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RIPLEY TIMELINE

Robert L. Ripley       Ripley Timeline       Submit your Oddity

1889 35-year old Isaac Ripley marries 20-year old Lillie Bell Yocka
1890 birth of Leroy Ripley in Santa Rosa, California
1893 birth of sister Ethel
1901 - 1908 formal education in Santa Rosa; quit school in 1908 before graduating in order to support his mother
1904 birth of brother Doug
1905 death of Isaac Ripley (father)
1906 playing semi-professional baseball in Santa Rosa and sells first artwork locally
1908 sells first cartoon, “The Village Belles are Wringing” to LIFE, a national magazine
1909 joins the staff of the San Francisco Bulletin, then the Chronicle
1912 August 28, Ripley’s last drawing for the Chronicle, moves to New York that winter
1913 January 2, draws his first cartoon for “The Globe”; tries out for the New York Giants, but gets injured, ending his dreams of a baseball career
1914 his first trip abroad (Europe)
1915 death of Lillie Belle Ripley (mother)
1918 December 19th - publishes Champs & Chumps cartoon, long regarded as the “first” Believe It or Not! (BION) cartoon; moves into the New York Athletic Club
1919 October 16th - actual first cartoon with the BION bi-line; marries Beatrice Roberts on October 21st but separates 3 months later
1920 second trip to Europe (his first “solo” excursion) to cover the Olympics in Antwerp, Belgium
1922 December 3, embarks on his first trip around the world (returns April 7, 1923); publishes his travell journal in installment form
1923 April 13, divorce finalized; hires researcher/linguist Norbert Pearlroth; Globe newspaper folds, Ripley moves to “The Post”.
1925 trip to South America, publishes his travell journal; publishes a Handball Guide
1926 New York City Handball champion; publishes “Boxing Score” (a book on boxing)
1929 July 9th - joins W. R. Hearst’s King Features Syndicate, goes from 17 papers to world-wide distribution; first BION book published
1930 begins his 14-year run on radio and his 19-year association with radio show promoter Doug Storer (future President of Ripley’s Believe It or Not!); Hearst funds Ripley’s passion for travell, starting a decade of world travell, which culminates in Ripley visiting 201 countries by 1940; develops the concept for on location live radio broadcasts throughout the decade, which by the end of the decade becomes the Ripley radio show trademark with shows broadcast from underwater, in the sky, in caves in snake pits and from foreign countries
1931 creates movie shorts for Vitaphone Pictures, later owned by RKO; publishes his second book of BIONs
1932 lengthy trip to the Orient; the first, biggest and most successful national BION contest
1933 July, opens his first Odditiorium in Chicago, Illinois
1934 first radio show broadcast simultaneously around the world; purchases 28-room BION Island home (Mamaroneck, NY); closing of Chicago Odditorium in the Fall
1935 opens Odditorium in San Diego, California
1936 - 1937 opens Odditorium in Dallas, Texas; voted the most popular man in America (more popular than the president)
1937 the first published Charles Schulz drawing appears in BION; opens Odditiorium in Cleveland, OH
1939 opens Odditorium in San Francisco and New York City (Times Square); receives Honorary Degree from Dartmouth College
1940 purchases his second home, a Manhattan studio apartment with 13 rooms; receives two more honorary degrees
1940 - 1945 stops foreign travells and concentrates on “Seeing America First” (radio shows); World War II charity work, including a Madison Square Gardens baseball game featuring Babe Ruth.
1946 purchases his Chinese junk, the Mon Lei
1947 purchases his third home, Hi Mount, Florida
1948 makes a tv show pilot; takes last foreign trip to the Orient and Hawaii; celebrates 30th anniversary of BION with an elaborate costume party at Toot Shor’s famous nightclub in NYC
1949 first tv show; dies May 27th from heart failure after collapsing on the set of his weekly television show (show # 13)
1949 public auction of the Ripley estate; exhibits purchased by John Arthur; Doug Storer takes over the publication of the Ripley BION cartoon and Paul Frehm becomes the Ripley cartoon artist.
1950 December 9th, the first permanent BION museum opens in St. Augustine, FL; partnership between John Arthur and Robert Herlinger take over the display of Ripley artifacts as a separate entity/company
1950s company operates two museums (New York & St. Augustine) and several travelling shows (Las Vegas, Atlantic City…) Doug Ripley sells all family interests in the company to Doug Storer and John Arthur
