Tex Blaisdell
Philip Eustice Blaisdell was born on March 30, 1920, and spent the better part of six decades leaving his mark across American comics as both a syndicated strip artist and comic-book editor. Working under the name Tex Blaisdell, he accumulated credits on an impressive 22 syndicated newspaper features, most notably spending five years drawing *Little Orphan Annie* — a demanding, high-profile assignment that demonstrated his versatility and dependability as a craftsman.
His work in comic books ranged widely, touching titles from across the industry spectrum. Catalog records credit him as artist, inker, colorist, letterer, and writer across more than 200 issues between 1940 and into the modern era of reprints, with his contributions appearing most frequently in DC's flagship Superman and Action Comics titles, as well as Batman. International reprint editions — including *Superman Taschenbuch*, *Supermán*, and *Superman Poche* — further extended the reach of his work to readers in Europe and Latin America.
Blaisdell represented a generation of consummate comics professionals equally at home in the stripped-down demands of newspaper syndication and the denser storytelling of periodical comic books. He died on March 14, 1999, just two weeks shy of his seventy-ninth birthday. No major industry awards are documented in available sources, but his sustained output across multiple formats and decades speaks to a career built on craft and reliability.
Full bibliography · 92 series
Original biography and editorial content © comicbooks.com™. Information drawn in part from Wikipedia and the Grand Comics Database. Portrait by Tex Blaisdell / Wikimedia Commons (Public domain).