Ralph Heimdahl sketched himself right out of Depression-era Minnesota, using his skillful right hand to illustrate his way from Willmar to Walt Disney's animation department in Burbank, Calif.
After working on cartoon classics like "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs," "Fantasia" and "Pinocchio," Heimdahl spent three decades drawing the daily Bugs Bunny comic strip for more than 450 newspapers around the world, from Singapore to Saudi Arabia.
Today Heimdahl is "largely forgotten," said Tom Steman, archivist at St. Cloud State University, where the illustrator studied, graduating in 1930.
But Heimdahl's memory lives on at the school, to which his daughter, California artist Martha Slavin, donated 5,000 of her father's onion-skin paper drawings and even footed the bill for a student to arrange and describe the artwork now preserved in 51 boxes.
"I'm sure my father would be embarrassed but appreciative that his work is being preserved at St. Cloud State, which played such an important role in his life," said Slavin, 76.
Born in 1909, Heimdahl inherited his blond hair and blue eyes from his Norwegian-born father, Peter, who emigrated to the United States around 1900 and worked as a salesman and Kandiyohi County auditor. Ralph, the third of Peter and Clara Heimdahl's seven kids, graduated from Willmar High School before venturing to what was then called St. Cloud State Teachers College.
Heimdahl was "an attractive young man ... the all-American boy," St. Cloud State's longtime dean, John Weisman, recalled in 1985. He coached Heimdahl, who played halfback and studied art at the school from 1928 to 1930.
Graduating in 1930 just as the Great Depression descended, Heimdahl became a school principal in Miltona, Minn., a tiny Douglas County burg north of Alexandria. By 1936, he was teaching at the State School for the Deaf in Faribault.