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{{Short description|English painter (1911–2006)}}
{{Infobox Biography
| subject_name = Jack Banham Coggins {{for|the American politician|Jyles Coggins}}
{{Infobox person
| image_name = jackcoggins.jpg
| image_size = 200px |name = Jack Banham Coggins
|image = Jack Coggins.jpg
| image_caption = Jack Coggins at age 91
|image_size = 200px
| date_of_birth = {{Birth date|1911|07|10}}
|alt = Head and shoulders of elderly man wearing glasses with one black lens. The man is white-haired and mostly bald, and sports a goatee and mustache.
| place_of_birth = ], ] {{flagicon|UK}}
|caption = Jack Coggins at age 91
| date_of_death = {{Death date and age|2006|1|30|1911|7|10}}
|birth_date = {{Birth date|1911|07|10}}
| place_of_death = ], ] {{flagicon|USA}}
|birth_place = ], England
| occupation = ] and ]
|death_date = {{Death date and age|2006|1|30|1911|7|10}}
| spouse = Alma Wood (1948–2006)
|death_place = ], United States
| religion = None
|occupation = Author, illustrator, and artist
| nationality = ], ]
|spouse = Alma Wood (1948–2006)
|nationality = British, American
}} }}
'''Jack Banham Coggins''' (July 10, 1911 – January 30, 2006) was an artist, author, and illustrator. He is known in the United States for his ], which focused predominantly on ]. He is also known for his books on ], which were both authored and illustrated by Coggins. Besides his own works, Coggins also provided illustrations for advertisements and magazine covers and articles.


During World War II, he served as an artist and correspondent for '']'' magazine, capturing and conveying wartime scenes from the front lines. Over the course of his career, Coggins produced more than 1,000 paintings and taught art classes for 45 years. He retired in May 2001 and died at his home in ] in January 2006.
'''Jack Banham Coggins''' (], ] – ], ]) was an illustrator, author, and artist, who is best known in the ] for his ] of predominantly ] subjects and for his books on ].


==Biography==
Jack Coggins also wrote and/or illustrated a large number of books on a wide range of subjects, as well as providing many illustrations for advertisements, magazine articles and magazine covers. During ], he served as an artist/correspondent for '']'' magazine in the ] and ], and captured many war time scenes from the front lines.


===Early life===
Coggins produced in excess of 550 paintings during his long career, and taught master art classes for 45 years. He retired in May 2001 at nearly 90 years of age and died at his home in Pennsylvania in January 2006.
Coggins was born in London, England on July 10, 1911, the only child of Ethel May (née Dobby) and Sydney George Coggins. Sydney Coggins was ] of the ] of ], the part of the ] responsible for guarding the ];<ref name = "outre">{{Cite journal

==Early life==
Jack Coggins was born in ], ] on ], ], the only child of Ethel May (Dobby) and Sidney George Coggins. Sidney Coggins was the Riding Master of the First Regiment of ] which were the elite cavalry of the British Army, and Jack Coggins was born in his father's military barracks.<ref name ="berks">{{cite journal
| last = Zissa
| first = Robert F.
| year = 2001
| month = Spring
| title = Author-artist Jack Coggins
| journal = Historical Review of Berks County
| volume = 66
| issue = 2
| pages = 76–82
| issn = 0018-2524
| id = {{OCLC|1589887}}
}}
</ref> Coggins's father was retrenched from his position as ] during wholesale cutbacks to the military started in 1922 (known as the Geddes Axe after the committee chairman ]), when the First and Second Life Guards were combined into a single regiment. A fellow officer married to an American steel heiress offered Coggins's father work as a secretary to his wife, and the family migrated to the United States, moving to ], ] in 1923.<ref name = "outre">{{Cite journal
| last = Miller | last = Miller
| first = Ron | first = Ron
| authorlink = Ron Miller (artist and author) | author-link = Ron Miller (artist and author)
| year = 2001 | year = 2001
| title = Jack Coggins | title = Jack Coggins
Line 44: Line 32:
| pages = 42–49 | pages = 42–49
| publisher = Filmfax Inc. | publisher = Filmfax Inc.
| isbn = 9780385183437
| url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/articles.html
| access-date = July 13, 2009
| issn = 0895-0393 | issn = 0895-0393
| id = {{OCLC|14292774}} | oclc = 14292774
}} }}
</ref> Jack Coggins was born in his father's barracks.<ref name ="berks">{{cite journal
</ref>
| last = Ziss
| first = Robert F.
| date=Spring 2001
| title = Author-artist Jack Coggins
| journal = Historical Review of Berks County
| volume = 66
| url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/articles.html
| access-date = July 13, 2009
| issue = 2
| pages = 76–82
| issn = 0018-2524
| oclc = 1589887
}}
</ref> During ], Sydney Coggins served with, and was ] by the regiment.<ref>{{London Gazette|issue=30875|supp=y|page=10166|date=27 August 1918}}</ref> After the war, he was appointed regimental Riding Master,<ref>{{London Gazette|issue=31113|supp=y|page=440|date=7 January 1919}}</ref> but he was retired when the 1st and ] were amalgamated into a single regiment under the ].<ref name = "outre" /><ref>{{London Gazette|issue=32790|page=610|date=26 January 1923}}</ref> A fellow officer, married to an American steel heiress, offered Sydney work as a secretary to his wife, and the Coggins family emigrated to ], ] in 1923.<ref name = "outre" />


===Education===
Coggins's interest in sailing and maritime subjects, which had its beginnings in London when sailing model yachts on the famous ] in Kensington Gardens, developed into a life-long passion during his teen years spent sailing small craft on Hempstead Harbor, near his new home on Long Island.<ref name = "berks"/>
While his father served with the Life Guards Regiment in France during World War I, Coggins and his mother lived with family in ]. He attended the ], a public school preferred by army families. After moving to ], Coggins enrolled at Roslyn High School in ] where he found difficulty in adjusting to the difference between military school in England and New York city public school. After graduation from Roslyn in 1928 at age 17, he enrolled in the New York City ] and studied under ], ], and Wayman Adams.<ref name = "berks"/> In the early years, he painted advertising signs to support himself.<ref name = "outre"/> With a grounding in fine art techniques, Coggins graduated to the ], where he studied from 1933 to 1934 under noted artist ].<ref name = "berks"/>


===Marriage and later life===
==Education==
]
While his father served with the Life Guards Regiment in France during ], Coggins and his mother lived with family in ], and he attended the ], a public school preferred by army families.
While a member of the faculty of ] in New York, Coggins met Alma Wood, a fashion and photographic model.<ref name = "Alma">{{cite news
On moving to ], Coggins enrolled at Roslyn High School in ] where he found difficulty in adjusting to the extreme differences between his military school in England and his New York city public school.<ref name = "berks"/>
| title = A painter, a model, a class act
| first = Ron
| last = Schira
| url = http://www.readingeagle.com/article.aspx?id=24947
| work = ]
| date = March 25, 2007
| access-date = July 10, 2009
}}
</ref> They married in 1948 and moved to ], ], ], where Coggins had purchased an old farm. Alma named their home "Crestfield," which, according to Jack, meant absolutely nothing.<ref name = "berks" />


Coggins taught his wife to paint, and she had success as an artist in her own right under the name Alma Woods. The couple would hold annual joint exhibitions for many years.<ref name = "berks" /> Alma Coggins assisted her husband in the planning, research and typing of many of his books, and he acknowledged her efforts with book dedications to her.<ref>E.g. Dedication in ''Marine Painter's Guide'', published by Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, 1983, ''et al.''</ref>
Coggins had always enjoyed "fiddling around with drawing" and his family had not discouraged him; after graduation from Roslyn in 1928 at age 17, he was enrolled in the New York City which was located above ]. There he studied under such eminent painters as ], , and . In the early years, he painted constantly but not professionally; to support himself he painted advertising signs.<ref name = "outre"/> With a concentrated grounding in fine art techniques, Coggins graduated to the , where he studied from 1933 to 1934 under noted artist ].

