Herschel C. Logan

Herschel C. Logan was an American artist and founding member of the Prairie Print Makers. He is known primarily today for his woodcuts of serene, nostalgic scenes of Midwest small towns and farms -- mostly Kansas subjects -- rendered in precise, clean lines.[1] He earned both international acclaim as well as the nickname "The Prairie Woodcutter".[2]

Herschel C. Logan
Born
Herschel Cary Logan

(1901-04-19)April 19, 1901
DiedDecember 8, 1987(1987-12-08) (aged 86)
EducationChicago Academy of Fine Arts
Olivet Institute in Chicago
Federal School, Minneapolis
Known forPrintmaker
Illustrator
Expert/collector of historic firearms
Publisher of miniature books
MovementSocial realism
American realism
Regionalism

His work shows a deep admiration and respect for the beauty of rural America, and great skill in its portrayal.[3] People were seldom a subject in these works beyond small figures as part of the landscape, though he also produced many portraits of famous Americans and other historical figures. Logan's work is similar to that of his contemporary J. J. Lankes. Scenes of rural life are dominant in both artists’ woodcuts, and both use an “L” monogram to sign their works in the print.[4]

From 1921 to 1938, Logan produced some 140 woodcuts in editions up to 50,[5] but then gave up printmaking as a profession. In the following nearly 50 years, he was an author and illustrator, a collector, a noted authority on firearms, and a publisher of miniature books.

Early life and education

Logan was born on April 19, 1901, in Magnolia, Missouri to Oliver Cary Logan (1877-1944) and Leota Pinkie Bills Logan (1880-1902).[6] After the death of his mother in January 1902 his father took the remaining family, including his grandparents, to live on a farm near Winfield, Kansas.[7] At Winfield High School he became the staff cartoonist for the school newspaper, The Oracle.[8] After graduation in 1920 he studied commercial art at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts.[2] He also took courses at the Olivet Institute in Chicago[9] and through the Federal School (aka Art Instruction, Incorporated), a correspondence art school in Minneapolis.[8][10]

On June 20, 1924, Logan married his first wife, Susie Titus (1902-1990), in Wichita, Kansas.[11] They had two children, Samuel Herschel Logan and Peggy Joan Logan.

Career

After a year of studying art in Chicago, Logan took a position as branch manager for Salina Mid-Continent Engraving[12] before accepting a job as a commercial artist for the McCormick-Armstrong Lithography Company in Wichita.[8] One of his contributions was a series of woodcuts offered as “Exclusive Holiday Greetings from Wood Cuts by Herschel C. Logan”.[13]

Logan left Wichita in 1929 to work for the Consolidated Printing and Stationery Company in Salina, becoming its director in 1931.[8] He stayed there until he retired in 1967, and soon after moved to Santa Ana, California. There he met and married his second wife, Anne Lawrence Serven, in 1970.[14] Soon after, Logan started a new career publishing miniature books (see below), and would travel around California drawing and painting trees and landscapes, typically ink or graphite with watercolor.

Logan died on December 8, 1987 in Santa Ana, California.[15][16]

Printmaking

It was at the Olivet Institute that Logan met fellow artists like Glenn Golton, Louis Grell, and Harry Muir Kurtzworth. A friendship with C.A. Seward,[17] a well-known Kansas printmaker, heightened Logan's interest in woodcuts; it also put Logan in contact with other printmakers such as Lloyd Foltz, Charles Capps, Clarence Hotvedt, and Leo Courtney and painter Birger Sandzen from nearby Lindsborg. It was through these friendships that Logan learned the art of printmaking, and that eventually led to their founding, with others, the Prairie Print Makers society in 1930.[18] There Logan “lent his skill as a craftsman and instinctive aptitude for carving wood blocks that had established his national recognition by the age of twenty-three.”[19]

Logan gained considerable recognition for his body of editioned woodcuts, most of them about Kansas. He was exhibited extensively in the Mid-West, but also at international exhibitions in Los Angeles and at the 1939 New York World's Fair. Logan worked from life, using photographs or sketches he made on location, often finding inspiration in simple structures by the roadside while driving. He would spend several days studying and refining a sketch before proceeding.[2]

In 1938 Logan collaborated on a book entitled “Other Days in Pictures and Verse”. Presenting a nostalgic view of "The Good Old Days" in small town America, it incorporates 12 woodcuts, prose poems by Everett Scrogin, and decorations by C.A. Seward.[20]

Portraits were another favorite subject for Logan. Twelve prints of famous Americans were gathered into a book with short biographies,[21] and later reissued as a calendar by the Consolidated Printing Company.[22]

Famous printers and printmakers throughout history were another focus of Logan's portraiture. He produced over 100 portraits in pen in ink for a book project “Great Names in Printing Through Six Centuries” that was never realized despite having lithographic reproductions prepared and possible page mockups.[23] Fifteen of these were published posthumously in the miniature book Portraits of Some Famous Printers[24] as a keepsake for the 1992 joint meeting of the Roxburghe & Zamorano Clubs.

