Tom Carrington (illustrator)
Francis Thomas Dean Carrington, (17 November 1843 – 9 October 1918) was a journalist, political cartoonist and illustrator in colonial Australia.[1]
Tom Carrington | |
---|---|
Born | Francis Thomas Dean Carrington 17 November 1842 London |
Died | 9 October 1918 75) Toorak, Victoria, Australia | (aged
Occupation | Cartoonist |
Carrington was born in London, England,[1] and educated at the City of London School.[2] He received his first lesson in drawing from George Cruikshank, and went through the South Kensington course. He commenced drawing for Clarke & Co., Paternoster Row, a title-page to one of Thomas Mayne Reid's novels being his first appearance in print.[2]
Carrington came to Australia in the 1860s,[1] and after some experience on the diggings at Wood's Point, Jericho, Jordan, and Crooked River, he joined Melbourne Punch in 1866, succeeding Nicholas Chevalier and O. R. Campbell.[2] With this paper he was connected for twenty-one years, drawing the principal cartoons and many smaller blocks all through the stirring times of the Darling excitement and the "Berry blight." Carrington left Punch when it was amalgamated with The Bulletin and joined the Melbourne Australasian.[2]
Carrington died in Toorak, Victoria, he had two daughters with his wife Dora, née Clausen.[1]
References
- Mahood, Marguerite. "Carrington, Francis Thomas Dean (Tom) (1843–1918)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Melbourne University Press. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 26 November 2013 – via National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
- Mennell, Philip (1892). . The Dictionary of Australasian Biography. London: Hutchinson & Co – via Wikisource.