He taught art classes at the ] Institute of the Arts from 1957 until 2001,<ref>{{cite web
|title = 75th Anniversary Coggins Award Recipient
|url = http://www.institute-of-arts.org/SearchProcess.aspx?id=335
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110726181449/http://www.institute-of-arts.org/SearchProcess.aspx?id=335
|publisher = Wyomissing Institute of the Arts
|location = ]
|year = 2009
|archive-date = 2011-07-26
|access-date = July 10, 2009
|quote = Since 2006, the Coggins Award has been awarded to a local, outstanding artist, and is named in honor of Jack Coggins, an internationally recognized artist who taught master art classes at the Institute of the Arts from 1957 until his retirement in 2001.
|url-status = dead
}}
</ref> despite being handicapped by the loss of his left eye due to infection after an operation.<ref name = "berks"/>

Coggins was a signature member and Master Pastelist of the ],<ref name="PSA">{{cite web
|url=http://www.pastelsocietyofamerica.org/psaannualcatalog2009.pdf
|title=Thirty-Seventh Annual Open Juried Exhibition for "Pastels Only"
|work=2009
|publisher=Pastel Society of America
|page=5
|access-date=September 5, 2010
|url-status=dead
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101230175502/http://www.pastelsocietyofamerica.org/psaannualcatalog2009.pdf
|archive-date=December 30, 2010
}}
</ref> a Fellow of the American Society of Marine Artists,<ref name = "MS">{{cite web
|title = Alaskan Salmon Fishers
|url = http://mobius.mysticseaport.org/detail.php?t=objects&type=all&f=&s=coggins&record=4
|work = Objects
|publisher = ]
|access-date = July 20, 2009
|quote = Oil on canvas mounted on board; painting titled "Alaskan Salmon Fishers", by Jack Coggins. Signed lower right "JACK COGGINS, ASMA", and handwritten on back presumably by artist "ALASKAN SALMON FISHERS/ OIL 22X26/ JACK COGGINS, ASMA"
}}
</ref> a member of the American Ordnance Association, the ], and an adviser to the boards of the ] and the ].<ref name="Lavelle">{{cite web
|first = Lavelle
|last = Matthew
|title = Coggins, Jack Banham
|url = http://pabook.libraries.psu.edu/palitmap/bios/Coggins__Jack.html
|publisher = ]
|date = Spring 2007
|access-date = July 13, 2009
|url-status = dead
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100613100202/http://www.pabook.libraries.psu.edu/palitmap/bios/Coggins__Jack.html
|archive-date = June 13, 2010
}}
</ref> He died at his home in Berks County, Pennsylvania at the age of 94 and willed his body to medical science.<ref name = "obit-Jack">{{cite news
| title = Jack B. Coggins, author-illustrator
| url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/jackcoggins.pdf
| series = Obituaries
| page = 15
| work = ]
| date=February 2, 2006
| access-date = 2007-05-07
}}
</ref> Alma Wood-Coggins died March 4, 2007.<ref name = "Alma" /> Jack and Alma Coggins had no children and were survived by several nieces and nephews.<ref name = "obit-Jack" />


==Illustrator, author and artist== ==Illustrator, author and artist==
{{main list|List of works by Jack Coggins}}
===World War II: Early years===

As a result of his father's military service and his early education in a military school, Coggins had always been interested in military subjects. By ], the world was on the brink of war as hostilities had already erupted in ]; Coggins took a sampling of his war illustrations to Worthen Paxton, the then-art director of '']''. Paxton commissioned Coggins to produce a drawing of an imaginary coastal invasion of England<ref>{{Citation
===Military illustrations of World War II===
| last=Coggins
]
| first=Jack
Coggins's interest in sailing and maritime subjects began in London when he would sail model yachts on ] in Kensington Gardens. This interest developed into a lifelong passion during his teens when he sailed small craft on ], near his new home on Long Island.<ref name = "berks"/> During the early years of World War II, Coggins took a sampling of his war illustrations to ], the art director of '']'', who commissioned Coggins to produce a drawing of an imaginary coastal invasion of England.<ref>{{cite magazine
| date=], ]
| last = Coggins
| title=Imaginary Invasion of England (illustration)
| first = Jack
| periodical=]
| date=July 15, 1940
| volume=9
| title = Imaginary Invasion of England (illustration)
| issue=3
| pages=20 | magazine = LIFE
| volume = 9
| issue = 3
| pages = 20
| url= http://www.jackcoggins.info/life150740.jpg | url= http://www.jackcoggins.info/life150740.jpg
| accessdate = 2007-04-14 | access-date = 2007-04-14
}} }}
</ref> for $250, a large sum at the time.<ref name = "outre"/> Appearing on ], ], this was possibly Coggins's earliest published work and the first of many war time illustrations for ''LIFE'';<ref name = "LifeImages">{{cite web </ref> Coggins was paid $250 for that work, a large sum at the time, which paid his rent for five months.<ref name = "outre"/> Appearing on July 15, 1940, this was the first of many war time illustrations for ''LIFE''.<ref name = "LifeImages">{{cite web
| url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/magazines.html | url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/magazines.html
| title = Jack Coggins: Life Magazine Illustrations | title = Jack Coggins: Life Magazine Illustrations
| publisher = JackCoggins.info
| accessdate = 2007-04-14
| access-date = 2007-04-14
}} }}
</ref> Some of Coggins's works are in the ].<ref>{{cite web
</ref> it set the direction of much of his work for the next five years, and showed the meticulous style of his future artistic output.
|url=http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/University_Library/exhibits/Artists/files/Artists.html
|title=The Artists
|publisher=]
|access-date=December 17, 2009
|url-status=dead
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100106124554/http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/University_Library/exhibits/Artists/files/Artists.html
|archive-date=January 6, 2010
}}
</ref>