Logan abandoned fine art printmaking in general after 1938. Logan himself recalled “...after my friend Seward’s long illness and death [Jan 31, 1939], I simply lost interest in making prints.”[25] “But perhaps more to blame were Herschel’s restless energies which were diverted to other enterprises.”[26] By then he had thoroughly explored his love of the Kansas countryside from farms to towns to landmarks, often revisiting scenes often in different seasons or different times of the day. Logan later reflected “After World War II, abstract art and painting became more popular and took over, and printmaking just kind of fell apart."[27]

Logan did not completely abandon woodblock printing, nor its companions linocut and rubber plates. Throughout his career he advocated woodcut as a desirable medium for a straightforward presentation of an idea in his commercial work and designed many woodcut logos, emblems and bookplates.[28] This extended to a woodcut style – he emulated woodcuts in many of his commercial work and later drawings, a technique he developed for advertising purposes, “satisfactory and yet may be produced quickly and with less difficulty”.[29] Logan continued to produce numerous portraits throughout his life, generally in pen and ink. A large collection is found in his “Little Portraits of Famous Americans”, a miniature book from 1973.

Consolidated Printing

In 1939, Logan began hosting “The Consolidated Hour”, a weekly series of radio talks on KSAL in which he talked about Kansas industries. Starting January 2, 1939, he introduced “The Colonel” in advertisements for Consolidated Printing and Stationery.[30] The Colonel was a dapper cartoon gentleman in a long black frock coat and vest, sporting a Kentucky Colonel necktie, a wide-brimmed Stetson hat, a handlebar mustache, and a goatee. He offered short bits of homespun philosophy, “sometimes serious, sometimes merely amusing, but never bitter”.[31] Logan himself describes The Colonel as a bit of Abe Lincoln, Will Rogers, Teddy Roosevelt and other characters he admired.[32] A mainstay of Consolidated advertising, The Colonel appeared weekly in the Salina Journal for nearly 30 years. Logan both drew and wrote copy for the Colonel, becoming so identified with his creation that “The Colonel” became a widely used nickname among colleagues and friends. Indeed, as Logan himself was a Kentucky Colonel since 1934 and sometimes dressed the part,[33] “The Colonel" was very much his alter ego.

Logan contributed a considerable amount of art to Consolidated's work products through the years, from small decoration to full illustrations. An advertising sheet contains numerous samples of his work.[34] A postcard illustration of the Brookville Hotel in Brookville, Kansas, shows his use of the woodcut style.[35]

Firearms and ammunition

Since Logan was young he was interested in guns, whittling rifles and pistols as a boy on the farm.[36] He collected his first antique firearm, a blunderbuss, in 1932.[37] As his collection grew, Logan became an expert in firearms and ammunition, authoring and illustrating a number of books that continue to be standard historical references. He also contributed drawings and articles to the American Rifleman over a period of more than two decades.[26] Logan became a popular lecturer in the Civil War Roundtable circuit as a noted collector and historian.

When Logan purchased a Smith & Wesson American .44 engraved “Texas Jack, Cottonwood Spring, 1872”, he learned all he could about John B. “Texas Jack” Omohundro, a colorful Old West showman and scout.[38] The result was the book “Buckskin and Satin: The Life of Texas Jack (J.B. Omohundro)”.[39]

Other gun-related texts:

  • Cartridges: a Pictorial Digest of Small Arms Ammunition
  • Hand Cannon to Automatic: A Pictorial Parade of Hand Arms
  • The Little Book of Guns: A Chronology
  • The Muzzle Loading Rifle Then and Now
  • The Pictorial History of the Underhammer Gun

Miniature books

Since his Consolidated Printing days Logan had been fascinated by the art and craft of printing and publishing. In 1940 he built a small-scale working model of Gutenberg's press out of wood for a display as part of the 500th Anniversary of Printing. In 1973 he purchased a Baby Reliance Hand Press and started a new career as a publisher of miniature books. The Log-Anne Press, named after him and his wife, operated out of a studio behind their Santa Ana home. The company published some 50 books.[26]

Collecting

Logan's interests were broad and found expression in a number of valuable collections. An early love was the Civil War, sparked when he learned his maternal grandfather had been active in that conflict. By 1967, he had a collection of over 600 antique guns and edged weapons, focused on the Civil War and other items. “My collection included … firearms, uniforms, badges, medical gear, battle rattle, souvenirs – anything that would present a picture of the times through the relics that were left.”[36]

