
Schulz & Peanuts Time Line

1950 After several rejections, Schulz sold his Li'l Folks strip to United
Feature Syndicate They renamed his strip Peanuts, a title he
never liked
October 2, 1950 Peanuts debuted in seven newspapers The
syndicate paid Schulz $90 for his first month of strips

First Peanuts strip ~ October 2, 1950
1951 Schulz married Joyce Halverson After a brief move to Colorado
Springs, Colorado, the young family returned to Minneapolis
1952 The first Sunday Peanuts page was published; the strip was
then featured in over 40 U.S. newspapers The first book collection, Peanuts,
was also published
1955 Kodak became the first product sponsor for Peanuts, using the characters
in a camera handbook Schulz won his first Reuben Award from the National
Cartoonists Society
1958 Schulz left Minnesota and moved with his wife and five children
to Sebastopol, California Peanuts appeared in 355 U.S. and 40 foreign
newspapers Hungerford Plastics created the first plastic Peanuts figures, including Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Linus & Lucy Yale University named Schulz "Cartoonist of the Year" |
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1960 Hallmark created the first Peanuts greeting cards Peanuts art
and animation was used in a popular Ford Falcon advertising campaign

1962 Determined Productions published Happiness is a Warm Puppy, which made it to the New York Times best-seller list Peanuts was named
“Best Humor Strip of the Year” by the National Cartoonists Society

1964 Schulz became the first cartoonist to be awarded two Reubens by
the National Cartoonists Society
1965 Peanuts featured on cover of Time magazine The first animated television special, A Charlie Brown Christmas, won a Peabody Award and an Emmy for outstanding children's programming
1966 Schulz’ father, Carl, died while visiting in California A fire
later destroyed Schulz’s Sebastopol studio

September 19, 1966
1967 The stage musical You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown opened off Broadway; it has since become the most-produced musical in America
May 24, 1967 California Governor Ronald Reagan greeted the cartoonist at
the State Capitol in observance of the legislature-proclaimed “Charles Schulz
Day”
April 28, 1969 Grand Opening of the Redwood Empire Ice Arena in Santa Rosa, California, starring the 1968 Olympic Gold Medallist Peggy Fleming and the Vince Guaraldi trio
May 1969 Charlie Brown and Snoopy accompanied astronauts on Apollo X

March 14, 1969
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1990 The French government named Schulz “Commander of Arts and Letters,” and the Snoopy in Fashion exhibit opened at the Louvre This Is Your
Childhood, Charlie Brown—Children in American Culture exhibit opened at The
National Museum of History in Washington, D.C.
1992 Snoopy, The Masterpiece exhibit opened at the Montreal
Museum of Fine Art Schulz awarded the “Order of Merit” from the Italian
Minister of Culture
1995 The 45th anniversary of Peanuts was marked by exhibit Around
the Moon and Home Again: A Tribute to the Art of Charles M. Schulz at the Space
Center in Houston
June 28, 1996 Schulz got his own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
October 16, 1997 Schulz and wife Jeannie announced they would give $1
million toward the construction of a
D-Day memorial to be placed in Virginia World
premiere of Peanuts Gallery by composer Ellen Taaffe Zwilich held at
Carnegie Hall

March 16, 1997
1999 Schulz’s Peanuts: A Golden Celebration published You’re
a Good Man Charlie Brown opened in a new production on Broadway Peanuts appeared in more than 2,600 newspapers worldwide, and over 20,000 products had been
developed to date
December 14, 1999 Schulz announced his
retirement due to health problems |
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January 3, 2000 Charles Schulz bade a fond farewell to all his readers in the final daily Peanuts newspaper strip

January 3, 2000
February 7, 2000 California lawmakers declared Sunday, February 13, as “Charles
M. Schulz Day” to coincide with the final Peanuts Sunday strip
February 12, 2000 Charles Schulz died Saturday evening in his home in Santa Rosa of complications from colon cancer; he was 77 years old
February 13, 2000 The final Sunday Peanuts strip appeared in newspapers
around the world
May 2000 Posthumous awarding of the Milton Caniff Lifetime Achievement
Award by the National Cartoonists Society
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AP photo/Santa Rosa
Press Democrat |
June 2000 Ground breaking of Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center in Santa Rosa, across from Redwood Empire
Ice Arena (Snoopy's Home Ice)
May 17, 2001 First Day of Issue of the U.S. Postal Service Peanuts stamp
at Charles Schulz’s Redwood Empire Ice Arena in Santa Rosa, California
June 7, 2001 Posthumous awarding of the Congressional Gold Medal by the United States Congress to Schulz's family
August 17, 2002 Grand Opening of the Schulz Museum! |
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