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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Silly_Philly
rdf:type
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rdfs:label
Silly Philly
rdfs:comment
Silly Philly was the first comic strip by Bil Keane, most noted for the long-running comic The Family Circus. Silly Philly ran from April 27, 1947, to September 3, 1961. In 1947, Keane created the Sunday strip while working for the Philadelphia Bulletin. The main character was a goofy, juvenile William Penn, who had somehow jumped down from his 37' statue on the tower of City Hall in Philadelphia and become something of a scamp. The cartoon often featured jokes submitted by readers. The Sunday strip sometimes included Mirthquakers, a puzzle and joke feature.
dcterms:subject
dbc:Fictional_American_people dbc:American_comic_strips dbc:American_comics_characters dbc:1947_comics_debuts dbc:1961_comics_endings dbc:Comics_characters_introduced_in_1947 dbc:Gag-a-day_comics
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185812
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1065974642
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
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dbt:Infobox_comic_strip dbt:Reflist dbt:Comic-strip-stub dbt:Italic_title
dbp:author
dbr:Bil_Keane
dbp:first
1947-04-27
dbp:followedBy
dbr:The_Family_Circus
dbp:genre
Humor, Philadelphia
dbp:last
1961-09-03
dbp:publisher
Philadelphia Bulletin
dbp:status
Concluded Sunday strip
dbp:title
Silly Philly
dbo:abstract
Silly Philly was the first comic strip by Bil Keane, most noted for the long-running comic The Family Circus. Silly Philly ran from April 27, 1947, to September 3, 1961. In 1947, Keane created the Sunday strip while working for the Philadelphia Bulletin. The main character was a goofy, juvenile William Penn, who had somehow jumped down from his 37' statue on the tower of City Hall in Philadelphia and become something of a scamp. The cartoon often featured jokes submitted by readers. The Sunday strip sometimes included Mirthquakers, a puzzle and joke feature. Keane, a native Philadelphian, has occasionally brought the city into reminiscences in Family Circus, which began in 1960.
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