Author Topic: Percy Keese Fitzhugh - Early 1900s Hackensack writer/Popular characters  (Read 3570 times)

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Pee Wee Harris Mayor For a Day, Grosset & Dunlap, 1926 by Percy K. Fitzhugh Good condition, except for fading and bumps on cover, with no dust jacket. "Approved by the Boy Scouts of America" Part of the series including Pee Wee Harris, Westy Martin and Tom Slade books that inspired the comic strip still carried in Boy's Life magazine every month today. -------------------------------------------------------------- Percy Keese Fitzhugh (1876 - 1950) was the author of nearly 100 books for children and adolescents. From 1917 to 1935 he was one of the most popular children’s authors in the United States. Percy was born in Brooklyn, NY on September 7, 1876. He attended Pratt Institute, Brooklyn from 1892 - 1894, pursuing a course in "Regular Art". He married Harriet Lloyd LePorte in Kingston, MA on July 13, 1900. After the birth of their first child, Lawrence in April of 1901,the Fitzhughs moved to New York where they had their second child, Millicent in 1903. By 1910 they were living in Hackensack, NJ. His first known published work, The Golden Rod Story-Book was released in 1906. It was in Hackensack that his writing carrier began to take off. In 1914, after the release of a silent picture The Making of a Scout, he was commissioned by the Boy Scouts of America to write a book based on the film. That book was Tom Slade Boy Scout of the Moving Pictures, the book that really launched his career. The book was an instant success and was followed by a string of several, equally successful volumes. The Tom Slade series gave birth to other series based on the characters from Troop 1, Bridgeboro, NJ. These series included Pee Wee Harris, Westy Martin, Roy Blakely, and several of "The Buddy Books for Boys". All of these books were hugely popular with boys and girls and even adults.The Characters in his books became so real to many of his readers that the post office in Hackensack was receiving up to 30 letters a day addressed to the imaginary characters themselves. These came along with dozens of letters addressed to Percy. He did what he could to respond to these letters but could never keep up with the volume. At one point, requests for his autograph were so numerous that he finally resorted to replying with the following note printed on a post card: So many letters from readers are received by me that it would be impossible, much as I would like to do so, to send individual replies to all of these and to answer particularly all the questions which are asked by these young friends throughout the country. One question contained in almost all of these letters may here by answered by the general statement that Tom Slade, Pee-wee Harris, Roy Blakeley, Westy Martin and their comrades, are indeed real boys, being taken from characters in actual life. The reader will understand that the originals of these young heroes cannot be made known to the reading public. But it is a pleasure to state, in answer to the many who have asked, that all of these scouts of the printed page have their counterparts in the real field of scouting. The bulk of his work was published by Grosset & Dunlap; in addition, several of his books were serialized and published in Boys' Life Magazine. In all, millions of his Scouting books were published. In 1931, he began writing the Hal Keen Mystery series (10 titles) under the pseudonym Hugh Lloyd, also published by Grosset & Dunlap. The Hal Keene books were followed by the Skippy Dare series (3 titles- G&D) in 1934. There was an agreement with G&D for another series - Gordon Stubbs but it appears that no work was ever done on this series. Mr. Fitzhugh was diagnosed with Hypertensive Heart Disease in 1935, (also known as Hypertension or High Blood Pressure). Shortly after, he contracted Chronic Atrial Fibrillation which caused him to stop most of his activity and all but give up on his writing. His wife always believed that the pressure from his publisher, to continuously produce manuscripts at an unreasonable pace, contributed to his condition. Between 1917 and 1934, he penned over 80 books and an unknown number of short stories and articles. At the height of his popularity, he was turning out 5 to 7 books a year. PKF did continue to write, in small amounts, when he could and was working on a book for adults titled The Walrus in the Barber Shop, it was never published. While at home, at about 6:30 PM, on July 5th, 1950, Percy Keese Fitzhugh finally succumbed to complications of his long illness and passed away. He was 73. What Mr. Fitzhugh did to promote the Boy Scouting movement can never be measured, but it is safe to say that thousands of boys joined the Scouts because of his writings. Today, his books are sought after by collectors all over the world. Mr. Fitzhugh's work lives on today as Pee Wee Harris has remained a monthly comic strip in Boy's Life Magazine for about sixty years.



The seller has many copies of the books that feature most of the above-mentioned characters for sale on eBay. I just picked Pee Wee Harris because he was the best-known.



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Re: Percy Keese Fitzhugh - Early 1900s Hackensack writer/Popular characters
« Reply #1 on: August 17, 2010, 04:13:11 PM »
This was sent to me for posting.  Thanks Mike.
_________________________

He also lived in Oradell for 25 years.  The same street as Wally Schirra too!

- OBITUARIES -
 

Percy and a group of local Scouts circa 1918
(End papers of Tom Slade on a Transport)
 
THE BERGEN COUNTY RECORD, Friday, July 7th 1950
 
Fitzhugh, Author, Is Victim Of Stroke At Oradell Home
 __________________________
 
Listed As Hugh Lloyd, He Wrote For Boys; Some Stories Laid In Hackensack’s Vicinity
 _____________________
 
Oradell-Percy Keese Fitzhugh, 73 Author of many boys’ books, died Wednesday at 6P.M. following a stroke. He had lived at 283 Maple Avenue for the past 23 years.
 
BORN IN BROOKLYN
 
Born in Brooklyn Sept. 7 1876, the son of William Wyvill Fitzhugh and Mary Keese Fitzhugh, he was educated in public schools and the Pratt Institute there. July 13 would have been the golden wedding anniversary of his marriage to Harriett Lloyd LePorte.
 
Listed in Who’s Who with the pseudonym of Hugh Lloyd, Mr. Fitzhugh wrote many boys’ books including the Tom Slade, Pee-Wee Harris, and Roy Blakeley series. He also wrote several history books, contributed to magazines, and edited several libraries and a biographical dictionary. All told, it is estimated that his books written between 1906 and 1935 sold over a million copies. During the First World War, Mr. Fitzhugh’s “For the Honor of Uncle Sam” was translated into Braille for blind solders. His popularity with boys’ books began with the forming of the Boy Scouts Organization in this country. The young male public wanted books about Scouts and scouting. Replete with accounts of camping and set against a backdrop of woods and lakes, Mr. Fitzhugh’s books caught on immediately.
 
A resident of Hackensack for 25 years, Mr. Fitzhugh liked to tell of boating trips on the Hackensack River Some of his stories are laid in Hackensack, to witch he gave the name Bridgeboro.
 
Pre deceased by a daughter, Millicent Alden Fitzhugh, Mr. Fitzhugh is survived by his wife, Mrs. Harriet Lloyd Fitzhugh; a son Lawrence Fitzhugh both of Oradell; Two brothers, John Lawrence Fitzhugh of Mt. Vernon, N.Y., and William W. Fitzhugh of New York and Stamford Conn.; and a sister, Mrs. Norman T. Boggs of Woodstock, N.Y.

Funeral services and burial will be private.
 

 

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