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- Seckatary_Hawkins abstract "Robert F. Schulkers is the author of a series of children's novels. The 11 novels were first published between 1921 and 1932, although many appeared first in serialized form in The Cincinnati Enquirer and hundreds of other newspapers around the country. The eleven novels are: Stoner's Boy, Seckatary Hawkins in Cuba, The Red Runners, The Gray Ghost, Stormie the Dog Stealer, Knights of the Square Table, Ching Toy, The Chinese Coin, The Yellow Y, Herman the Fiddler, and The Ghost of Lake Tapaho.Schulkers further popularized the series through a nationally syndicated NBC radio broadcast from Chicago and an extensive number of Seckatary Hawkins clubs in larger metropolitan areas. The official club name was "The Fair and Square Club". The club slogan was "A quitter never wins and a winner never quits". Except for Seckatary Hawkins in Cuba and The Ghost of Lake Tapaho, the setting was a river bank that was a composite based on Schulker's familiarity with segments of the Ohio River, the Licking River, and the Kentucky River.Seckatary Hawkins, a fat boy with a cowlick hairdo, records daily minutes of the adventures of a remarkably organized group of boys. The group of ten or so boys (some boys rotated in and out of the club) have their own clubhouse on the river bank, complete with a stove for heat, a telephone, and even an organ for the required singing practice.While never the president of the club, Seckatary Hawkins is clearly the smartest member and the leader. He is regularly called upon by the books' few adult characters and many of the youthful ones to solve various mysteries and to keep the river bank safe. Most of their enemies in the end go home to their mothers or end up in the school for bad boys. A few reform during death scenes.Seckatary Hawkins has a small cadre of loyal followers who have, under the guidance of one of the author's grandsons, re-established a "Fair and Square" club. The books, which originally sold for a few dollars, now command premium prices, with Stormie the Dog Stealer, the rarest, sometimes selling for $1000 or higher on internet auctions.The books have always enjoyed an enthusiastic readership, the most notable Harper Lee, who mentions two of them in her novel To Kill a Mockingbird and the late television personality Bill Cullen, who spoke of Seckatary Hawkins during at least one broadcast.".
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageExternalLink www.seckatary.com.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageID "6758862".
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageLength "3034".
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageOutDegree "23".
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageRevisionID "665174895".
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink Bill_Cullen.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink Category:Characters_in_American_novels_of_the_20th_century.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink Category:Child_characters_in_literature.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink Category:Fictional_characters_introduced_in_1921.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink Chicago.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink Ching_Toy.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink Harper_Lee.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink Herman_the_Fiddler.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink Kentucky_River.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink Knights_of_the_Square_Table.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink Licking_River_(Ohio).
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink NBC.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink Ohio_River.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink Seckatary_Hawkins_in_Cuba.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink Stoners_Boy.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink Stormie_the_Dog_Stealer.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink The_Chinese_Coin.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink The_Cincinnati_Enquirer.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink The_Ghost_of_Lake_Tapaho.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink The_Gray_Ghost_(novel).
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink The_Red_Runners.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink The_Yellow_Y.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLink To_Kill_a_Mockingbird.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageWikiLinkText "Seckatary Hawkins".
- Seckatary_Hawkins hasPhotoCollection Seckatary_Hawkins.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Child-lit-char-stub.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Multiple_issues.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Portal.
- Seckatary_Hawkins subject Category:Characters_in_American_novels_of_the_20th_century.
- Seckatary_Hawkins subject Category:Child_characters_in_literature.
- Seckatary_Hawkins subject Category:Fictional_characters_introduced_in_1921.
- Seckatary_Hawkins hypernym Author.
- Seckatary_Hawkins type Article.
- Seckatary_Hawkins type Person.
- Seckatary_Hawkins type Article.
- Seckatary_Hawkins type Character.
- Seckatary_Hawkins comment "Robert F. Schulkers is the author of a series of children's novels. The 11 novels were first published between 1921 and 1932, although many appeared first in serialized form in The Cincinnati Enquirer and hundreds of other newspapers around the country.".
- Seckatary_Hawkins label "Seckatary Hawkins".
- Seckatary_Hawkins sameAs m.0gmhj1.
- Seckatary_Hawkins sameAs Q7442921.
- Seckatary_Hawkins sameAs Q7442921.
- Seckatary_Hawkins wasDerivedFrom Seckatary_Hawkins?oldid=665174895.
- Seckatary_Hawkins isPrimaryTopicOf Seckatary_Hawkins.