In the 1930s, Logan wrote to illustrators Herbert Johnson and J.N. “Ding” Darling, hoping to start a collection of cartoon art. He offered some of his work for theirs, and to his surprise, they agreed. He continued to barter his work for the works of others, amassing one of the greatest collections of cartoon and illustrator art from the 19th and 20th century.[36] The cartoons are now in the special collections department at Kansas State University Library. Twelve oil paintings by American magazine illustrators are in the care of the Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art.[40]

His other collections included:[12]

As well as:[41]

  • Mustache Cups
  • Relics and Curios

Activities

Except as noted, items are from “In Memoriam, Herschel C. Logan”.[42]

Salinas, Kansas 1929-1968

  • Art Director, Consolidated Printing and Stationery Co. for 37 years
  • Chief, Auxiliary Police, World War II
  • President, Salinas Rotary Club,1949–50
  • Director, Salinas Chamber of Commerce
  • President, Christian Laymen's Association
  • Member, City Planning Board
  • Secretary, Board of Trustees, Salina Public Library

State and national activities

  • Board of Directors, Kansas State Historical Society
  • Vice-president, American Society of Arms Collectors, 1955–56
  • President, American Society of Arms Collectors, 1957–58
  • Member of Board of Directors, American Society of Arms Collectors
  • Fellow of the company, Military Historians and Collectors
  • Member, Arms and Armour Society of England
  • Life Member, Muzzle-Loading Rifle Association
  • Contributing Editor, “The American Rifleman”
  • Member, Los Angeles Corral of the Westerners
  • Member, Company of Military Historians and “fellow” of the company[12]

Memberships

  • Salina Lodge No. 60 A.F. & A.M.
  • Salina Consistory
  • Salina Chapter No. 18 Royal Arch Masons
  • Askelon Commandery No. 6, K.T.
  • Isis Temple Shrine
  • El Bandito Shrine Club, Santa Ana, California
  • Past President, Los Compadres con Libros
  • Trinity United Presbyterian Church, Santa Ana

