Cartoonists’ Exchange of Pleasant Hill, Ohio
One of the businesses contacting my almost seventeen-year-old father in the fall of 1937 was the Cartoonists’ Exchange of Pleasant Hill, Ohio.

The Cartoonists’ Exchange was not a traditional school. It was a correspondence course, part of a larger movement in early 20th century America that brought education directly into people’s homes. At a time when college was not accessible to many, especially during the years of the Depression, these programs offered something different: a chance to learn a skill and to reach beyond one’s immediate surroundings.
Founded in the mid-1930s by cartoonist David Rand, the Cartoonists’ Exchange taught aspiring artists how to draw cartoons entirely by mail.
Students enrolled in a structured program, and by many accounts, this program was one of the more comprehensive programs of its kind. From its small base in Pleasant Hill, OH, the Cartoonists’ Exchange operated for decades, reaching students across the country.
For a young man in 1937, living in Martinsburg, WV, this was an invitation. I do not know how exactly my father first heard about the Cartoonists’ Exchange, whether it was a small advertisement in a magazine, a clipping he mailed in, or a suggestion from someone who saw his interest in drawing. But I do know he had to take the first step. Somewhere along the way he quietly asked for more information.
This company remained active well into the mid-20th century. The Cartoonists’ Exchange eventually faded, like many correspondence schools of its era, as education changed and new opportunities replaced mail order dreams.
Read More From Nancy
Induction Paper
What this document records is a clearly defined sequence in my father’s entry into military service during World War II, set within the structured and highly organized process of Army induction in 1942. On August 4, 1942, my father, Roger E. Watson, was among a group of men processed through the induction center in Clarksburg, West Virginia. […]
Letter to Induction Center – August 1942
In August of 1942, my father found himself in a place that marked a turning point, not just in his life, but in the lives of millions of young men across the country. His letter, addressed to Major S,S. Bobes at the induction station in Clarksburg, WV, brings that moment into sharp focus. The examination took […]