Aunt Margaret: How Walt Disney's Aunt Inspired Him to Draw

Posted on Thu, 09/08/2011 - 06:00

Walt said: “So Dear was especially close to me. Why, that’s the life my brother and I grew up with as kids out in Missouri.” One of Walt’s inspirational and supportive family members is the subject of today’s post-Aunt Margaret.

Aunt Maggie

“…my father had a very close brother [Robert Disney] all his life,” Roy O. Disney recalled in a 1968 interview. “His wife’s name was Margaret. We called her Maggie. She was a wonderful character with an infectious laugh, and laughed at the slightest provocation, and she was always enamored with Walt from the time he was a little fellow.”

Walt recalled, “…I had an Aunt that was a very favorite aunt who would come and visit us. Her name was Aunt Margaret. She’d always bring something for my sister and she’d bring me a big tablet and these Crayola things. I was always drawing Aunt Margaret pictures. And she’d just rave over them, and she’d keep them.”

Margaret’s Support of Walt’s Dreams

“Aunt Margaret was the one that gave Walt his first drawing implements,” Founding director of the Walt Disney Archives Dave Smith recalls. “She must have heard about that little episode of his drawing on the side of the house with the tar because she thought, well, it would be better if he practices art on paper with a pencil…”

“She was the one used to bring him tablets and pencils, you remember the Big Chief Indian red tablet that we used to buy as kids?” Roy said. “She used to keep him supplied with those.” 

“So from that he started drawing,” Dave Smith continues, “he drew a horse that was owned by the local doctor, Doc Sherwood. The horse’s name was Rupert. And Walt did this really good drawing of this horse and sold it to the good doctor. He was willing to pay for this piece of art. So that was really Walt Disney’s very first sale in the art field.”

Walt’s Return From France

Walt’s passion for art continued unabated, and many years later, after he returned from Red Cross service in France, Walt got his first job in the art field. He recalled, “One of the fellows working with Roy said ‘I have a couple of friends that have and art shop over here and they just told me the other night they need an apprentice. I went up to see these guys…two fellows by the name of Pessman and Rubin. They had the art for Gray Advertising Company. I went up with these samples and they were all these corny things I had done in France. Well, by gosh, they hired me!

Running Home to Aunt Margaret

“The first thing I did I ran down to see Auntie Margaret. I thought that Auntie would be happy to know after all that encouragement she gave me that somebody was paying me $50 a month to draw pictures!”

Walt made his way to the Kansas City hotel where his Aunt Margaret and Uncle Robert were staying, enthusing, “Auntie, look, they’re paying me to draw pictures! They’re paying me to draw pictures!” 

Sadly, Aunt Margaret was elderly and in ill health; her weakness and frailty prevented her sharing any enthusiasm for Walt’s achievement. It was “kind of a heartbreak,” Walt recalled.

Aunt Margaret died of pneumonia shortly afterward, but her simple generosity and encouragement to her young nephew changed the world.

Visit Us and Learn More About Disney’s Amazing History 

Originally constructed in 1897 as an Army barracks, our iconic building transformed into The Walt Disney Family Museum more than a century later, and today houses some of the most interesting and fun museum exhibitions in the US. Explore the life story of the man behind the brand—Walt Disney. You’ll love the iconic Golden Gate Bridge views and our interactive exhibitions here in San Francisco. You can learn more about visiting us here.

Image above: Walt's Aunt Margaret Disney. Courtesy of Walt Disney Family Foundation.