During the early 1940s, Coggins obtained more work producing war pictures for other magazines, including a series of double-page spreads for the controversial newspaper '']'',<ref>{{Citation During the early 1940s, Coggins obtained more work producing war pictures for other magazines, including a series of double-page spreads for the controversial newspaper '']'',<ref>{{cite journal
| last=Coggins | last=Coggins
| first=Jack | first=Jack
| date=], ] | date=March 23, 1941
| year = 1941
| title=Germany May Invade England in Barges Like These (illustrations for article) | title=Germany May Invade England in Barges Like These (illustrations for article)
| periodical=] | journal=]
| volume=1 | volume=1
| issue=40 | issue=40
| pages=14-15 | pages=14–15
| url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/pm.html | url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/pm.html
| accessdate = 2007-04-14 | access-date = 2007-04-14
}} }}
</ref> and illustrations for '']''.<ref name = "outre"/> Throughout the war years, most of the output of many large corporations was reserved for war ] production; however, management were keen to promote their connection to the war effort and keep their name before the buying public until they could resume peace time sales. Coggins received advertising commissions from such corporations, including ],<ref>{{Citation </ref> and illustrations for '']''.<ref name = "outre"/> Throughout the war years, most of the output of many large corporations was reserved for ] production; however, management were keen to promote their connection to the war effort and keep their name before the buying public until they could resume peacetime sales. Coggins received advertising commissions from such corporations including ],<ref>{{Cite journal
| last=Coggins | last=Coggins
| first=Jack | first=Jack
| date=July, 1942 | date=July 1942
| year = 1942
| title=Midnight off Cebu (illustration for advertisement) | title=Midnight off Cebu (illustration for advertisement)
| periodical=The Rudder | journal=The Rudder
| volume=58 | volume=58
| issue=7 | issue=7
| pages=1 | pages= 1
| url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/elcoadvertfull.jpg | url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/elcoadvertfull.jpg
| accessdate = 2007-04-14 | access-date = 2007-04-14
}} }}
</ref> ],<ref>{{Citation </ref> ],<ref>{{Cite magazine
| last=Coggins | last=Coggins
| first=Jack | first=Jack
| date=], ] | date=January 25, 1943
| title=PT...For Plenty Tough (illustration for advertisement)
| year = 1943
| magazine=]
| title=PT…For Plenty Tough (illustration for advertisement)
| periodical=]
| volume=41 | volume=41
| issue=4 | issue=4
| pages=65 | pages=65
| url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/koppersadvertfull.jpg | url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/koppersadvertfull.jpg
| accessdate = 2007-04-14 | access-date = 2007-04-14
}} }}
</ref> ],<ref>{{Citation </ref> ],<ref>{{Cite journal
| last=Coggins | last=Coggins
| first=Jack | first=Jack
| date=September, 1943 | date=September 1943
| year = 1943
| title=The Flying Fish With a Steel Lung (illustration for advertisement) | title=The Flying Fish With a Steel Lung (illustration for advertisement)
| periodical=Country Gentleman | journal=Country Gentleman
| volume=113 | volume=113
| issue=9 | issue=9
| pages=48 | page=48
| url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/ussadvertfull.jpg | url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/ussadvertfull.jpg
| accessdate = 2007-04-14 | access-date = 2007-04-14
}} }}
</ref> and ].<ref>{{Citation </ref> and ].<ref>{{Cite journal
| last=Coggins | last=Coggins
| first=Jack | first=Jack
| date=August, 1942 | date=August 1942
| year = 1942
| title=Bombers from the bottom of the Deep Blue Sea (illustration for advertisement) | title=Bombers from the bottom of the Deep Blue Sea (illustration for advertisement)
| periodical=] | journal=]
| volume=141 | volume=141
| issue=2 | issue=2
| pages=15 | pages=15
| url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/westinghouseadvertfull.jpg | url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/westinghouseadvertfull.jpg
| accessdate = 2007-04-14 | access-date = 2007-04-14
}} }}
</ref> He also received commissions from the ] for aircraft recognition charts,<ref>{{cite web </ref> He also received commissions from the ] for aircraft recognition charts,<ref>{{cite web
| url = https://digital.library.unt.edu/search/?q=Coggins%2C+jack&t=fulltext&q1=&t1=dc_title&q2=&t2=dc_description&q3=%28coggins%29&t3=untl_agent&q4=&t4=dc_publisher&q5=&t5=dc_subject&q6=&t6=dc_coverage&q7=&t7=dc_identifier&q8=&t8=page&q9=&t9=&searchType=advanced&sort=default&fq=&fq=
| url = http://digital.library.unt.edu/search.tkl?type=creator_simple&q=Coggins,%20Jack
| title = Creator: Coggins, Jack | title = Creator: Coggins, Jack
| accessdate = 2007-04-14 | access-date = 2007-04-14
| year = 2005 | year = 2005
| work = Digital Collections | work = Digital Collections
| publisher = ] | publisher = ]
}} }}
</ref> and was intrigued to later find these charts used during his army basic training.<ref name = "outre"/> </ref> and he was intrigued to later find these charts used during his army basic training.<ref name = "outre"/>


Because of the quality of his maritime illustrations, Coggins was invited by publisher ] to provide artwork for a children's book about the U.S. Navy; the author being ], the well known military historian. Coggins was invited to participate in Pratt's ''Naval Game'', based on a ] developed by ] involving dozens of tiny wooden ships, built on a scale of one inch to fifty feet. These were spread over the floor of Pratt's apartment and their maneuvers were calculated via a complex mathematical formula. The result of Pratt and Coggins's first collaboration, published in 1941, was ''Fighting Ships of the U.S. Navy'', a volume that described in text and illustrated in full color every class of ship in the Navy.<ref name = "outre"/>
]
Because of the quality of his maritime illustrations, Coggins was invited by publisher Doubleday to provide artwork for a planned children's book about the U.S. Navy. The author was to be ], a well known military historian, and the publisher sent Coggins to meet him. Their common interest in maritime history created a lasting friendship and a fruitful association between the two men.


Coggins was called up for Army service, and enlisted on April 8, 1943.<ref name = "NARA">{{cite web
Coggins was invited to participate in Pratt's ''Naval Game'', based on a ] developed by ] involving dozens of tiny wooden ships, built on a scale of one inch to 50 feet. These were spread over the floor of Pratt's apartment and their maneuvers were calculated via a complex mathematical formula.<ref name = "outre"/>
|title = Enlistment Records

|url = https://aad.archives.gov/aad/record-detail.jsp?dt=893&mtch=5&cat=all&tf=F&q=Jack+Coggins&bc=&rpp=10&pg=1&rid=3384565&rlst=316882,1006755,5011480,6878203,3384565
The result of Pratt and Coggins's first collaboration, published in 1941, was ''Fighting Ships of the U.S. Navy'', a volume that described in text and illustrated in full color every class of ship in the Navy.<ref name = "outre"/>
|publisher = ]

|access-date = July 20, 2009
=== World War II: Service===
}}
Jack Coggins was called up for Army service, and enlisted on ], ].<ref name = "archive">Military Personnel Records, National Personnel Records Center, National Archives, St. Louis, Missouri.</ref> He was pulled from basic training at Fort Eustis, Virginia, before he could complete it, to work as an illustrator for '']'' magazine; a U.S. Army weekly magazine "by the men ... for the men, in the service". He was originally introduced to the Commanding Officer and Editor of ''YANK'', ], by Fletcher Pratt.<ref name = "outre"/> On ]], Coggins commenced work at the head office of ''YANK'' in New York, where he worked until his departure for Britain on ] of the same year.<ref name = "archive"/> Jack Coggins became a naturalized citizen of the ] on ], ].<ref>Naturalization Records, Southern District Court, New York </ref>
</ref> He was pulled from basic training at Fort Eustis, Virginia before he could complete it to work as an illustrator for '']'' magazine.<ref name ="berks" /> He was originally introduced to the Commanding Officer and Editor of ''YANK'', ], by Fletcher Pratt.<ref name = "outre"/> On May 20, 1943, Coggins commenced work at the head office of ''YANK'' in New York, where he worked until his departure for Britain. Jack Coggins became a naturalized citizen of the United States on August 19, 1943.<ref>{{cite web
|title = Naturalization Records
|publisher = Southern District Court, New York
|url = http://www.italiangen.org/southernresults.ASP?EnterSurname=Coggins&EnterSoundexCode=&EnterFirstInitial=Jack%20Banham&kindenter=exact <!-- Convenience link -->
|access-date = July 20, 2009
|url-status = dead
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110722061629/http://www.italiangen.org/southernresults.ASP?EnterSurname=Coggins&EnterSoundexCode=&EnterFirstInitial=Jack%20Banham&kindenter=exact
|archive-date = July 22, 2011
}}
</ref>


