Inscription
Creator of some of America’s favorite cartoon characters, Milton Caniff was born in Hillsboro in 1907 and graduated from Ohio State University in 1930. He created his first comic strip in 1932 for the Associated Press Syndicate, and in 1934 introduced “Terry and the Pirates,” an innovative serial adventure featuring believable characters drawn with unprecedented realism. Enormously popular through the World War II years for both “Terry” and the comic strip “Male Call,” which he created for the U.S. military’s Camp Newspaper Service, Caniff subsequently introduced “Steve Canyon” in 1947. “Steve Canyon” ran for forty-one years until Caniff’s death in 1988. Credited with influencing generations of successful cartoonists, Caniff brought adventure, suspense, and sensuality to what had been largely a medium for humor and melodrama.
[Side B]: Same
Location
Sources
More markers in Highland
West Settlement and Abolition Lane
Greenfield, OH
Augustus West, an African American, was born in Madison County, Virginia on March 20, 1814, and moved to Ohio in 1837.
The C. R. Patterson & Sons Company
Greenfield, OH
The factory of the C. R. Patterson & Sons Company once stood near here at 138 N. Washington Street.
The Lincoln School
Hillsboro, OH
The Lincoln School, which stood on this site from 1869 to 1956, was a segregated elementary school intended for the city’s African...
Gist Settlement
Through the terms of his will, British absentee landowner Samuel Gist (c.1723-1815) freed his 350 Virginia slaves and provided funds for...
New Market / Oliver Harris – 1780-1845
In 1798, Henry Massie, brother of General Nathaniel Massie, platted a town, the earliest permanent settlement in Highland County,...
