends and colleagues saw her as an opportunist. Crosby fired Lord, Day & Lord for "heinous conduct" in 1942 and threatened to sue the firm, which had also done all tax work. In June, 1944 he discovered that, despite the 1934 final decision for Skippy, Inc., Rosefield had continued to sell its peanut butter under the counterfeit Skippy label. A cease and desist letter from Crosby's new attorney resulted in Rosefield's renewed request to its Chicago attorney to report Crosby and Skippy, Inc. to the "criminal division" of the Justice Department. In September,1946 the IRS froze all assets of Percy Crosby and Skippy, Inc., after Hearst cancelled the Skippy contract. The IRS claimed Crosby and Skippy, Inc. owed another $43,000 in back taxes and penalties. Crosby, unable to pay an attorney, was forced to sue Rosefield pro se in New York (these documents remain concealed by Bestfoods to date), which action was allegedly dismissed for failure to prosecute. It was during this period that Crosby's licensing agent said the artist was "hounded and harassed", and was like "a hunted man"... " His phone was tapped, his mail intercepted, and he trusted no one."....

On or about December 16,1948 Crosby allegedly slashed his wrists and stabbed himself in the chest at his New York apartment. It was reported on national radio news that the famous creator of Skippy had attempted suicide, and was taken to Bellevue hospital. Interestingly, a small news article reported that the police found no evidence of the weapon used. Five days later, on December 21, 1948, Rosefield was issued a federal trademark for Skippy by the U.S. Patent Office after Rosefield's fraudulent application swore that no other person, firm or corporation had a right to the mark. Rosefield and its Chicago counsel had not appealed the 1934 decision for Skippy, Inc., and knew this federal registration was at their own peril as long as Percy Crosby was alive to make a protest. Crosby was transferred to Kings Park hospital for the mentally ill, and adjudicated incompetent by the New York Supreme Court in January, 1949, without a hearing or counsel to defend him. His written pleas for his release fell on deaf ears....

Throughout his years in confinement, Crosby wrote thousands of memos and tried to seek help from the outside world to gain his release, including letters to the National Press Club, to publishers and a plea to Erwin Griswold, Harvard Law School Dean. Letters to his children and others were censored, and Crosby was led to believe that his children had been college educated with the royalties from Skippy peanut butter, and turned against him. This was during the period of the Senator McCarthy "witch hunt" hearings exposing Communists in government and focusing particularly on writers, artists, Hollywood directors and screenwriters, who were branded as subversives, and their careers destroyed. Crosby's former attorney, Herbert Brownell (Lord, Day & Lord partner) became U.S. Attorney General under Eisehower-Nixon, and knew that Percy Crosby had threatened to sue the firm for "heinous conduct" in 1946 for "selling Skippy down the river", but he remained silent to protect his political interests....

Crosby was deprived of the expensive art material to which he was accustomed as a free man, but kept his sanity by drawing pictures and cartoons. He had to use cheap paper, and hospital adhesive tape to mat his art and correct his manuscripts, keeping his work locked in a trunk with keys kept on a shoestring around his neck to protect his work from theft and vandalism. The artist, who had captivated millions of people with his humor and extraordinary skills with the pen and brush, refused to accept defeat. Despite his long years of despair, frustration and humiliating torment by fellow inmates and hospital staff, he achieved a fulfillment and forged an inner peace with God. He would not give into tyranny and continued to wage his battle for truth and to satisfy an unquenchable fire of creativity with which he was blessed. In June, 1964 he wrote his last memo to a hospital nurse about the "Skippy steal", and shortly thereafter had a coronary, which left him in a coma for months. On December 8, 1964, his 73rd birthday, he died. His children were not notified of his death, and read his obituary in The New York Times a week later. He was buried in Pine Lawn Veterans Cemetery, close to his childhood home.

At this point, I must admit that I was not the first to notice the similarities between Percy Crosby's demise and James Forrestal's.  That honor belongs to Ms. Tibbetts.  I had never heard of Crosby until I received her e-mail in September of 2003.  A copy of this correspondence is at  http://www.dcdave.com/article4/030929.html.

David Martin, December 10, 2006

Reproduced gratefully from www.dcdave.com

Pictures added by Gnostic Liberation Front.

    

Major new find re Percy Crosby

 

--Forwarded Message Attachment--
Date: Sun, 9 Mar 2008 01:59:45 -0500
From: jctskippy@.................
Subject: Major new find re Percy Crosby
To: dcdave2u@verizon.net
 

Dave,
 
After many years of searching, I found the attached
article in NewspaperArchives.com that I believe will interest you.  It was
during this time that my father knew Jim Forrestal.
 