He served as an artist for British ''YANK'' in London until ], ] and was finally discharged from the U.S. Army on ], ].<ref name = "archive"/> While in Britain, Coggins spent time on a ] convoy in the ], witnessed the bombing of ], and flew over ] in a ]. He also spent time on a U.S. ] patrolling the beaches and made a trip into ] with an armored column.<ref name = "berks"/><ref name = "outre"/> Action from all these sorties was illustrated in ''YANK'' magazine in double page spreads.<ref name = "images">{{cite web He served as an artist for British ''YANK'' in London until August 2, 1945, and was discharged from the U.S. Army on November 3, 1945.<ref name = "archive">Military Personnel Records, National Personnel Records Center, National Archives, St. Louis, Missouri.</ref> After serving as a Private for most of his time abroad, he finally made Corporal, and just before discharge, Sergeant.<ref name = "Yank - Reporting on the Greatest Generation">{{cite book
| last = McGurn
| first = Barrett
| title = Yank - Reporting on the Greatest Generation
| year = 2004
| page = 230
| publisher = Fulcrum Publishing
| location = ]
| isbn = 1-55591-296-6
}}</ref> While in Britain, Coggins spent time on a ] convoy in the ], witnessed the bombing of ],<ref name = "outre"/> and flew over ] in a ].<ref name ="berks" /> He also spent time on a U.S. ] patrolling the beaches and made a trip into ] with an armored column.<ref name = "berks"/> Events from all of these sorties were illustrated in ''YANK'' magazine in double page spreads.<ref name ="berks" /><ref name = "images">{{cite web
| url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/yanklist.html | url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/yanklist.html
| title = Jack Coggins: Yank Magazine Illustrations & Articles | title = Jack Coggins: Yank Magazine Illustrations & Articles
| publisher = JackCoggins.info
| accessdate = 2007-04-14
| access-date = 2007-04-14
}}
}}</ref>
</ref> During his time in Britain, Coggins wrote articles on war rockets and the German Navy which were also published in ''YANK''; these articles clearly demonstrate his talents and early knowledge in those fields.<ref>{{Citation

Coggins was "bugged" by the fact that the ] to which he had been assigned for the ] got to ] only on ] plus one. He saw lively action, but bemoaned missing the big show.<ref name="Yank - Reporting on the Greatest Generation"/> During his time in Britain, Coggins also wrote articles on war rockets and the German Navy which were published in ''YANK''.<ref>{{Cite journal
| last= Coggins | last= Coggins
| first= Jack | first= Jack
| date= ], ] | date= January 9, 1944
| year= 1944
| title= The 700 Year History of War Rockets (article and illustrations) | title= The 700 Year History of War Rockets (article and illustrations)
| periodical= ] | journal= ]
| volume= 2 | volume= 2
| issue= 30 | issue= 30
| pages= 9–11 | pages= 9–11
| url= http://www.jackcoggins.info/yankarticle1.jpg
| id=
| access-date = 2007-04-14
| url= http://www.jackcoggins.info/yankarticle1.html
| accessdate = 2007-04-14
}} }}
</ref><ref>{{Citation </ref><ref>{{Cite journal
| last= Coggins | last= Coggins
| first= Jack | first= Jack
| date= ], ] | date= February 20, 1944
| title= The German Fleet – A Brief Review (article and illustrations)
| year= 1944
| journal= ]
| title= The German Fleet - A Brief Review (article and illustrations)
| periodical= ]
| volume= 2 | volume= 2
| issue= 36 | issue= 36
| pages= 22–23 | pages= 22–23
| url= http://www.jackcoggins.info/yankarticle2.jpg
| id=
| access-date = 2007-04-14
| url= http://www.jackcoggins.info/yankarticle2.html
}}
| accessdate = 2007-04-14
}}
</ref> </ref>


===Science and science-fiction illustrations===
=== Post World War II: Books and magazine covers ===
]'', his first SF magazine cover]]
After returning to New York from his war service, Coggins found that many of the outlets for his pre-war work had dried up. A friend had resigned from ], a faculty of the ], and suggested that Coggins apply for the position. His application was successful, and he taught watercolor painting at Hunter College from 1948 to 1953.
During the late 1940s and early 1950s Coggins's marine art was featured on covers of ]<ref>

In New York, as a result of his friendship with Fletcher Pratt, Coggins was introduced to the Hydra Club where he met ] and ]; he was also invited to join Pratt's ] club where he became closely associated with ] and ]. The contact with such visionaries, in addition to his exposure to the German ] rockets in Europe, served to strengthen his growing interest in space travel, rockets and science fiction.<ref name = "outre"/>

]

During the 1950s Coggins illustrated covers for ] ]s, most notably '']'', '']'' and '']''. During the late 1940s and early 1950s Coggins's marine art was featured on covers of ]<ref>
{{cite web {{cite web
| url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/yachting.html | url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/yachting.html
| title = Jack Coggins: Yachting Magazine Covers | title = Jack Coggins: Yachting Magazine Covers
| accessdate = 2007-04-14 | access-date = 2009-07-10
| publisher = JackCoggins.info
}} }}
</ref> and other publications, as well as on advertising material.<ref> </ref> and other publications, as well as on advertising material,<ref>
{{cite web {{cite web
| url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/bristol.html | url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/bristol.html
| title = Jack Coggins: Bristol Laboratories Advertising Brochures | title = Jack Coggins: Bristol Laboratories Advertising Brochures
| accessdate = 2007-04-14 | access-date = 2009-07-10
| publisher = JackCoggins.info
}} }}
</ref> and his science-fiction art illustrated covers for ] ]s. These included '']'', '']'' and '']''.
</ref> (]).


Due to reduced interest in his pre-war work, Coggins applied for a position teaching watercolor at ]. He taught watercolor painting there from 1948 to 1952. In New York, as a result of his friendship with Fletcher Pratt, Coggins was introduced to the members of the ], where he met ] and ]. Coggins was also invited to join Pratt's ] club, where he became closely associated with ] and ]. The contact with such visionary thinkers complemented his exposure to the German ] rockets in Europe and served to strengthen his growing interest in space travel, rockets, and science fiction.<ref name = "outre"/>
]

In 1951 and 1952, he again collaborated with Fletcher Pratt on two classic books: ''Rockets, Jets, Guided Missiles & Space Ships'', and ''By Space Ship to the Moon''. The books were released amidst a great wave of interest in space travel which swept the United States and the rest of the world in the 1950s;<ref name = "outre"/> they were published in several countries and translated into other languages.<ref>
In 1951 and 1952, Coggins collaborated again with Fletcher Pratt on two classic books: ''Rockets, Jets, Guided Missiles & Space Ships'', and ''By Space Ship to the Moon''. The books were released amidst the great wave of interest in space travel sweeping the United States and the rest of the world in the 1950s,<ref name = "outre"/> and they were published in several countries and translated into other languages.<ref>
{{cite web {{cite web
| url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/spacebooks1.html | url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/spacebooks1.html
| title = International Editions of Coggins/Pratt Space Books | title = International Editions of Coggins/Pratt Space Books
| accessdate = 2007-04-14 | access-date = 2009-07-10
| publisher = JackCoggins.info
}} }}
</ref> These books made the prospect of ] seem a practical possibility. NASA scientists used the books to demonstrate their ideas to Congressmen when seeking funding for the space program,<ref name ="berks"/> and there are many ] scientists today who retain fond memories of the influence the books had on their careers.<ref name = "StarLog">{{cite book </ref> These books made the prospect of ] seem a practical possibility. ] (NASA) scientists used the books to demonstrate their ideas to Congressmen when seeking funding for the space program,<ref name ="berks"/> and there are many NASA scientists today who retain fond memories of the influence the books had on their careers.<ref name = "StarLog">{{cite book
| last = Miller | last = Miller
| first = Ron | first = Ron
| authorlink = Ron Miller (artist and author) | author-link = Ron Miller (artist and author)
| others = art director, Robert P. Ericksen; designer, Phyllis Cayton
| editor = Jon-Michael Reed and Robin Snelson, eds.
| title = Norman Jacobs & Kerry O'Quinn present Space art
| others = art director, Robert P. Ericksen; designer, Phyllis Cayton
| title = Norman Jacobs & Kerry O’Quinn present Space art
| year = 1978 | year = 1978
| publisher = O’Quinn Studios | publisher = O’Quinn Studios
| location = ] | location = ]
| isbn = 9780385183437
| oclc = 4947036 | oclc = 4947036
| id = {{LCCN|79||101645}} | lccn = 79101645
}} }}
</ref> </ref>


