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Milt Gross: Banana Oil Masterpiece – A Source Revealed?

I’m *loving* Paul C. Tumey’s latest book, The Art of Milt Gross Volume 1: Mastering Cartoon Pantomime – Judge 1923-1924. I’ve become even more interested in this era, when the old comic weeklies are still going, and newspaper comics are just getting started. Gross is a great example, from drawing cartoons for the humor weeklies and moving into newspaper cartooning, an evolution that still has room for exploration and lots of historical work. Several pioneering newspaper comic strip artists either started out with Judge and the like, or grew up reading those publications and carried that influence into their earliest strips. I also enjoyed this book because Gross’s cartoons here are still very funny.

A Milt Gross original of Dave’s Delicatessen exhibited at the Charles M. Schulz Museum. On loan from the Cartoon Art Museum, San Francisco, CA.

A couple of years ago, I curated an exhibition at the Schulz Museum on some of the comics that Charles Schulz grew up reading in the 1920s and 1930s. While working on that, I got to know the older comics I wasn’t familiar with, including Milt Gross’s newspaper comic Dave’s Delicatessen. But what I saw from that time included some racist caricatures, which, though abhorrent even then, were very widespread. However, in his earlier work found in this volume, his anti-Klan stance is loud and clear. Gross drew a number of comics ridiculing the Klan and their targeting not only of Black Americans, but also of Jewish Americans, like Milt Gross. A brave thing to do in 1920s America.

In his book, Tumey uses this delightful portrait of Gross, which was originally published in the January 24, 1925, issue of Judge. It’s a wonderful construction of photography, cartooning, and photo manipulation. The very funny Three Horses painting on the back wall caught my eye, and it did for Tumey, too. He mentions the repeated appearance of thisThree Horses image in a couple of other cartoons by Gross. One cartoon from June 1924 was published in Judge, and again later, in his comic strip Nize Baby, on October 2, 1928. But there was something familiar to me about it. Something … else.

Image courtesy the author and historian, Paul C. Tumey.

And then I half-remembered. I’d seen this before. Not the Milt Gross version, but something so similar, I feel they’re probably connected — a print of a painting that hung in some elderly relation’s home. I think it’s quite likely that Gross was lampooning a very famous work of art from the 1840s — A painting by J. H. Herring, Sr., titled “Pharaoh’s Chariot Horses.” Prints of the image were available almost immediately after the paint dried, and they (and knock-offs) remained popular for decades. So much so that these prints had essentially become kitsch by 1900. As affordable color printing became more widespread, cheaper prints of this painting quickly became available. In the original, the horses are all white. In some versions, one or all of the horses’ colors are changed. The original was round, but square and rectangular versions also spread. Herring’s powerful image also became popular as a tattoo design by the 1920s1. I think there’s at least a possibility that Gross is referencing this image and having some fun with it.

After messaging my parents, they remembered it too, which helped me solve my mystery, but it might not solve it 100% for Milt Gross’s reference.

Will Milt Gross’s version now become a tattoo? Time will tell. With Paul C. Tumey’s book (and the rest of his planned series), we will all get to know Gross’s work better, and maybe with more appreciation, we’ll see more of it. I hope so.

John F. Herring, Sr.’s The Pharaoh’s horses, 1848.

A later square tribute piece.

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About the Author: Benjamin L. Clark writes and works as a museum curator.

  1. Carol Clerk. Vintage Tattoos: A Sourcebook For Old-School Designs and Tattoo Artists. London: Carlton Books Ltd., 2008, pg. 198-201. ↩︎

What is slumgullion? A drink? A soup? Something weird?

A spot illustration from Roughing It featuring Mark Twain sitting at a table with a steaming mug in hand looking upset, or hesitant, or generally unhappy.

There’s a lot of good comics chat on Bluesky, in case you’ve not joined up and hang out there. Or maybe you signed up in the early days and haven’t been back — it’s worth dropping in sometime!

The cartoonist behind “Fluffy and Mervin,” Deb Perry, also an artist and comics history buff, asked this question that had a few people chatting, joking, guessing, and thinking:

From Donald Duck Finds Pirate Gold, 1942

I love a silly, nonsensical comics word, but Deb’s question about the word slumgullion sparked a little recognition in me. Was it historical sailor slang for liquor or grog (which was also real, btw)? Was it a soup? No, I thought, that’s Mulligatawny stew you’re half-remembering. Slumgullion sounds like a silly, made-up comics word. And, it has been used in comics as a silly-sounding word.

