Annual Convention

Annual Convention October 3-6

The AAEC and Association of Canadian Cartoonists will be teaming up with the Université du Québec à Montréal for a 3-day celebration political cartoonists, October 3-6, 2024.

Online registration coming soon!


CARTOONIST PROFILE

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General

First Name

Kate

Last Name

Palmer

Reprints

Reprint Contact First Name

Kate

Reprint Contact Last Name

Palmer

Reprint Phone

8646506340

Physical address for reprint requests

Use Custom address for reprints

Profile

Bio

“Salley” is Kate Salley Palmer’s maiden name, so you can just call her Kate.

She started doing political cartoons for The Greenville News in 1975.

In 1976, Kate joined the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists and attended her first AAEC convention.  She and Etta Hulme, of The Fort Worth Star-Telegram, were the only two women cartoonists in attendance that year.  Kate’s husband, Jim, was the first male member of the then-called “Ladies Auxillary”.

In 1980, the (now renamed) Field Newspaper Syndicate began distributing Kate’s cartoons nationwide.  In 1981, she received the Freedoms Foundation’s George Washington medal for editorial cartooning.

In 1986, she left The Greenville News, but continued her National syndication for a couple more years.

Kate Palmer then began to write and illustrate children’s picture books.  She illustrated “How Many feet in the Bed?” by Diane Hamm for Simon & Schuster in 1990, then wrote and illustrated “A Gracious Plenty” for Simon & Schuster that same year.   Throughout the ‘90s, Kate illustrated more than twenty books for other publishers.

In 1998, she and her husband, Jim, formed their own publishing company, Warbranch Press, Inc.

Since then, Kate has produced more than ten titles for Warbranch Press, among them: “The Pink House,” The Little Chairs,” Palmetto: Symbol of Courage,” “Francis Marion and the Legend of the Swamp Fox,” and “Almost Invisible: Black Patriots of the American Revolution.”

In 2006, The Clemson University Digital Press published her memoir/cartoon retrospective, “Growing Up Cartoonist in the Baby Boom South,”  a ramble through Kate’s growing-up years in Orangeburg, SC, combined with a bit of modern political history–and page after page of scary old political cartoons that could easily run today.

In 2016, Kate published a Campaign Coloring Book, featuring all the presidential candidates that year.  In 2018, she did another one for the presidential election of 2020.

in 2019, The University of South Carolina Press published Kate’s story of a Native American legend, “The Lady of Cofitachequi.”  This book is illustrated by Kate’s son, James, a graphic artist in Atlanta.

Since early 2022, Kate has been painting and selling oil paintings.  She paints from reference photos that she has taken of people, places, and activities that interest her.

she no longer produces editorial cartoons for publication, but remains interested in politics and the activities of the AAEC.

OUR MISSION

The mission of the AAEC is to champion and defend editorial cartooning and free speech as essential to liberty in the United States and throughout the world.

The AAEC aims to be an international leader in support of the human, civil, and artistic rights of editorial cartoonists around the world, and to stand with other international groups in support of the profession.


CARTOONS IN EDUCATION

Cartoons in Education

Every two weeks throughout the year, The Learning Forum and the AAEC offers CARTOONS FOR THE CLASSROOM, a free lesson resource for teachers discussing current events.  Visit NIEonline.com for more lesson plans.