===Books===
Altogether, between 1941 and 1983, Coggins wrote and/or illustrated 44 books on a wide range of marine, military, historical and educational themes (]). In 1962 he wrote and illustrated ''Arms and Equipment of the Civil War'' which has become a major reference work for Civil War historians and which has been republished several times, most recently in 2004. In 1966 he wrote and illustrated ''The Horseman's Bible'', which has sold at least half a million copies; a revised edition was published in 1984. In this book Coggins acknowledges his father, "whose twenty five years in the cavalry and life long interest in horses made his advice invaluable".
{{main|Jack Coggins bibliography}}
Between 1941 and 1983, Coggins wrote or illustrated 44 books on a wide range of marine, military, historical and educational themes. Among his more famous works is the 1962 authoring and illustration of ''Arms and Equipment of the Civil War''. Dale E. Biever, registrar at the Civil War Library and Museum in Philadelphia, described the work as "not about generals or battles but about the things one should know before delving into those areas ... a welcome addition to any Civil War library."<ref>{{cite web
|first = Dale E.
|last = Biever
|title = Arms and Equipment of the Civil War
|url = http://www.civilwarnews.com/reviews/bookreviews.cfm?ID=704
|work = Book Reviews
|access-date = July 10, 2009
|url-status = dead
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060828085228/http://civilwarnews.com/reviews/bookreviews.cfm?ID=704
|archive-date = August 28, 2006
}}
</ref> It was republished several times, most recently in 2004. In 1966, Coggins wrote and illustrated ''The Horseman's Bible'', which sold over 500,000&nbsp;copies with a revised edition published in 1984. In this book Coggins acknowledges his father "whose twenty five years in the cavalry and lifetime interest in horses made his advice invaluable."<ref>{{cite book
|last= Coggins
|first= Jack
|title= The Horseman's Bible
|publisher= ]
|location= ]
|year= 1984
|edition = Revised
|orig-year= 1966
|isbn= 978-0-385-18343-7
|oclc= 9918714
|page= Acknowledgments
|lccn= 83016500
}}
</ref> Coggins's last book was ''Marine Painter's Guide'', which was first published in 1983. After the book was published, he decided to stop writing to concentrate more on painting.<ref name = "berks"/> A new edition of ''Marine Painter's Guide'' was published in 2005 by ], the publisher of new editions for several of his books.<ref>{{cite web
|title = Jack Coggins
|url = http://search.store.yahoo.net/cgi-bin/nsearch?catalog=doverpublications&query=%22Jack%20Coggins%22
|publisher = ]
|access-date = July 10, 2009
}}
</ref>


===Other paintings and illustrations===
Coggins's last book was ''Marine Painter's Guide'' which was first published in 1983; after the book was published he decided to stop writing to concentrate more on painting.<ref name = "berks"/>
]
A new edition of ''Marine Painter's Guide'' was published in 2005 by ] Inc., New York, who have printed new editions of several of his books.


In 1968, Coggins was invited to undertake part of a voyage on the ] vessel ] from ] and commissioned to paint several images of the ship and crew. Harris B. Stewart was the chief scientist who commissioned and personally paid for the artwork, which remained his personal property; Stewart was the author of the cited report.<ref>
===Oil and watercolor paintings===
]
Jack Coggins produced in excess of 550 paintings during his career.<ref name = "berks"/> His published books and illustrations led to many commissions for works of art from individuals, major corporations and institutions; however no catalogue of his art works is known to exist, he rarely dated his work, and he kept few personal records. A retrospective exhibition and sale of artworks found in Coggins's home after his death was held at the in late 2006, consisting of about 300 previously unseen oils, watercolors and other printed materials. Part of the proceeds of the sale of these works was used to set up an annual Jack Coggins award to be given to a deserving local artist.<ref>{{Citation
| last=Schira
| first=Ron
| title=Institute Prepares Coggins Retrospective
| newspaper=Reading Eagle, Entertainment
| pages=50
| date=], ]
| url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/exhibition.pdf
}}
</ref><ref>{{Citation
| last=Schira
| first=Ron
| title=Coggins Focused on the Single Work
| newspaper=Reading Eagle, Entertainment
| date=], ]
| url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/cogginsreview.pdf
}}</ref>

The majority of his paintings have a maritime theme in a ] style and are executed in oils, for which he had a preference. However, he executed many works in ] and other media; examples of rural themes are common, and some works have a slightly ] style.<ref>
{{cite web {{cite web
| url = https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CZIC-gc1001-o25-1988-v-3/html/CZIC-gc1001-o25-1988-v-3.htm
| url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/art.html
| title = IEEE - OCEANS 88 - A partnership of Marine Interests (pp 840-841)
| title = Jack Coggins: Samples of Artwork
| access-date = December 30, 2017
| accessdate = 2007-04-14
| publisher =
}} }}
</ref>
</ref> His stated preference in art styles was "a direct splashy type of realistic painting" and he admired the ] school of ] and ], with "no liking for ']'".<ref name = "berks"/>


Coggins relied on a ] style that was executed in oils, for which he had a preference. However, he also painted works in water colors and other media. The majority of his paintings have a maritime theme, about which he wrote "It seems strange that with so much of the globe covered by water, so few artists know how to paint it."<ref name = "berks"/> His stated preference in art styles was "a direct splashy type of realistic painting" and he admired the ] school of ] and ], with "no liking for ']{{'"}}.<ref name = "berks"/>
His paintings are owned by the ], the ] of the ], the ], the ], among many other institutions and corporations, as well as private collectors.<ref name = "berks"/><ref name = "outre"/> His original manuscripts and illustrations are part of the ]'s Permanent Collection of outstanding authors and artists.<ref>

A catalog listing well over 1000 works has been posthumously compiled by his relatives.<ref>
{{cite web {{cite web
| url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/degrum.html | url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/catalogue.html
| title = Jack Coggins: de Grummond Children's Literature Collection University of Southern Mississippi | title = Jack Coggins: Catalogues
| publisher = JackCoggins.info
| accessdate = 2007-04-14
| access-date = 2008-08-22
}} }}
</ref> </ref>
A retrospective exhibition and sale of artworks found in Coggins's home after his death was held at the Wyomissing Institute of the Arts in late 2006. This consisted of about 300 previously unseen oils, watercolors, and other printed materials. An annual "Jack Coggins Award" to be given to a deserving local artist was financed from part of the proceeds from the sale of these works.<ref>{{cite news

| first = Ron
Coggins was a signature member of the and a Fellow of the .
He has been a member of the , the ], and advisor to the board of the Philadelphia Maritime Museum and the ] Public Museum.<ref name = "berks"/><ref name = "outre"/>
==Family==
During his time as a member of the faculty of Hunter College in New York, Coggins met Alma Wood who was a fashion and photographic model at the time.<ref>{{Citation
| last = Schira | last = Schira
| title = Institute Prepares Coggins Retrospective
| url = http://www.jackcoggins.info/exhibition.pdf
| series = Entertainment
| work = ]
| page = 50
| date=September 3, 2006
| access-date = 2007-05-07
}}
</ref><ref>{{cite news
| first = Ron | first = Ron
| last = Schira
| title=A Painter, a Model, a Class Act
| title = Coggins Focused on the Single Work
| newspaper=Reading Eagle, Obituaries
| url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/cogginsreview.pdf
| date=], ]
| series = Entertainment
| url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/almawoods.pdf
| work = ]
| date=November 7, 2006
| access-date = 2007-05-07
}} }}
</ref> </ref>
They married in 1948 and moved to ], ] shortly afterwards. Coggins taught his wife to paint, and she had success as an artist in her own right under the name Alma Woods, the couple holding annual joint exhibitions for many years.<ref name = "berks"/> Alma Coggins assisted her husband in the planning, research and typing of many of his books, and he acknowledged her efforts with book dedications to her.<ref>Dedication in ''Marine Painter's Guide'', published by Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, 1983, ''et al.''</ref>


