Early life and career Tom Gill was born in
Brooklyn,
New York City,
New York, where he drew the first map of the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor. He also worked for the
Herald-Tribune and the
Times. His earliest known
comic book work was
penciling and
inking the five-page story "The Scientist's Haunted House" for the feature "K-51 Spies At War" in
Fox Comics'
Wonderworld Comics #13 (May 1940). Other early comics work includes
Novelty Press'
Blue Bolt Comics, from 1944 to 1946, and
Target Comics in the mid-1940s. He is also tentatively identified on three stories for
Fiction House's
Jungle Comics in 1941, and drew occasionally for that publisher's
Wings Comics in the mid-1940s. a 107-issue run that marks one of the longest of any artist on a comic-book series. The series had been produced by
Western Publishing and published by its business partner, Dell. After severing ties, Western established its own comic-book imprint,
Gold Key Comics, which launched its own
Lone Ranger title. This reprinted Newman-Gill material from the Dell run for its first 21 issues (Sept. 1964 - June 1975), after which it published new material by other creators through the final issue, #28 (March 1977). Gill's other comic-book work includes the spin-off ''The Lone Ranger's Famous Horse Hi-Yo Silver
; the TV-Western tie-in Bonanza, and the equine-series tie-in Fury
; the six-issue Native American-hero Western Red Warrior'' (Jan.-Dec. 1951) for
Atlas Comics, the 1950s precursor of
Marvel Comics; and, with writer
Jerry Siegel, the sole two issues (April 1967 & April 1968) of Gold Key's self-consciously camp revival of creator Frank Thomas' 1940 character
The Owl. Working from his studio on
Long Island and never venturing West, Gill gained his facility for drawing horses, he said, from "a $1 book called ''How to Draw Horses: It's Fun and It's Easy''. In that same interview, he explained his philosophy of drawing the Lone Ranger's famed white steed: "You had to make Silver a glamour horse. His head was always high, his mane was always flying.""
Cartooning and children's books Gill also drew a 1948 comic strip,
Ricky Stevens, and comic books for
Harvey Comics and
Toby Press. For Western Publishing, he additionally illustrated
children's books and such projects as
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. TV tie-in books and activity books. For roughly 50 years, Gill taught
cartooning and children's-book
illustration in New York-area colleges and institutions, including the
School of Visual Arts, where he served as a department chair in 1948, alumni director in 1969, and consultant well into the 21st century. He served several terms as vice-president of the
National Cartoonists Society, winning its Silver T-Square award in 1964 and its Best Story Comic Book Artist award in 1970. With Tim Lasiuta, he wrote the autobiography ''Misadventures of A Roving Cartoonist: The Lone Ranger's Secret Sidekick'' (Five Star Publications, 2008)
Later life Gill lost his eyesight later in life but continued to teach art at community colleges. at his home in
Croton-on-Hudson,
New York. He was survived by family including wife Patricia, daughter Nancy Zaglaluer, and son Tom Gill. ==Awards==