Works

Exhibitions and awards

Year Event and works Ref
1925 1st Annual Kansas Artists Exhibition. Topeka [8]
1925 6th International Print Makers Exhibition, Los Angeles Museum Exhibition Park, March 1–29
  • Summer Afternoon
[43]
1925 Midwestern Artists Exhibition, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri, Feb 2-Mar 1
  • Rainy Day
  • The Blacksmith Shop
[44]
1925 Philadelphia Art Alliance, Annual exhibition Dec 1925-Jan 1926
  • Lincoln Portrait
[45]
1926 2nd Annual Exhibition, Artists Guild of Wichita
  • Barnyard
  • Barnyard in Winter
  • The Old Milk House
  • Evening Shadows
  • Farmyard
  • Old Print Shop
  • Church in the Valley
  • Deserted Barn
[46]
1926 7th International Print Makers Exhibition, Los Angeles Museum Exhibition Park, March 2-April 4, 1926
  • Rainy Day
[43]
1926 Midwestern Artists Exhibition, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri
  • The Old Milkhouse
  • Evening Shadows
  • Barn-yard in Winter (Bronze Medal)
[47]
1927 3rd Annual Kansas Artists Exhibition, Topeka [8]
1927 8th International Print Makers Exhibition, Los Angeles Museum Exhibition Park, March 1–31
  • Old Mission Ranchos De Tao
  • Evening Shadows
[43]
1927 17th McPherson Exhibition [8]
1927 Midwestern Artists Exhibition, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri, Feb 1-Mar 1
  • Deserted Barn
  • Mexican Farmyard
  • Church in the Valley
  • Old Mission, Ranchos de Taos (Bronze Medal)
[48]
1928 9th International Print Makers Exhibition, Los Angeles Museum Exhibition Park, March 1–31, 1928
  • The Weaver
[43]
1928 Library of Congress - Six wood block prints added to the permanent collection
  • Church in Winter
  • Kansas Wheat Field
  • Lindy
  • The Lost Hope
  • The Old Mission
  • The Weaver
[26]
1928 Midwestern Artists Exhibition, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri, Feb 1-Mar 1
  • The Weaver
  • Lost Hope
[49]
1928 Wichita Artists’ Guild
  • The First Snow
[50]
1929 5th Annual Kansas Artists Exhibition, Topeka [8]
1929 American Block Prints, Second Annual Exhibition, Mar 19–31, Wichita City Library, April at Mulvane Museum
  • Barn in Winter
  • The First Snow
  • Lincoln
  • Roosevelt
[51]
1929 Kansas Free Fair, Topeka
  • The First Snow (First Prize) in group of 5
[52]
1930 6th Annual Kansas Artists Exhibition, Topeka [8]
1930 11th International Print Makers Exhibition, Los Angeles Museum Exhibition Park, March 1–31, 1930
  • The First Snow
[43]
1930 Kansas Free Fair, Topeka
  • Group of 5 prints (Second prize)
[52]
1930 Midwestern Artists Exhibition, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri, Feb 2-Mar 2
  • Summer Day
  • The First Snow (Silver Medal)
[53]
1931 7th Annual Kansas Artists Exhibition, Topeka, Oct 17-Nov 9 [8]
1931 12th International Print Makers Exhibition, Los Angeles Museum Exhibition Park, March
  • Fodder in the Shock
[43]
1931 Kansas Free Fair, Topeka
  • Book plate (First Prize)
  • Pen and Ink Pirate (Second prize)
[52]
1931 Midwestern Artists Exhibition, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri, Feb. 1-Mar 2
  • Fodder in the Shock
  • Snow
  • Barker Homestead
[54]
1932 8th Annual Kansas Artists Exhibition, Topeka [8]
1932 Kansas Free Fair, Topeka
  • Book plate (First prize)
  • Group of 5 prints (Second prize)
[52]
1933 6th Annual American Blockprint Exhibition, Jan 8–17, Wichita City Library
  • Brick Plant
  • Hartley’s Elevator
  • A Kansas Landscape
[51][55]
1933 9th Annual Kansas Artists Exhibition, Topeka
  • A Kansas Landscape
  • Sand Boat
  • Brick Plant
  • August Sunshine
[8][56]
1933 Kansas Free Fair, Topeka
  • Group of 5 prints (First prize)
[52]
1933 Midwestern Artists Exhibition, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri
  • Sunlight Through the Trees (Honorable mention)
  • Morning Sunlight
[57]
1933 Prairie Print Exhibition of Wichita, Kansa, Municipal Clubhouse, March [58]
1934 Midwestern Artists Exhibition, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri
  • On Fifth Street (Bronze Medal)
[59]
1934 15th International Print Makers Exhibition, Los Angeles Museum Exhibition Park, March, 1934
  • On Fifth Street (Honorable mention)
  • Old Corn Crib (Honorable mention)
[43]
1934 Kansas Free Fair, Topeka
  • Group of 5 prints (Second prize)
[52]
1934 Rocky Mountain Print Makers Exhibition, Chappell House, Denver
  • Morning Sunlight (Purchase prize)
  • Sunlight Through the Trees (Purchase prize)
[52][60]
1935 8th Annual American Block Print Exhibition, Jan 10–20, Wichita
  • Easter Snow
  • Lonely Farmhouse (Kansas Federation of Art, best blockprint)
[51][52]
1935 16th International Print Makers Exhibition, Los Angeles Museum Exhibition Park, March, 1935
  • Trosper Homestead
[43]
1935 Friends of Art, K.S.C.
  • Woodside Hut (Gift print, Kansas Federation of Art)
[52]
1935 Kansas Free Fair, Topeka
  • Group of 3 prints (First prize)
[52]
1935 Midwestern Artists Exhibition, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri, Feb. 3-28
  • Easter Snow
  • Lonely Farmhouse
[61]
1938 9th Annual American Block Print Exhibition, Nov 20-Dec 5, [Wichita]
  • Hillside Road
  • Hilltop Home
  • Monday Morning
  • Sod Shanty
[51]
1936 17th International Print Makers Exhibition, Los Angeles Museum Exhibition Park, March, 1936
  • Hillside Road
[43]
1936 Kansas Federation of Art, Prairie Print Makers collection, Apr-May 1 [62]
1936 Kansas Free Fair, Topeka
  • Group of 3 prints (Second prize)
  • Book plate (Montgomery) (First prize)
  • Comm. Design (engine) (First prize)
  • Lettering (Will Rogers) (First prize)
  • Pen & Ink (Capital Bldg) (Third prize)
[52]
1936 Midwestern Artists Exhibition, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri, Feb 2-Mar 2
  • Trosper Homestead
  • Monday Morning
[63]
1936 Print-Makers Society of California, traveling exhibit
  • The Bather
[64]
1937 Midwestern Artists Exhibition, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri
  • Hilltop Home (Third Prize, $10)
[65]
1938 American Blockprint Exhibition, Wichita
  • Afternoon Shadows (Kansas Fed. of Art, best blockprint)
[66]
1938 Brooks Memorial Art Gallery, Graphic Art, Memphis, Tennessee [67]
1938 Kansas Free Fair, Topeka
  • Group of 3 prints (Second prize)
[52]
1939 Kansas Free Fair, Topeka
  • Group of 2 prints (First prize)
  • Comm/ design (Berkowitz) (Third prize)
[52]
1939 Midwestern Artists Exhibition, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri, Feb 5-2
  • Afternoon Shadows
  • Victim of the Dust
[68]
1939 New York World's Fair
  • Winter Day
[43]
1939 Prairie Print Maker's Exhibit [8]
1939 Six States Exhibition [6th Annual], Joslyn Memorial Art Museum, Omaha [8]
1940 13th Annual American Block Prints and Lithographs Exhibition, Jan 2-Feb 2, [Wichita]
  • Sod House in Winter
  • Winter Day
[51]
1940 Midwestern Artists Exhibition, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri, Feb 4-25
  • Sod House in Winter
  • Summer Calm
[69]
1940 Six States Exhibition [8th Annual], Joslyn Memorial Art Museum, Omaha [8]
1941 Printmakers Society of California, traveling exhibit Central Library, Los Angeles [70]
1941 Six States Exhibition [9th Annual], Joslyn Memorial Art Museum, Omaha [8]
1944 Prairie Print Makers traveling exhibition [71]
1954 Exhibit of Kansas Regional Print, Wharton Room, Manhattan Library [72]
1958 Prairie Print Makers traveling exhibition [73]
1984 Kennedy Galleries. Proofs of talent : American artists and the challenge of printmaking. May 1984
  • Morning Sunlight
[74]
2007 Birger Sandzén Memorial Gallery 50th anniversary exhibition [75]
2018 Prints of the Prairie: Herschel Logan's Kansas. Nov 13–15, 2018, The Coutts Museum of Art, El Dorado, Kansas. (30 prints on display) [76]
2020 Telling a story : woodblock prints by Clare Leighton, J.J. Lankes, Herschel Logan. Jun 27-Nov 1, 2020, Wichita Art Museum, Ablah Gallery, Wichita, Kansas. [77]
2020 The Printmakers at Ranchos de Taos. Aug-Sep, 2020, William R. Talbot Fine Art, Santa Fe, New Mexico.
  • Old Mission, Rancho de Taos
[78]

