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  1. Feb 5, 2023 · Henrietta Augusta Geisel formerly Seuss. Born 13 May 1878 in Springfield Hampden County Massachusetts, USA. Ancestors. Daughter of George J. Seuss and Margaretha Katherine (Greim) Seuss. Sister of Mary Seuss. Wife of Theodor Robert Geisel Jr. — married 27 Feb 1902 in Manhattan, New York, New York. Descendants.

    • Female
    • May 13, 1878
    • Theodor Robert Geisel Jr.
    • March 8, 1931
  2. Mar 2, 2014 · Son to Theodor Robert and Henrietta (Seuss) Geisel, he was also the grandson of German immigrants. Geisel lived in Springfield, Massachusetts, where his father ran a brewery and it was a street in this town that Geisel used as an inspiration for his first book as Dr Seuss, And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street. Geisel is mainly known ...

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    • Early Years
    • Dartmouth College and A Pseudonym
    • Advertising Career
    • Children’s Author
    • WWII Cartoons
    • 'The Cat in The Hat' and More Popular Books
    • Awards, Heartache, and Controversy
    • Death and Legacy
    • Sources

    Geisel was born in Springfield, Massachusetts. His father, Theodor Robert Geisel, helped manage his father’s brewery, and in 1909 was appointed to the Springfield Park Board. Geisel tagged along with his father for behind-the-scenes peeks at the Springfield Zoo, bringing along his sketchpad and pencil for exaggerated doodling of animals. Geisel met...

    Geisel’s favorite English teacher urged him to apply to Dartmouth College, and in 1921 Geisel was accepted. Admired for his silliness, Geisel drew cartoons for the college humor magazine Jack-O-Lantern. Spending more time on his cartoons than he should, his grades began to falter. After Geisel’s father informed his son how unhappy his grades made h...

    Upon returning to the United States, Geisel was able to freelance a few cartoons in the Saturday Evening Post. He signed his work “Dr. Theophrastus Seuss” and then later shortened it to “Dr. Seuss.” At the age of 23, Geisel got a job as a cartoonist for Judgemagazine in New York at $75 per week and was able to marry his Oxford sweetheart, Helen Pal...

    Geisel and Helen loved to travel. While on a ship to Europe in 1936, Geisel made up a limerick to match the grinding of the ship’s engine rhythm as it struggled against rough seas. Six months later, after perfecting the related story and adding drawings about a boy’s untruthful walk home from school, Geisel shopped his children's book to publishers...

    After publishing a large number of political cartoons to PMmagazine, Geisel joined the U.S. Army in 1942. The Army placed him in the Information and Education Division, working with Academy Award-winning director Frank Capra at a leased Fox studio in Hollywood known as Fort Fox. While working with Capra, Captain Geisel wrote several training films ...

    With World War II over, Geisel returned to children's stories and in 1950 wrote an animated cartoon titled "Gerald McBoing-Boing" about a child who makes noises instead of words. The cartoon won an Academy Award for Cartoon Short Film. In 1954, Geisel was presented with a new challenge. When journalist John Hersey published an article in Lifemagazi...

    Dr. Seuss was awarded seven honorary doctorates (which he often joked made him Dr. Dr. Seuss) and the 1984 Pulitzer Prize. Three of his books—"McElligot’s Pool" (1948), "Bartholomew and the Oobleck" (1950), and "If I Ran the Zoo" (1951)—won Caldecott Honor Medals. All the awards and successes, however, couldn't help cure Helen, who had been sufferi...

    Geisel's final book, "Oh, the Places You’ll Go" (1990), was on The New York Timesbestseller list for more than two years and remains a very popular book to give as a gift at graduations. Just a year after his last book was published, Geisel died in 1991 at the age of 87 after suffering from throat cancer. The fascination with Geisel's characters an...

    Andrews, Colman. “Don't Be Obtuse, Get to Know Dr. Seuss.” USA Today, Gannett Satellite Information Network, 30 Nov. 2018.
    “Siblings.” Seuss in Springfield, 16 June 2015.
    “Theodor Geisel (Dr. Seuss).” Poetry Foundation, Poetry Foundation.
    Jones, Brian Jay. Becoming Dr. Seuss: Theodor Geisel and the Making of an American Imagination. Penguin, 2019.
  4. Theodor Seuss Geisel ( / suːsˈɡaɪzəl, zɔɪs -/ ⓘ sooss GHY-zəl, zoyss -⁠; [2] [3] [4] March 2, 1904 – September 24, 1991) [5] was an American children's author and cartoonist. He is known for his work writing and illustrating more than 60 books under the pen name Dr. Seuss ( / suːs, zuːs / sooss, zooss ).

    • 1921–1990
  5. 14. The Butter Battle Book. Buy on Amazon. Add to library. Beyond the sounds, rhymes, and illustration, quite a few of Dr. Seuss’ books are highly moralistic and deal with serious subjects matters. This is one of them. On one side of the war in this book, there are the Yooks — and on the other, the Zooks.

  6. Theodor Seuss Geisel, better known to the world as the beloved Dr. Seuss, was born in 1904 on Howard Street in Springfield, Massachusetts. Ted's father, Theodor Robert, and grandfather were brewmasters in the city. His mother, Henrietta Seuss Geisel, often soothed her children to sleep by "chanting" rhymes remembered from her youth.

  7. The world of Dr. Seuss. By E. J. Kahn. December 9, 1960. Illustration by Loris Lora. The face of Theodor Seuss Geisel—an arresting one, with soft eyes and a long, beaky nose—is not nearly as ...

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