1960 - 1961 Doug Storer retires after 30 years with the company
1963 Alec Rigby, a Canadian, becomes a franchisee with John Arthur and builds museum # 3 in Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada
1966 the opening of new museum in San Francisco, CA
1968 the opening of new museum in Chicago, IL; publication of the 50th Anniversary Edition of BION (1968).
1969 Alec Rigby becomes sole owner of BION and moves the company from New York to Toronto, Canada
1970 - 1976 the opening of several Ripley museums, including Gatlinburg, Tennessee, Myrtle Beach, South Carolina and Blackpool, England (the first overseas Ripley museum in 1972).
1972 Santa Rosa honors Ripley with a city run memorial in “The Church of One Tree” (closes in 1998)
1973 hiring of future BION president Robert Masterson
1976 Norbert Pearlroth retires after 53 years service as Head Researcher of BION
1978 Paul Frehm retires as the Ripley cartoonist and is replaced by his brother Walter Frehm
1980 - 1985 Alec Rigby, semi-retired CEO; company run by president John Withers; successful national television show starring Jack Palance (1980-84)
1985 January, company purchased from Rigby by Canadian entrepreneur Jim Pattison of Vancouver; opening of Las Vegas, BION, October 1, the first franchised Ripley museum
1988 opening of Surfer’s Paradise, Australia (initially opened as a franchise, but later acquired by Ripley Entertainment Inc), the first “Asian” BION museum.
1989 John Withers retires; Bob Masterson becomes president of BION; Walter Frehm retires and is replaced by Don Wimmer (January 1990); Ripley’s leaves King Features Syndicate after 60 years and moves to United Media.
1990 - 1993 opening of several franchised museums, domestic and foreign, including Orlando and Korea, and a return to Blackpool, England (the first one closed in 1976).
1991 opening of the first Ripley Moving Theater in Gatlinburg, Tennessee
1993 RBION headquarters moved from Toronto to Orlando, Florida; celebration of the 75th Anniversary of RBION , including TBS’ 90-minute television documentary “The Life and Times of Robert Ripley.”
1993 - 1997 Asian expansion; opening of museums in Thailand, Korea, Jakarta and Hong Kong
1996 acquisition of the Guinness World Records Museum franchise rights
1997 opening of the first Ripley Aquarium in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina
1999 opening of the first Ripley Haunted Adventure in Gatlinburg, Tennessee
2000 opening of the first Guinness World Record Experience in Orlando; opening of the second Ripley Aquarium, the Aquarium of the Smokies in Gatlinburg, Tennessee; new television show starring Dean Cain
2001 conversion of Ripley’s three Moving Theaters to 3-D presentations
2002 opening of museum in Genting Highlands, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; opening of the second Haunted House in Myrtle Beach
2003 opening of new museums in Key West, Florida and New Orleans, Louisiana; end of new Dean Cain TV show (4 seasons, 88 shows), and beginning of world syndication of the show; opening of third Haunted House in San Antonio, TX
2004 acquisition of 2 franchised Ripley museums and 2 Louis Tussaud’s wax museums in Texas; acquisition of St. Augustine Sightseeing trains; launching of Ripley Publishing company with successful New York Times best seller: Ripley’s Believe It or Not! (“eyeball book”). Ripley cartoonist Don Wimmer retires and is replaced by John Graziano.

Ripley’s move its corporate office to its second location in Orlando, Florida, combining the art department, the exhibit warehouse and administrative offices under one roof for the first time in the company’s history.
2005 opening of Old MacDonald’s Mini Golf and Super Fun Zone in Sevierville, Tenn.; opening of a new Louis Tussaud’s Waxworks in Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada (an earlier version had operated for nearly 40 years); start of construction on Ripley’s first Great Wolf Lodge (to open 2006) in Niagara Falls, Canada.
2006 opening of Great Wolf Lodge Indoor Waterpark Resort in Niagara Falls, Canada; opening of Wacky Wilderness Mini-golf on the Great Wolf Lodge property; opening of two new Ripley’s Believe It or Not! museums in Panama City Beach, Florida and Williamsburg, Virginia; release of the highly anticipated Ripley publication: “Expect the Unexpected”.
2007 Opening of Ripley’s Believe It or Not! New York, New York
2008 Opening of Ripley’s Believe It or Not! London, England