He wrote this letter to a Texas paper shortly
before going to Chicago to give a speech vs. Capone, which was not covered by
any paper, or Skippy's Hearst syndicated, but was reported in TIME, entitled "
Crosby v. Capone".
 
His published letter refers to the 3 month Skippy
daily continuity strip he did in Aug. 1930, 2 mos. after Capone was convicted
for tax evasion, and it ran until Election Day, Nov. 1930.  The Skippy
satire of Capone as "Spumone" (meaning froth in Italian) was intended to expose
Capone's corrupt Wall St. ties and election fraud, wherein Skippy
(prophetically) gets kidnapped so Capone can win election.
 
I refer to this comic series in my website
story because the copyrighted, artistic theme Crosby used of Skippy using his
pail of red paint & paintbrush to paint messages on fence to his pals--to
help Skippy fight the "Jackateers" is what Rosefield copied for its SKIPPY
peanut butter label--- a clear case of trade forgery, using Crosby's distinctive
childlike calligraphy.
 
It was this factor, and clues I found in Crosby's
writings in confinement, alleging that Rosefield was part of the "criminal
underworld" that wanted him silenced, which led me to do investigative research
on organized crime and Rosefield's corrupt Chicago lawyer shielding his client
from prosecution--in retaliation for Skippy's successful lawsuit v. Rosefield in
1933-34.
 
I also found other damning evidence in news archive
online, including (at last!) photos of Jerome M. Rosefield and the Theron Lamar
Caudle scandal, who was convicted, imprisoned 2 years for tax fraud/corruption
and died a broken man after his release.  I have FOIA copies of Caudle's
letters as Asst. A.G., criminal div. of DOJ in 1949, in c/o collecting taxes
allegedly due from Crosby/Skippy while he was confined, and powerless to defend
himself.  No wonder why those FOIA files were redacted and withheld from me
during Skippy litigation in 1980. 
 
What goes around comes around, and I still heed the
old Tammany Hall saying, "More lawyers live off dirty politics than flies on a
dead camel."  They say that the dead don't talk and their testimony is
lost, but with digging and research one can sometimes find the decedent's own
words and state of mind when warned to back off from stepping on big toes of
power.
 
Ad astra per aspera...
 
Joan

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

C O P Y

 

San Antonio Light newspaper, Texas, Feb. 26, 1931, page 56  (column 1, top)

 

TOP  CARTOONIST SENDS BEST WISHES                ________________________

      Creator of ‘Skippy’ Tells Why                                           Crosby ‘Adds Glow”

         He Did Recent Continuity                                               (Photo of Percy Crosby)

 

                        _______                                                          Light cartoonist explains

                                                                                                reasons for recent “Skippy-

                                                                                                Spumone” series

   Sending his best wishes and congratulations to

The Light on its newest achievement, fine new home,

Percy L. Crosby, famed cartoonist, creator of “Skippy”,

takes the opportunity to say that he will not do any more   ________________________

continuities, and explains his reasons for his recent productions.  He says:

   “In a recent continuity series, wherein Skippy antagonized Spumone, I did that because I had to get it out of my system.  I felt very deeply in regard to ‘Al’ Capone exercising criminal tyranny over the United States.  That series had a very deep motive underneath, and that was to make people realize  there was a great danger in this criminal supremacy.

TALK TOO HOT

   “I happen to know many of the facts in regard to criminal government, and one of them is that business men over the entire country are paying something like $7,000,000,000 a year to this power—a frightful sum.

   “Almost every line of honest endeavor was poisoned by criminal politicians and racketeers, to say nothing of their gun men.

   “I would also like to say that I have been unable to spread the truth about these criminals over the Columbia Broadcasting company.  I was scheduled to talk over 30 stations, but my talk was barred because it was too hot.

CLEAN GOVERNMENT

   “I don’t know whether this will be of interest to your readers, but I imagine it will when I say that I am not interested in either the Democratic or the Republican party, but I am interested in having clean government.

   “This is the first time that I have undertaken to explain the idea in back of the Skippy series and I thought that perhaps you would like to have me write about it, as many people really have so many different ideas about it.  I would like to clear up one impression, however, and that is that I really was very serious about it and conceived this idea with only the good of the country at heart.

   “Please accept my deepest gratitude for using the series and I hope that I may be able to add a little glow in the future home of the San Antonio Light.”

