Bill Blackbeard was an American writer, editor, and pioneering comics historian whose lifelong mission was to preserve the art of the newspaper comic strip. As founder and director of the San Francisco Academy of Comic Art, he assembled one of the world’s most important collections of comic strips and newspaper sections, ultimately totaling millions of items. His belief that the newspaper comic strip was a vital and uniquely American art form shaped both his scholarship and his preservation efforts, especially at a time when libraries were discarding bound newspapers in favor of microfilm. A passionate advocate for the cultural value of comics, Blackbeard wrote, edited, or contributed to more than two hundred books, including The Smithsonian Collection of Newspaper Comics, 100 Years of Comic Strips, and major restorations of series such as Krazy & Ignatz and Wash Tubbs and Captain Easy. His work helped establish the foundation for modern comics scholarship, and his meticulous archival practices preserved material that would otherwise have been lost. Through the Academy, he developed a vast network of supporters who helped him rescue newspapers from across North America. His collection later became a cornerstone of the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum, where it continues to support research and publication. Blackbeard’s influence extends far beyond his own writing; generations of scholars, cartoonists, and historians have relied on the resources he saved and the standards he set.