Wende
Devlin
Dorothy
Wende was born on April 27, 1918 in Buffalo, New York to Dr.
Bernhardt Phillip Wende and Elizabeth May Buffington. She was
known to her family and friends as "Wende".
Wende
was a frequent visitor to the Albright-Knox Art Gallery and
took private art lessons as a child. She became the art editor
of the yearbook. Wende met Harry at the Crouse College of Art
in Syracuse in 1938.
Harry
graduated a year before Wende and his promising career took
off. After being hired by Life Magazine to prepare
Army manuals, along with other freelance work, Harry felt financially
secure enough to propose to Wende. They were married on August
30, 1941.
The
couple initially settled in Manhattan, but soon left the bustling
city for a quiet thatched-roof home in the tiny town of Valley
Cottage, NY, in Rockland County. There they developed friendships
with well-known writers, artists, singers and painters such
as Maxwell Anderson and Lotte Lenya. Their idyllic lifestyle
was shattered by the entry of the United States into World War
II. On October 30, 1942 as Harry prepared for his first day
of military service, Wende gave birth to the first of the couple's
seven children, Harry Noel (later known as "Herke").
Between
feedings and diaper changes, Wende continued to paint extraordinary
portraits and still lifes. In 1946, first daughter Wende Elizabeth
arrived. The growing Devlin family relocated to Elizabeth, NJ.
Harry went through a prosperous time with steady employment
as the lead editorial cartoonist at Collier's,
numerous freelance assignments including Saturday Home Magazine
and the book, Innocents at Home. The Devlins summered
on Cape Cod with their children, now numbering four with the
addition of Jeffrey Anthony and Alexandra Gail.
In
1950, the family moved to a magical, three acre hilltop property
in Mountainside, NJ with a large Victorian farmhouse and a carriage
house they converted into an artist's studio. Harry and Wende
collaborated on a cartoon strip called "Fullhouse"
and later called "Raggmopp" based on the fun and chaos
of their growing family.
The
Golden Age of Illustration came to an end and in 1956, Wende
started a humorous column for Good Housekeeping magazine
using elegant lyricism and comedy to describe domestic ironies.
She managed to find time to write two new comic strips - "Amy"
and "Margie" while raising her seven young children.
In
1963, Wende and Harry combined their unique talents to produce
their first children's book, Old Black Witch! Wende
wrote the book and Harry illustrated. This led to other "Old
Witch" books and in 1971, they started a new series
with the publication of "Cranberry Thanksgiving".
Wende's
gifted words will continue to enthall future generations as
they get tucked under the covers and fall asleep listening to
her delightful stories, just as her own children probably did
when she first spun these tales. Her timeless words, brought
alive by Harry's vivid illustrations, leave a amazing testimony
to the talents of Wende Devlin.