Collections and archives

An extensive collection of over 1600 prints (published and unpublished), books, paintings, drawing, studies, sketchbooks, original wooden blocks and other artifacts, plus Logan's collection of cartoon and illustrator art, can be found at the Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art, Kansas State University. All their holdings have been digitized.

Additional collections:

Sources

  • Baker, L.V. “Herschel C. Logan, Personality Profile”, Arms Gazette. North Hollywood, Calif., Bienfeld Pub. Co., Apr 1971.
  • Baldwin, Sara M, and Robert M. Baldwin. Illustriana Kansas: Biographical Sketches of Kansas Men and Women of Achievement Who Have Been Awarded Life Membership in Kansas Illustriana Society. Hebron, Nebraska: Illustriana Incorporated, 1933. Print.
  • Conrads, David, and Pamela Evans (Editors). The Prairie Print Makers. Exhibits USA, 2001
  • Craig, Susan. Biographical Dictionary of Kansas Artists (active Before 1945). Lawrence, KS: Susan V. Craig, 2009. Internet resource. url:https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/handle/1808/1028
  • From Printmaking to Making Books”, Tampa Book Arts Studio, 1 Apr. 2020.
  • Krause, Rachel. “Herschel Logan's Intricate Wood Prints Take Viewers Back to Kansas' Dust Bowl Days”. Medium, Medium, 14 Oct. 2018. url: https://medium.com/@rachel_krause/herschel-logans-wood-prints-highlight-scenes-from-kansas-farmland-bb5fe64bcf8.
  • Lehman, Anthony L. Herschel Logan: Man of Many Careers. (Los Angeles: Westerners, Los Angeles Corral, 1986).
  • Midwestern Artists’ Exhibition (Kansas City: Kansas City Art Institute, 1920-1942
  • Mines, Cynthia. For the Sake of Art: The Story of an Art Movement in Kansas. s.l. Mines, 1979.
  • North, Cori Sherman. “In the Center of It All: 90 Years of the Prairie Print Makers”, [Lindsborg, Kansas]: The Birger Sandzén Memorial Foundation, 2020.
  • O'Neill, Barbara T, George C. Foreman, and Howard W. Ellington. The Prairie Print Makers. 1984. Print.
  • Reinbach, Edna, comp. “Kansas Art and Artists”, in Collections of the Kansas State Historical Society. v. 17, 1928. p. 571-585.
  • Sain, Lydia, comp. Festival of Kansas Arts and Crafts. Catalog: Arts and Crafts of Kansas: an Exhibition held in Lawrence, Feb. 18-22, 1948 in the Community Building. Lawrence: World Co., 1948.