{{As of|2001}}, Coggins's paintings are owned by the ], the ] of the ], the ], and the ], among many other institutions, corporations, and private collectors.<ref name = "outre"/><ref name = "berks"/> His original manuscripts and illustrations are part of ]'s Permanent Collection of outstanding authors and artists.<ref>
Jack and Alma Coggins had no children; his only living relatives are several cousins and their families in Australia.
{{cite web

| url = http://www.lib.usm.edu/legacy/degrum/public_html/html/research/findaids/DG0202.html
Coggins taught master art classes at the Wyomissing Institute of the Arts for over 45 years until failing health forced his retirement in May 2001 at nearly 90 years of age. He died at his home in Berks County, Pennsylvania at the age of 94 and willed his body to medical science.<ref>{{Citation
| title=Jack B. Coggins, Author-Illustrator | title = Jack Coggins Papers
| access-date = July 10, 2009
| newspaper=Reading Eagle, Obituaries
| publisher = ]
| pages=15
| year=2006
| date=], ]
| url=http://www.jackcoggins.info/jackcoggins.pdf
}} }}
</ref> </ref>


==Awards== ===Recognition===
In 1985, Jack Coggins received the Americanism Award from the Daniel Boone National Foundation and in 1989, he received the Purchase Award from the ]. He received the Rudolph Shaeffer Award in the International Maritime Exhibition from 1987 to 1990, the Pagoda Award from the in 1995, and the .<ref name = "outre"/> Coggins's work has been accepted for show by the ], the ], the American Artist Professional League, and the ].<ref name = "berks" /> Coggins received a number of awards and accolades during his career, including the American Revolution Round Table Award in 1969, the Daniel Boone National Foundation's Americanism Award in 1985, the ]'s Purchase Award in 1989, the International Maritime Exhibition's Rudolph Shaeffer Award from 1987 to 1990, and Berks Art Council's Pagoda Award in 1995.<ref name = "Lavelle" /> In 2000, he was inducted to the ] Hall of Fame as a ''Living Legend'' and celebrated master of the genre of Space Art.<ref>{{cite web

In 2000 he was inducted to the ] Hall of Fame as a ''Living Legend'' and celebrated master of the genre of Space Art.<ref>{{cite web
| url = http://www.iaaa.org/gallery/rudaux/ | url = http://www.iaaa.org/gallery/rudaux/
| title = The Lucien Rudaux Memorial Gallery | title = The Lucien Rudaux Memorial Gallery
| accessdate = 2007-04-22 | access-date = 2007-04-22
| year = 2000 | year = 2000
| publisher = ] | publisher = International Association of Astronomical Artists}}</ref>
}}
</ref>


==See also==
*]
*]
*]
==References== ==References==
{{ambox|type=notice|text=Many of the cited references have ] to , where the originals have been scanned and collected.}}
{{reflist|2}}
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}
{{refbegin}}

==Further reading==
*{{Cite book *{{Cite book
| last =Tuck | last =Tuck
| first =Donald H. | first =Donald H.
| authorlink = Donald H. Tuck | author-link = Donald H. Tuck
| title =The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy Volume 3 | title =The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy Volume 3
| year = 1984 | year = 1984
| publisher = Advent Publishers | publisher = Advent Publishers
| isbn = 0-911682-26-0 | isbn = 0-911682-26-0
| id = {{OCLC|60069023}} | oclc =60069023
}} }}
{{refend}}


==External links== ==External links==
* – created by his family – includes images of many of his works
*{{isfdb name|id=Jack_Coggins|name=Jack Coggins}}
*{{ISFDB name|id=Jack_Coggins}}
*
* at Galenet
* - created by his family - includes images of many of his works.
* in '']''
* {{LCAuth|n79061171|Jack Coggins|34|}}


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|ALTERNATIVE NAMES= Coggins, Jack; Coggins, J. Banham
|SHORT DESCRIPTION=] ]
|DATE OF BIRTH= ], ]
|PLACE OF BIRTH= ], ]
|DATE OF DEATH= ], ]
|PLACE OF DEATH=], ]
}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Coggins, Jack Banham}}
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Latest revision as of 04:45, 14 November 2024

English painter (1911–2006) For the American politician, see Jyles Coggins.
Jack Banham Coggins
Head and shoulders of elderly man wearing glasses with one black lens. The man is white-haired and mostly bald, and sports a goatee and mustache.Jack Coggins at age 91
Born(1911-07-10)July 10, 1911
London, England
DiedJanuary 30, 2006(2006-01-30) (aged 94)
Berks County, Pennsylvania, United States
NationalityBritish, American
Occupation(s)Author, illustrator, and artist
SpouseAlma Wood (1948–2006)

Jack Banham Coggins (July 10, 1911 – January 30, 2006) was an artist, author, and illustrator. He is known in the United States for his oil paintings, which focused predominantly on marine subjects. He is also known for his books on space travel, which were both authored and illustrated by Coggins. Besides his own works, Coggins also provided illustrations for advertisements and magazine covers and articles.

During World War II, he served as an artist and correspondent for YANK magazine, capturing and conveying wartime scenes from the front lines. Over the course of his career, Coggins produced more than 1,000 paintings and taught art classes for 45 years. He retired in May 2001 and died at his home in Pennsylvania in January 2006.

Biography

Early life

Coggins was born in London, England on July 10, 1911, the only child of Ethel May (née Dobby) and Sydney George Coggins. Sydney Coggins was Regimental Corporal Major of the First Regiment of Life Guards, the part of the Household Cavalry responsible for guarding the British Monarch; Jack Coggins was born in his father's barracks. During World War I, Sydney Coggins served with, and was commissioned by the regiment. After the war, he was appointed regimental Riding Master, but he was retired when the 1st and 2nd Life Guards were amalgamated into a single regiment under the Geddes Axe. A fellow officer, married to an American steel heiress, offered Sydney work as a secretary to his wife, and the Coggins family emigrated to Long Island, New York in 1923.

Education

While his father served with the Life Guards Regiment in France during World War I, Coggins and his mother lived with family in Folkestone, Kent. He attended the Imperial Service College, a public school preferred by army families. After moving to New York, Coggins enrolled at Roslyn High School in Roslyn Heights where he found difficulty in adjusting to the difference between military school in England and New York city public school. After graduation from Roslyn in 1928 at age 17, he enrolled in the New York City Grand Central School of Art and studied under Edmund Greacen, George Pearse Ennis, and Wayman Adams. In the early years, he painted advertising signs to support himself. With a grounding in fine art techniques, Coggins graduated to the Art Students League of New York, where he studied from 1933 to 1934 under noted artist Frank DuMond.

Marriage and later life

Head of an elderly, white-haired lady wearing glasses
Alma Wood-Coggins—May 2002

While a member of the faculty of Hunter College in New York, Coggins met Alma Wood, a fashion and photographic model. They married in 1948 and moved to Pike Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania, where Coggins had purchased an old farm. Alma named their home "Crestfield," which, according to Jack, meant absolutely nothing.

Coggins taught his wife to paint, and she had success as an artist in her own right under the name Alma Woods. The couple would hold annual joint exhibitions for many years. Alma Coggins assisted her husband in the planning, research and typing of many of his books, and he acknowledged her efforts with book dedications to her.

