Dick Wick Hall

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dick_Wick_Hall an entity of type: Thing

Dick Wickenburg "Dick Wick" Hall (born DeForest Hall, March 20, 1877 – April 28, 1926) was an American humorist. As co-founder and initial resident of Salome, Arizona he began publishing The Salome Sun, a newsletter containing tall tales and humorous prose. Hall created a variety of characters for his newsletter, the most famous being a seven-year-old frog that had never learned to swim. Excerpts from the Sun became a regular feature of The Saturday Evening Post, appearing in the magazine from 1920 until Hall's death in 1926. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Dick Wick Hall
rdf:langString Dick Wick Hall
rdf:langString Dick Wick Hall
xsd:date 1926-04-26
xsd:date 1877-03-20
xsd:integer 38947317
xsd:integer 1089826411
xsd:date 1877-03-20
rdf:langString DeForest Hall
rdf:langString Dick Wick Hall
xsd:date 1926-04-26
xsd:integer 250
rdf:langString Writer, Real Estate promoter
rdf:langString Daysie Mae Sutton
rdf:langString Dick Wickenburg "Dick Wick" Hall (born DeForest Hall, March 20, 1877 – April 28, 1926) was an American humorist. As co-founder and initial resident of Salome, Arizona he began publishing The Salome Sun, a newsletter containing tall tales and humorous prose. Hall created a variety of characters for his newsletter, the most famous being a seven-year-old frog that had never learned to swim. Excerpts from the Sun became a regular feature of The Saturday Evening Post, appearing in the magazine from 1920 until Hall's death in 1926.
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rdf:langString DeForest Hall

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