References

  1. "From Printmaking to Making Books". Tampa Book Arts Studio. 2020-04-09. Retrieved 14 Feb 2022. In crisp, carefully composed images, Herschel portrayed scenes like farmhouses nestled in untouched foothills, cows grazing beneath the cool shade of a tree, the play of light and shadow in a field, a woodland hut half-built into the earth, apple trees in brilliant bloom, and a sod shanty on the open prairie.
  2. "Kansapedia, Prairie Print Makers". Topeka, KS: Kansas Historical Society. Retrieved 2 Jul 2022.
  3. "Charm of Kansas Landscape in Logan's Woodcuts". The Kansas City Star. 1950s. Retrieved 15 Mar 2022. "...blazing sunlight effects in summer, falling snow and drifted farmsteads in winter … there is a liquid quality in his moonlight, little lakes of it resting on wheat shocks, roofs, little plateaus and banks of ground and burnishing trees and stacks and hay barns"
  4. "From Printmaking to Making Books". Tampa Book Arts Studio. 2020-04-09. Retrieved 14 Feb 2022. Anyone familiar with J. J. Lankes's work could be excused ... for attributing a Logan print to Lankes. The same subjects predominate in both artists' work: pastoral and rustic scenes animated by the lives of modest people who live close to the land. Both men responded to the rapid changes they witnessed as they grew up and came of age in the early decades of the twentieth century. The America celebrated in their prints is made up of landscapes gently marked by dirt roads and rough stone walls or crooked fences. ... Aside from the subject matter, one also notices that some prints by both men are "signed" with similar "L" monograms.
  5. 140 is the number most often quoted in the literature, sometimes qualified as “near” or “approximately”. The actual number is difficult to pin down. Logan’s own typed inventory, reproduced in Lehman, lists 136, but includes non-editioned works. For example, it has both the first (abandoned) and second versions of “Country Store”, and both “Temple of Karnak” and “Valley of the Kings”, both annotated as experiments. It includes his early works like “California or Bust”, likely not editioned, and a “Craftmen’s Club Cover”, also a one-off. There are at least 20 more prints in the Kansas State and Wichita Art Museum collections, only some of which may fall into Logan’s final entry of “many small cuts for Christmas cards and other printing”.
  6. "Ancestry.com. Leota Bill, Facts, from Opliger Whitney Framily Tree". Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc. Retrieved 2 Jul 2022.
  7. "Kansapedia, Dust Storm Print". Topeka, KS: Kansas Historical Society. Retrieved 2 Jul 2022.
  8. Craig, Susan V. (2009). Biographical Dictionary of Kansas Artists (active Before 1945) (PDF). Lawrence, KS: Susan V. Craig. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  9. "Olivet Institute sketchbook". Manhattan, KS: Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art, Kansas State University. Retrieved 3 Mar 2022.
  10. "Drawing Turns Ink to Gold (advertisement for the 'Federal School of Illustrating')". Popular Science. Vol. 113, no. 3. New York, N. Y.: Popular Science Publishing Co., Inc. Sep 1928.
  11. From correspondence with son Samuel, March 20, 2022: "[My] Mother’s full name is Susie Titus ... She had no middle name. She was born January 25, 1902, in Waldo, Ks to Casper Grant and Lona May Crawford Titus. Susie and Herschel were married June 20, 1924, in Wichita, Ks. Mom died August 24, 1990. Susie and Herschel were divorced August 5, 1956
  12. "Th' Colonel cal'ates thet ever'body ken be his frend". The Salina Journal. 13 Apr 1975. p. 7. Retrieved 4 Mar 2022.
  13. "Exclusive Holiday Greetings". The Wichita Eagle. November 1, 1925. p. 19. Retrieved 3 Mar 2022.(Subscription or advertising required.)
  14. "Ancestry.com. California, U.S., Marriage Index, 1960-1985 [database on-line]". Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc. Retrieved 2 Jul 2022.
  15. "Ancestry.com. U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014 [database on-line]". Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc. 2014. Retrieved 2 Jul 2022.
  16. "Herschel C. Logan (obituary)". The Salina Journal. 20 Dec 1987. p. 7. Retrieved 2 Jul 2022.
  17. ”Several accounts indicate that Logan met Seward after joining McCormick-Armstrong, however, according to a sketchbook of Logan’s in the Beach Museum, the two met in Chicago while Logan was in school.” - From a staff annotated bio, Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art at Kansas State University
  18. North, Cori Sherman (2020). In the Center of It All: 90 Years of the Prairie Print Makers (PDF). Lindsborg, Kansas: The Birger Sandzén Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 8 January 2022.
  19. Hotvedt, Steve (2020). "Chapter 15: The Prairie Print Makers 1930-1966". C.A. Hotvedt, Prairie Print Maker. Retrieved 17 Feb 2022.
  20. Logan, Herschel C. (1928). Other Days in Pictures and Verse. Kansas City, Missouri: Burton Publishing Co.
