Ginger Meggs

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

Ginger Meggs, Australia's most popular and longest-running comic strip, was created in the early 1920s by Jimmy Bancks. The strip follows the escapades of a red-haired prepubescent mischief-maker who lives in an inner suburban working-class household. While employed at The Bulletin, Bancks submitted cartoons to the Sydney Sunday Sun, where he began his Us Fellers strip in 1921 in the "Sunbeams" section of the Sunday Sun. Ginger first appeared in Us Fellers on 13 November 1921, drawn by Bancks. When Bancks died on 1 July 1952 from a heart attack, Ron Vivian took over the strip (1953–1973), followed by Lloyd Piper (1973–1982), James Kemsley (1983–2007), and Jason Chatfield since 2007. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Ginger Meggs
rdf:langString Ginger Meggs
rdf:langString Ginger Meggs
xsd:integer 1788648
xsd:integer 1124573268
rdf:langString Us Fellers
rdf:langString A$1.3 million
rdf:langString Australia
xsd:date 1921-11-13
rdf:langString Humour
rdf:langString A$990,000
rdf:langString Current daily & Sunday strip
rdf:langString Ginger Meggs
rdf:langString Michael Latimer
rdf:langString Ginger Meggs, Australia's most popular and longest-running comic strip, was created in the early 1920s by Jimmy Bancks. The strip follows the escapades of a red-haired prepubescent mischief-maker who lives in an inner suburban working-class household. While employed at The Bulletin, Bancks submitted cartoons to the Sydney Sunday Sun, where he began his Us Fellers strip in 1921 in the "Sunbeams" section of the Sunday Sun. Ginger first appeared in Us Fellers on 13 November 1921, drawn by Bancks. When Bancks died on 1 July 1952 from a heart attack, Ron Vivian took over the strip (1953–1973), followed by Lloyd Piper (1973–1982), James Kemsley (1983–2007), and Jason Chatfield since 2007.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 10063
<usDollar> 1300000.0
<usDollar> 990000.0

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