Whitney "Whit"
Ellsworth was born in
Brooklyn, New York. He took a cartooning course at the
YMCA in Brooklyn and worked on the syndicated features
Dumb Dora (for
Newspaper Feature Service),
Embarrassing Moments (providing plots, pencils and inks for both) and
Just Kids (assisting with pencils and inks, for the
King Features Syndicate) between 1927 and 1929. In the early 1930s, he began working on another syndicated feature,
Tillie the Toiler, for King, as well as writing gag cartoons, articles and features for the
Newark Star-Eagle/Ledger newspaper (1931–1934), also finding time to work on a number of
pulp magazine stories throughout the 1930s.
National Allied Publications (DC) In late 1934, he became associated with
Major Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson's fledgling company
National Allied Publications, later known as
DC Comics.
Pulps Ellsworth also wrote short stories for the pulp titles
Black Bat,
G-Man (including the
Dan Fowler novel "Spotlight on Murder" in September 1942) and
The Phantom Detective (for which title he certainly
ghosted two pulps – #76 ''Murder at the World's Fair
and #77 The Forty Thieves'' in June and July 1939), among others. ==Comics, including
Batman==