  21. Logan, Herschel C. (1936). 12 Famous Americans. [Salina, Kansas]: Consolidated-Salina.
  22. Logan, Herschel C. (c. 1948). 12 Famous Americans Calendar. [Salina, Kansas]: Consolidated Printing.
  23. "Great Names in Printmaking". Kansas State University, Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art. n.d. Retrieved 15 Mar 2022.
  24. Logan, Herschel C, Bela Blau, Vance Gerry, and Patrick Reagh. Portraits of Some Famous Printers. Los Angeles: Zamorano Club, 1992. Print.
  25. Thompson, Barbara (2011). C.A. Seward Memorial Guest Print Maker Program. [Wichita, Kansas]: Wichita State University.
  26. Lehman, Anthony L. (1986). Herschel Logan: Man of Many Careers. Los Angeles: Westerners, Los Angeles Corral.
  27. Demuth, Gary (June 1, 2007). "Salina printmaker Herschel Logan captured Kansas in woodcut art". Salina Journal. Salina, KS. Retrieved 13 Mar 2022.
  28. Logan, Herschel C. (Spring 1931). "Woodcut Technique". The Federal Illustrator. Minneapolis, Minn.: Federal Schools. Retrieved 12 Jul 2022.
  29. "Herschel C. Logan of Salina, Kansas …]". The Christian Science Monitor. Boston, Mass. 30 March 1933. ProQuest 513332892. Retrieved 16 Mar 2022.
  30. Burke, Emmett William (1975). The Story of The Colonel: as told by Bill burke in the Salina Journal. Retrieved 2 Jul 2022. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  31. Burke, Bill; Logan, Herschel C. (1975). The Story of the Colonel. Santa Ana, Calif.: Log-Anne Press.
  32. Logan, Herschel C. (c. 1955). "Jot It Down". Kansas State University, Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  33. "Herschel C. Logan dressed as The Colonel". Kansas State University, Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art. c. 1960. Retrieved 21 Mar 2022.
  34. "A Complete Art and Advertising Service". Kansas State University, Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art. c. 1952. Retrieved 21 Mar 2022.
  35. Hahn, Ray (2021-09-15). "Herschel Logan and the Brookville Hotel: the Rest of the Story". Postcard History. Retrieved 19 Feb 2022.
  36. Baker, L.V. (April 1986). "Personality Profile : Herschel C. Logan". Arms Gazette. North Hollywood, Calif.: Bienfeld Pub. Co. p. 18. Retrieved 11 Mar 2022.
  37. Logan, Herschel C. (July 1962). "A Flintlock Blunderbuss Started It All". Shooting Times: Voice of the Gun Enthusiast: 18–21.
  38. A photo of the gun can be found at "Texas Jack's Smith & Wesson First Model American Revolver". Texas Jack Association. Retrieved 5 Jul 2022.
  39. Logan, Herschel C. (1954). Buckskin and Satin: The Life of Texas Jack (J.B. Omohundro). Harrisburg, PA: The Stackpole Company. -- from the author's preface: "I chanced ... to acquire an interesting revolver ... engraved 'TEXAS JACK COTTONWOOD 1872'. This would be interesting enough for the average person, but to an arms collector of many years standing, it was a thrilling bit of good fortune in that it offered an ideal incentive to delve back into history. ... the question as to the identity of the man whose name appeared on the side of the gun became uppermost in my thoughts. ... [my search] uncovered what is to me a most absorbing story of ... two inherently modest young people [whose] accomplishments were such as to reserve them a place among the immortals of the plains and stage."
  40. "Logans provide funding for conservation of American illustration collection" (PDF). Kansas State University, InSIGHT (newsletter). Retrieved 17 Feb 2022.
  41. "Herschel C. Logan business card". Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art. Kansas State University. c. 1965. Retrieved 11 Mar 2022.
  42. Memorial Service Program, courtesy of Samuel H. Logan.
  43. Wilson, Raymond L. (1988). Index of American Print Exhibitions, 1992-1940. Metuchen, N.J. & London: The Scarecrow Press.
  44. Midwestern Artists' Exhibition. Representative Work from Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Colorado. The Kansas City Art Institute, Feb. 2-March 1, 1925. Kansas City, Mo.: The Institute. 1925. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  45. "In the Galleries Devoted to Art". The Philadelphia Inquirer. 27 Dec 1925. p. 65. Retrieved 15 Mar 2022.
  46. "Work of Art Instructor Receives Recognition". The Sunflower. [Wichita, Kansas]. 20 Dec 1926. p. 8. Retrieved 15 Mar 2022.
  47. Midwestern Artists' Exhibition. Representative Work From Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Colorado. The Kansas City Art Institute, Feb. 2-March 1 1926. Kansas City, Mo.: The Institute. 1926. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  48. Midwestern Artists' Exhibition Representative Work From Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Colorado Kansas City Art Institute Feb. 1-March 1, 1927. Kansas City, Mo.: The Institute. 1927. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  49. Midwestern Artists' Exhibition. Representative Work From Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Colorado, Feb. 1-March 1, 1928. Kansas City, Mo.: The Institute. 1928. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  50. "The First Snow". The Wichita Eagle. Wichita, Kansas. 1928-12-09. p. 23. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  51. O'Neill, Barbara T. (2013). In the Middle of America: Printmaking & Print Exhibitions : C.A. Seward and Friends, Wichita, Kansas, 1916-1946. [Denver, Colorado]: Barbara Thompson.