He taught art classes at the Wyomissing Institute of the Arts from 1957 until 2001, despite being handicapped by the loss of his left eye due to infection after an operation.

Coggins was a signature member and Master Pastelist of the Pastel Society of America, a Fellow of the American Society of Marine Artists, a member of the American Ordnance Association, the U.S. Naval Institute, and an adviser to the boards of the Philadelphia Maritime Museum and the Reading Public Museum. He died at his home in Berks County, Pennsylvania at the age of 94 and willed his body to medical science. Alma Wood-Coggins died March 4, 2007. Jack and Alma Coggins had no children and were survived by several nieces and nephews.

Illustrator, author and artist

For a more comprehensive list, see List of works by Jack Coggins.

Military illustrations of World War II

An oil painting of World War II ships in combat.
Fighting Ships of the U.S. Navy, by Fletcher Pratt, illustrated by Jack Coggins, cover art by Jack Coggins

Coggins's interest in sailing and maritime subjects began in London when he would sail model yachts on Round Pond in Kensington Gardens. This interest developed into a lifelong passion during his teens when he sailed small craft on Hempstead Harbor, near his new home on Long Island. During the early years of World War II, Coggins took a sampling of his war illustrations to Worthen Paxton, the art director of LIFE Magazine, who commissioned Coggins to produce a drawing of an imaginary coastal invasion of England. Coggins was paid $250 for that work, a large sum at the time, which paid his rent for five months. Appearing on July 15, 1940, this was the first of many war time illustrations for LIFE. Some of Coggins's works are in the Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection.

During the early 1940s, Coggins obtained more work producing war pictures for other magazines, including a series of double-page spreads for the controversial newspaper PM, and illustrations for The Saturday Evening Post. Throughout the war years, most of the output of many large corporations was reserved for materiel production; however, management were keen to promote their connection to the war effort and keep their name before the buying public until they could resume peacetime sales. Coggins received advertising commissions from such corporations including Elco, Koppers, US Steel, and Westinghouse. He also received commissions from the U.S. War Department for aircraft recognition charts, and he was intrigued to later find these charts used during his army basic training.

Because of the quality of his maritime illustrations, Coggins was invited by publisher Doubleday to provide artwork for a children's book about the U.S. Navy; the author being Fletcher Pratt, the well known military historian. Coggins was invited to participate in Pratt's Naval Game, based on a wargame developed by Fred T. Jane involving dozens of tiny wooden ships, built on a scale of one inch to fifty feet. These were spread over the floor of Pratt's apartment and their maneuvers were calculated via a complex mathematical formula. The result of Pratt and Coggins's first collaboration, published in 1941, was Fighting Ships of the U.S. Navy, a volume that described in text and illustrated in full color every class of ship in the Navy.

Coggins was called up for Army service, and enlisted on April 8, 1943. He was pulled from basic training at Fort Eustis, Virginia before he could complete it to work as an illustrator for YANK magazine. He was originally introduced to the Commanding Officer and Editor of YANK, Colonel Franklin Forsberg, by Fletcher Pratt. On May 20, 1943, Coggins commenced work at the head office of YANK in New York, where he worked until his departure for Britain. Jack Coggins became a naturalized citizen of the United States on August 19, 1943.

He served as an artist for British YANK in London until August 2, 1945, and was discharged from the U.S. Army on November 3, 1945. After serving as a Private for most of his time abroad, he finally made Corporal, and just before discharge, Sergeant. While in Britain, Coggins spent time on a Royal Navy convoy in the North Sea, witnessed the bombing of Saint-Lô, and flew over Berlin in a Lancaster bomber. He also spent time on a U.S. PT boat patrolling the beaches and made a trip into Brittany with an armored column. Events from all of these sorties were illustrated in YANK magazine in double page spreads.

Coggins was "bugged" by the fact that the Liberty Ship to which he had been assigned for the Normandy Landings got to Utah Beach only on D-Day plus one. He saw lively action, but bemoaned missing the big show. During his time in Britain, Coggins also wrote articles on war rockets and the German Navy which were published in YANK.

Science and science-fiction illustrations

Coggins's painting "Mining an Asteroid" appeared on the cover of the May 1952 issue of Galaxy Science Fiction, his first SF magazine cover

During the late 1940s and early 1950s Coggins's marine art was featured on covers of Yachting Magazine and other publications, as well as on advertising material, and his science-fiction art illustrated covers for pulp science fiction magazines. These included Galaxy Science Fiction, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction and Thrilling Wonder Stories.

Due to reduced interest in his pre-war work, Coggins applied for a position teaching watercolor at Hunter College. He taught watercolor painting there from 1948 to 1952. In New York, as a result of his friendship with Fletcher Pratt, Coggins was introduced to the members of the Hydra Club, where he met Judith Merril and L. Ron Hubbard. Coggins was also invited to join Pratt's Trap Door Spiders club, where he became closely associated with L. Sprague de Camp and Isaac Asimov. The contact with such visionary thinkers complemented his exposure to the German V-2 rockets in Europe and served to strengthen his growing interest in space travel, rockets, and science fiction.

In 1951 and 1952, Coggins collaborated again with Fletcher Pratt on two classic books: Rockets, Jets, Guided Missiles & Space Ships, and By Space Ship to the Moon. The books were released amidst the great wave of interest in space travel sweeping the United States and the rest of the world in the 1950s, and they were published in several countries and translated into other languages. These books made the prospect of space exploration seem a practical possibility. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) scientists used the books to demonstrate their ideas to Congressmen when seeking funding for the space program, and there are many NASA scientists today who retain fond memories of the influence the books had on their careers.

Books

Main article: Jack Coggins bibliography

Between 1941 and 1983, Coggins wrote or illustrated 44 books on a wide range of marine, military, historical and educational themes. Among his more famous works is the 1962 authoring and illustration of Arms and Equipment of the Civil War. Dale E. Biever, registrar at the Civil War Library and Museum in Philadelphia, described the work as "not about generals or battles but about the things one should know before delving into those areas ... a welcome addition to any Civil War library." It was republished several times, most recently in 2004. In 1966, Coggins wrote and illustrated The Horseman's Bible, which sold over 500,000 copies with a revised edition published in 1984. In this book Coggins acknowledges his father "whose twenty five years in the cavalry and lifetime interest in horses made his advice invaluable." Coggins's last book was Marine Painter's Guide, which was first published in 1983. After the book was published, he decided to stop writing to concentrate more on painting. A new edition of Marine Painter's Guide was published in 2005 by Dover Publications, the publisher of new editions for several of his books.

Other paintings and illustrations

An oil painting of a multiple masted sailing vessel casting off from being towed by a steam-powered paddle tug
Tow Cast Off, oil painting by Jack Coggins

In 1968, Coggins was invited to undertake part of a voyage on the NOAA vessel USC&GS Discoverer (OSS-02) from Barbados and commissioned to paint several images of the ship and crew. Harris B. Stewart was the chief scientist who commissioned and personally paid for the artwork, which remained his personal property; Stewart was the author of the cited report.

Coggins relied on a realistic style that was executed in oils, for which he had a preference. However, he also painted works in water colors and other media. The majority of his paintings have a maritime theme, about which he wrote "It seems strange that with so much of the globe covered by water, so few artists know how to paint it." His stated preference in art styles was "a direct splashy type of realistic painting" and he admired the New Hope school of Redfield and Garber, with "no liking for 'modern art'".

A catalog listing well over 1000 works has been posthumously compiled by his relatives. A retrospective exhibition and sale of artworks found in Coggins's home after his death was held at the Wyomissing Institute of the Arts in late 2006. This consisted of about 300 previously unseen oils, watercolors, and other printed materials. An annual "Jack Coggins Award" to be given to a deserving local artist was financed from part of the proceeds from the sale of these works.

