Remington Schuyler (1884–1955) was an American painter, illustrator and writer during the early to mid twentieth century. After graduating from Washington University, he received scholarships to attend the National Academy in Rome, he returned back to New York and landed his first published illustration on the cover of The Saturday Evening Post, which he was soon working regularly for it along with Pearson's and Munsey's Magazine Schuyler did illustrations for Boys' Life and the Boy Scout Handbook as part of his thirty years service as a volunteer for the Boy Scouts. Other books illustrated by Schuyler included Daniel Boone, Wilderness Scout by Stewart Edward White, Indian Hunting Grounds and Great White Buffalo. He also was active as a mural painter and was editor of the Architectural Record for a period. During the Depression years, he painted many covers for pulp magazines and worked as a muralist for the WPA artist's program in Connecticut. After the end of the pulp era, Schuyler moved back to his birth state, Missouri, and taught art at Missouri Valley College. He died in 1955 at the age of 71.
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