 

 

 

Percy Crosby - signature

Reproduced From:

http://www.bpib.com/crosby.htm

Percy Crosby - Skippy bookPercy Crosby - photographyIt's nearly impossible to discuss Percy Crosby without discussing "Skippy", his most famous creation. Crosby was born in 1890 or 91 in Richmond Hill, Long Island, New York. "Skippy" came along in 1923 as a full-page feature in the original Life. Between the two events, Crosby worked as an editorial cartoonist (for the socialist New York Daily Call at the age of 19), sports cartoonist for the New York Globe, staff cartoonist for the New York World (still only 19), strip cartoonist (his first being "The Clancy Kids" in 1916), a second lieutenant in U.S. Army (perfect fodder for a new strip and book, "That Rookie from the Thirteenth Squad" and a book of war cartoons, Between Shots), and a student at the Art Students League. From 1921 to 1925 he created several panel features, one of which, "Always Belittlin'", is sometimes credited as being the prototype of Skippy.
 

Percy Crosby - "Skippy" sample 1Skippy was a nine year old kid from the streets of America. Crosby's years at the New York World had exposed him to life in the city and honed his drawing style into a fluid, slashing, brushstroke that was to influence the medium. (Doesn't the sequence at left remind you of the modern antics of "Calvin and Hobbes"?) Life also featured his watercolor paintings on the cover of many issues

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

.
 

 

Percy Crosby - "Skippy" sample 2
 

 

The "Skippy" strip in Life exposed him to a nation and gave him a canvas upon which to experiment even further. There's an energy in "Skippy" that was new to the comics page. That fluid brush stroke was applied with more surety and speed. The humor and pathos developed a more universal touch. And the public loved it. By 1925, "Skippy" was a household name. He had a book collection of his Life strips titled, what else, Skippy (see above - this was also published as Life Presents Skippy) and he was starring in his own newspaper strip.

Percy Crosby - Dear SookyOther books of the period were: Skippy, an illustrated novel (which went through four printings in April of 1929!), Dear Sooky, letters from Skippy to a friend who died, with tipped-in color plates featuring Crosby's watercolors (also from 1929, see sample at right), Always Belittlin', in which he cashed in on the name of his earlier strip in a collection of short stories featuring Skippy (b&w wash drawings, 1927), and more. By the mid-Thirties, Skippy was in the movies and on the song sheets and Crosby was in the money, the museums (see an example of his dry point etching below) and on top of the world. He had self-published in 1933 a large limited edition collection of his watercolor and loose brush art devoted to Sport Drawings. His art appeared regularly in the annuals of the Dutch Treat Club.

Percy Crosby - pencil sketchHaving survived the Wall Street Crash and the depths of the depression, Crosby fell victim to his political fervor and bouts of alcoholism. Much of his writings outside of the Skippy books and strip were of a political nature. Titles like Three Cheers for the Red, Red and Red were self-published because the mainstream publishers were both uncomfortable with a book that proclaimed FDR to be a Communist and fairly certain that it would be a commercial failure. They were right on the latter point. Crosby continued to spend money to proselytize his beliefs. He published books like A Cartoonist's Philosophy, paid for full-page ads in the major papers to publish articles rejected by Life, even revived Always Belittlin' as a title for a book on political thought. He was anti prohibition, anti Klu Klux Klan (anti-bigotry in any form), and was certain that both J. Edgar Hoover and FDR were operating outside of the powers with which they were vested. He thought the New Deal was rampant socialism and paid for the publication of cartoons and editorials that said so. As his fortune dwindled, so did his ability to amuse the public and a vicious downward cycle began. His wife divorced him in 1939 and he was never to see her or his children again. The "Skippy" strip became less about life and more about politics, less about hope and more about depression, less appealing, less read, less important. Until King Features failed to renew the strip and "Skippy" was canceled on Crosby's birthday, December 8, 1945.

Three years later, Crosby attempted suicide and spent the rest of his life (he died in 1964, also on his birthday) in the mental ward of Kings Park Veterans' Hospital. His children and public believed him dead. He was classified a paranoid schizophrenic for his assertions that the FBI and IRS were after him and that Skippy Peanut Butter had infringed on his copyright. All of which were probably quite true, but his depression and suicide attempt, and the fact that his second wife would not assume responsibility for his well-being kept him a literal prisoner for life. His daughter, Joan Crosby Tibbetts, continues the struggle to keep his name and reputation alive. His contributions to the comic strip and the kid strip especially have never died. Strips as diverse as "Peanuts", "Pogo", and "Doonesbury" are indebted to his efforts.

The vast majority of this page is taken from Jerry Robinson's excellent biography, Skippy and Percy Crosby. Highly recommended.

Reproduced gratefully from: http://www.bpib.com/crosby.htm

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Revised: July 18, 2010 .   Communication:   discoverer73(at symbol)hotmail.com     Go to Home Page     Go to Index of All Articles Pages       
Read the
Disclaimer
Last modified: July 18, 2010  Copyright © 1999 - 2008  All rights reserved. [Gnostic Liberation Front].   www.gnosticliberationfront.com