Like in this screwball newspaper comic strip, High Pressure Pete, signed SWAN by George Swanson. There are characters named the Slumgullions, and also a neighboring town, I think, by the same name. Sadly, I couldn’t read through the strip much to figure it all out. Someone really should reprint a collection of this strip! It has really fun drawing and some good jokes, even around 100 years later.

High Pressure Pete by Swan, originally published 5/25/1931

If I sound unsure about these facts, that’s because I’ve not heard of this strip. But praise from Paul C. Tumey that Swanson’s work is an excellent example of the Screwball school is high praise indeed. Paul’s book, Screwball! The Cartoonists Who Made the Funnies Funny is a great resource for learning about the funny, pioneering newspaper comic strips. If you’re into the old comics at all, you should grab a copy of this important book if you’ve neglected thus far to get a copy.

Comic artists will grab any silly-sounding word and try to use it in their own way, whether their syndicate editors realize what it really means or not. (I’ve heard from one such newspaper comic editor who had to tell Jim Davis he couldn’t use “schmuck” in Garfield, but that’s another story.)

Back to our question! It’s here, in a comic strip titled Dick Dippy’s Uncensored War Diary, that we see the actual definition of slumgullion in action:

Dicky Dippy’s Uncensored War Diary, signed with a name I can’t make out and HOLT in other installments, originally published 12/27/1927

Digging back through online newspaper archives, I see slumgullion largely defined as a ground beef stew with tomatoes, often some pasta, and whatever else you feel like. Then, finding this article helped shed light on several corners, and perhaps gave us a lead on the humorous use we find in Deb Perry’s original question! Maybe you’ll spot it toward the end of the first column, too.

The Arizona Republic, April 10, 1985, page 77

It makes sense that Mark Twain would use the word! The oldest use I found in print goes back to the Gold Rush days in California. It seems there were places in California named Ground Hog Glory, and a newcomer Slumgullion Bar had people laughing. There seems to be no place today known by this name, btw, which is too bad. But, Twain’s use does not surprise me. Humorists of old had some of those same instincts as the newspaper cartoonists of yesterday, and the better ones today. Of course, he’s going to find a funny word and latch onto it.

St. Louis Globe-Democrat, St. Louis, Missouri, originally published, Friday, April 29, 1853

I also found other 19th-century uses that indicate a mess. One, which brought a euphemism for stew to mind, described a hillside collapsing into a muddy mess in a mudslide full of rocks and logs. But, it seems in Deb’s example, slumgullion might be a beverage, not a stew. So, what is Mark Twain’s experience with slumgullion in his classic, Roughing It, about his life in the western gold country?

He described it as a beverage thus:

Spot illustration of “Drinking Slumgullion” from the 1886 edition of Roughing It by Mark Twain. “Illustrated by eminent artists” is the only art credit, sadly.

“Then he poured for us a beverage which he called Slumgullion, ” and it is hard to think he was not inspired when he named it. It really pretended to be tea, but there was too much dish-rag, and sand, and old bacon-rind in it to deceive the intelligent traveler. He had no sugar and no milk — not even a spoon to stir the ingredients with.”

Mark Twain in Roughing It (1886)

Was the illustration that accompanies the text informed by Twain? He kind of described it as “pretend tea,” and here we see his mug steaming away! Is that the “Eminent Artist’s” interpretation, or did they have access to Twain to get it right?

No matter what, it’s a very funny drawing, and as a humorist and travel writer, it’d come as no shock to me to learn that Carl Barks, the genius behind the Donald Duck adventure comics Deb is so fond of, had read Twain. Barks wrote and drew all kinds of adventure stories, often citing his reading of National Geographic as his major reference and influence. Had he also read Mark Twain? Could this one silly drawing in Twain have inspired Barks?

Deb Perry shared a follow-up with some more pages and panels, which gives us the answer in light of what we learned along the way:

STEW

Oh, so it *is* a stew or soup Donald is cooking up for Pete. Yellow Beak just happens to already have a mug on the table when Donald’s nephews, Huey, Dewey, and Louie, serve him some slumgullion, and he downs it in a gulp. So, Carl Barks knew slumgullion was a soup or stew, *not* a drink, and very doubtfully inspired by Mark Twain.

If you want some recipes, there are several that accompany that article from 1985, which are instructive in their own right. Let me know if you find one you like.

Recipes that accompanied the above article from The Arizona Republic.

For further reading:

Screwball: The Cartoonists Who Made the Funnies Funny by Paul C. Tumey

Donald Duck Finds Pirate Gold, 1942 [Reissue 2025] by Carl Barks

Roughing It by Mark Twain


About the Author: Benjamin L. Clark writes and works as a museum curator.

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