  52. From a hand-written list of Awards, Exhibits and Dates for specific prints, courtesy of the Logan estate
  53. Midwestern Artists' Exhibition. Representative Work From Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Colorado, Feb. 2-March 2, 1930. Kansas City, Mo.: The Institute. 1930. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  54. Midwestern Artists' Exhibition. Representative Work From Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Colorado. Feb. 1-March 2, 1931. Kansas City, Mo.: The Institute. 1931. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  55. "In Gallery and Studio, News and Views of the Week in Art". Kansas City Star. Kansas City, Missouri. 21 Jan 1933. p. 11. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  56. "On Exhibition Here, Catalog of Works at Art Show Is Announced". The Wichita Beacon. Wichita, Kansas. 1933-11-06. p. 8. Retrieved 16 Mar 2022.
  57. Midwestern Artists' Exhibition. Representative Work From Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Colorado. Feb. 5-Feb. 28, 1933. Kansas City, Mo.: The Institute. 1933. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  58. "Mrs. R.L. Hogue, President of M.A.A. Urges Attendance at Print Exhibition". Clarion-Ledger. Jackson, Mississippi. 1933-04-02. p. 8. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  59. Midwestern Artists' Exhibition, Kansas City Art Institute, 1934. Kansas City, Mo.: The Institute. 1934. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  60. Cuba, Stan (2015). The Denver Artists Guild : Its Founding Members, An Illustrated History. Boulder, CO: University Press of Colorado. ISBN 9781457195952. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  61. Midwestern Artists' Exhibition, Feb. 3-Feb. 28, 1935. Kansas City, Mo.: The Institute. 1935. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  62. "Art". The Kansas City Star. Kansa City, Missouri. 19 Apr 1936. p. 12. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  63. Midwestern Artists' Exhibition, Feb. 2-March 2, 1936. Kansas City, Mo.: The Institute. 1936. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  64. "California Print Collection a Rewarding Show". The Salt Lake Tribune. Salt Lake City, Utah. 12 Jan 1936. p. 68. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  65. Midwestern Artists' Exhibition. Feb. 7-March 1, 1937. Kansas City, Mo.: The Institute. 1937. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  66. "Select Cover Design". The Manhattan Mercury. Kansas. 13 Oct 1939. p. 1. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  67. "Wide Range Included in Display at Brooks, Collection of 61 Prints Now Being Shown". The Commercial Appeal. Memphis, Tennessee. 20 Nov 1938. p. 11. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  68. Midwestern Artists' Exhibition and Preview of New York World Fair, Contemporary American Art. Feb. 5-26, 1939. Kansas City, Mo.: The Institute. 1937. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  69. Midwestern Artists' Exhibition, February 4 to 25, 1940. Kansas City, Mo.: The Institute. 1940. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  70. "Art Parade Reviewed". Los Angeles Times. [Los Angelis, Calif.] 22 Jun 1941. p. C9. ProQuest 165165048. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  71. "Art Display at State College". Chico Record. Chico, California. 12 Dec 1944. p. 4. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  72. "About Art and Artists". The Manhattan Mercury. Manhattan, Kansas. 13 Jun 1954. p. 4. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  73. "Prints DIsplayed". Mennonite Weekly Review. Newton, Kansas. 1958-05-01. p. 12. Retrieved 17 Mar 2022.
  74. Proofs of Talent: American Artists and the Challenge of Printmaking, May 1984. New York, NY: Kennedy Galleries. 1984.
  75. Demuth, Gary (2007-09-07). "Birger Sandzén Memorial Gallery has 50th anniversary exhibition". The Salina Journal. [Salina, Kansas]. p. A.23. ProQuest 381177889. Retrieved 16 Mar 2022.
  76. "Prints of the Prairie: Herschel Logan's Kansas". El Dorado, Kansas. Coutts Museum of Art, El Dorado. 2018. Retrieved 16 Mar 2022.
  77. "Telling a Story: Woodblock Prints by Clare Leighton, J.J. Lankes, and Herschel Logan". Wichita Art Museum. Wichita Art Museum, Ablah Gallery. 2020. Retrieved 16 Mar 2022.
  78. Abatemarco, Michael (2020-08-07). "Herschel C. Logan at William R. Talbot Fine Art". The Santa Fe New Mexican. Retrieved 16 Mar 2022.
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