As of 2001, Coggins's paintings are owned by the Philadelphia Maritime Museum, the National Air and Space Museum of the Smithsonian Institution, the U.S. Navy, and the United States Coast Guard, among many other institutions, corporations, and private collectors. His original manuscripts and illustrations are part of The University of Southern Mississippi's Permanent Collection of outstanding authors and artists.

Recognition

Coggins's work has been accepted for show by the American Watercolor Society, the Salmagundi Club, the American Artist Professional League, and the Pastel Society of America. Coggins received a number of awards and accolades during his career, including the American Revolution Round Table Award in 1969, the Daniel Boone National Foundation's Americanism Award in 1985, the Mystic Maritime Gallery's Purchase Award in 1989, the International Maritime Exhibition's Rudolph Shaeffer Award from 1987 to 1990, and Berks Art Council's Pagoda Award in 1995. In 2000, he was inducted to the International Association of Astronomical Artists Hall of Fame as a Living Legend and celebrated master of the genre of Space Art.

References

Many of the cited references have convenience links to JackCoggins.info, where the originals have been scanned and collected.
  1. ^ Miller, Ron (2001). "Jack Coggins". Outré Magazine. 23. Filmfax Inc.: 42–49. ISBN 9780385183437. ISSN 0895-0393. OCLC 14292774. Retrieved July 13, 2009.
  2. ^ Ziss, Robert F. (Spring 2001). "Author-artist Jack Coggins". Historical Review of Berks County. 66 (2): 76–82. ISSN 0018-2524. OCLC 1589887. Retrieved July 13, 2009.
  3. "No. 30875". The London Gazette (Supplement). 27 August 1918. p. 10166.
  4. "No. 31113". The London Gazette (Supplement). 7 January 1919. p. 440.
  5. "No. 32790". The London Gazette. 26 January 1923. p. 610.
  6. ^ Schira, Ron (March 25, 2007). "A painter, a model, a class act". Reading Eagle. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
  7. E.g. Dedication in Marine Painter's Guide, published by Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, 1983, et al.
  8. "75th Anniversary Coggins Award Recipient". Wyomissing, Pennsylvania: Wyomissing Institute of the Arts. 2009. Archived from the original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved July 10, 2009. Since 2006, the Coggins Award has been awarded to a local, outstanding artist, and is named in honor of Jack Coggins, an internationally recognized artist who taught master art classes at the Institute of the Arts from 1957 until his retirement in 2001.
  9. "Thirty-Seventh Annual Open Juried Exhibition for "Pastels Only"" (PDF). 2009. Pastel Society of America. p. 5. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 30, 2010. Retrieved September 5, 2010.
  10. "Alaskan Salmon Fishers". Objects. Mystic Seaport. Retrieved July 20, 2009. Oil on canvas mounted on board; painting titled "Alaskan Salmon Fishers", by Jack Coggins. Signed lower right "JACK COGGINS, ASMA", and handwritten on back presumably by artist "ALASKAN SALMON FISHERS/ OIL 22X26/ JACK COGGINS, ASMA"
  11. ^ Matthew, Lavelle (Spring 2007). "Coggins, Jack Banham". Pennsylvania Center for the Book. Archived from the original on June 13, 2010. Retrieved July 13, 2009.
  12. ^ "Jack B. Coggins, author-illustrator" (PDF). Reading Eagle. Obituaries. February 2, 2006. p. 15. Retrieved 2007-05-07.
  13. Coggins, Jack (July 15, 1940). "Imaginary Invasion of England (illustration)". LIFE. Vol. 9, no. 3. p. 20. Retrieved 2007-04-14.
  14. "Jack Coggins: Life Magazine Illustrations". JackCoggins.info. Retrieved 2007-04-14.
  15. "The Artists". Brown University. Archived from the original on January 6, 2010. Retrieved December 17, 2009.
  16. Coggins, Jack (March 23, 1941). "Germany May Invade England in Barges Like These (illustrations for article)". PM Sunday Edition. 1 (40): 14–15. Retrieved 2007-04-14.
  17. Coggins, Jack (July 1942). "Midnight off Cebu (illustration for advertisement)". The Rudder. 58 (7): 1. Retrieved 2007-04-14.
  18. Coggins, Jack (January 25, 1943). "PT...For Plenty Tough (illustration for advertisement)". TIME. Vol. 41, no. 4. p. 65. Retrieved 2007-04-14.
  19. Coggins, Jack (September 1943). "The Flying Fish With a Steel Lung (illustration for advertisement)". Country Gentleman. 113 (9): 48. Retrieved 2007-04-14.
  20. Coggins, Jack (August 1942). "Bombers from the bottom of the Deep Blue Sea (illustration for advertisement)". Popular Science. 141 (2): 15. Retrieved 2007-04-14.
  21. "Creator: Coggins, Jack". Digital Collections. University of North Texas Libraries. 2005. Retrieved 2007-04-14.
  22. "Enlistment Records". National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved July 20, 2009.
  23. "Naturalization Records". Southern District Court, New York. Archived from the original on July 22, 2011. Retrieved July 20, 2009.
  24. Military Personnel Records, National Personnel Records Center, National Archives, St. Louis, Missouri.
  25. ^ McGurn, Barrett (2004). Yank - Reporting on the Greatest Generation. Colorado: Fulcrum Publishing. p. 230. ISBN 1-55591-296-6.
  26. "Jack Coggins: Yank Magazine Illustrations & Articles". JackCoggins.info. Retrieved 2007-04-14.
  27. Coggins, Jack (January 9, 1944). "The 700 Year History of War Rockets (article and illustrations)". YANK Magazine (British Edition). 2 (30): 9–11. Retrieved 2007-04-14.
  28. Coggins, Jack (February 20, 1944). "The German Fleet – A Brief Review (article and illustrations)". YANK Magazine (British Edition). 2 (36): 22–23. Retrieved 2007-04-14.
  29. "Jack Coggins: Yachting Magazine Covers". JackCoggins.info. Retrieved 2009-07-10.
  30. "Jack Coggins: Bristol Laboratories Advertising Brochures". JackCoggins.info. Retrieved 2009-07-10.
  31. "International Editions of Coggins/Pratt Space Books". JackCoggins.info. Retrieved 2009-07-10.
  32. Miller, Ron (1978). Norman Jacobs & Kerry O'Quinn present Space art. art director, Robert P. Ericksen; designer, Phyllis Cayton. New York, NY: O’Quinn Studios. ISBN 9780385183437. LCCN 79101645. OCLC 4947036.
  33. Biever, Dale E. "Arms and Equipment of the Civil War". Book Reviews. Archived from the original on August 28, 2006. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
  34. Coggins, Jack (1984) . The Horseman's Bible (Revised ed.). Garden City, NY: Doubleday. p. Acknowledgments. ISBN 978-0-385-18343-7. LCCN 83016500. OCLC 9918714.
  35. "Jack Coggins". Dover Publications. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
  36. "IEEE - OCEANS 88 - A partnership of Marine Interests (pp 840-841)". . Retrieved December 30, 2017.
  37. "Jack Coggins: Catalogues". JackCoggins.info. Retrieved 2008-08-22.
  38. Schira, Ron (September 3, 2006). "Institute Prepares Coggins Retrospective" (PDF). Reading Eagle. Entertainment. p. 50. Retrieved 2007-05-07.
  39. Schira, Ron (November 7, 2006). "Coggins Focused on the Single Work" (PDF). Reading Eagle. Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-05-07.
  40. "Jack Coggins Papers". University of Southern Mississippi. Retrieved July 10, 2009.
  41. "The Lucien Rudaux Memorial Gallery". International Association of Astronomical Artists. 2000. Retrieved 2007-04-22.

Further reading

External links

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