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Fawcett Publications : ウィキペディア英語版
Fawcett Publications

Fawcett Publications was an American publishing company founded in 1919 in Robbinsdale, Minnesota by Wilford Hamilton "Captain Billy" Fawcett (1885–1940). At the age of 16, Fawcett ran away from home to join the Army, and the Spanish–American War took him to the Philippines. Back in Minnesota, he became a police reporter for the ''Minneapolis Journal''. While a World War I Army captain, Fawcett's experience with the Army publication ''Stars and Stripes'' gave him the notion to get into publishing, and his bawdy cartoon and joke magazine, ''Captain Billy's Whiz Bang'', became the launch pad for a vast publishing empire embracing magazines, comic books and paperback books.〔Thomas, Roy. "Captain Billy's Whiz Gang," ''The Best of Xero''. Tachyon Publications, 2004. ISBN 1-892391-11-2〕
The title ''Captain Billy's Whiz Bang'' combined Fawcett's military moniker with the nickname of a destructive World War I artillery shell. According to one account, the earliest issues were mimeographed pamphlets, typed on a borrowed typewriter and peddled around Minneapolis by Captain Billy and his four sons. However, in Captain Billy's version, he stated that when he began publishing in October, 1919, he ordered a print run of 5,000 copies because of the discount on a large order compared with rates for only several hundred copies. Distributing free copies of ''Captain Billy's Whiz Bang'' to wounded veterans and his Minnesota friends, he then circulated the remaining copies to newsstands in hotels. With gags like, "AWOL means After Women Or Liquor", the joke book caught on, and in 1921, Captain Billy made the highly inflated claim that his sales were "soaring to the million mark."〔(Lequidre, Zorikh. ''Captain Marvel Culture''. )〕
The book ''Humor Magazines and Comic Periodicals'' notes:
Few periodicals reflect the post-WW I cultural change in American life as well as ''Captain Billy’s Whiz Bang''. To some people () represented the decline of morality and the flaunting of sexual immodesty; to others it signified an increase in openness. For much of the 1920s, ''Captain Billy’s'' was the most prominent comic magazine in America with its mix of racy poetry and naughty jokes and puns, aimed at a small-town audience with pretensions of "sophistication".

''Captain Billy's Whiz Bang'' is immortalized in the lyrics to the song "Trouble" from Meredith Willson's ''The Music Man'' (1957): "Is there a nicotine stain on his index finger? A dime novel hidden in the corncrib? Is he starting to memorize jokes from ''Captain Billy's Whiz Bang''?"
==Expansion==

The publication, delivered in a 64-page, saddle-stitched, digest-sized format, soon saw a dramatic increase in sales. By 1923, the magazine had a circulation of 425,000 with $500,000 annual profits. With the rising readership of ''Captain Billy's Whiz Bang'', Fawcett racked up more sales with ''Whiz Bang'' annuals, and in 1926, he launched a similar publication, ''Smokehouse Monthly''. The popularity of ''Whiz Bang'' peaked during the 1920s. It continued into the 1930s, but circulation slowed as readers graduated to the more sophisticated humor of ''Esquire'', founded in 1933. It had an influence on many other digest-sized cartoon humor publications, including ''Charley Jones Laugh Book'', which was still being published during the 1950s.
Captain Billy's success as a publisher prompted him to create the Breezy Point Resort〔(Breezy Point Resort )〕 on Pelican Lake in Breezy Point, Minnesota. Since celebrity visitors came to the resort, Captain Billy had the road from Breezy Point into Pequot Lakes blacktopped at his own expense. His building program at the Resort included the construction of a massive lodge, planned to accommodate 700 people, using native Norway pines, some in length. Celebrities who stayed at Breezy Point included Carole Lombard, Tom Mix and Clark Gable.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Breezy Point Resort: who we are )〕 The Fawcett House, Captain Billy's personal log mansion, is made available for public rental today. Decorated with elk and deer skins, Fawcett House〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Fawcett House )〕 has ten bedrooms and eight baths. The living room has a cathedral ceiling, a loft, a bar and a large field rock fireplace.
Harry Truman was another Breezy Point guest. Edward McKim, a friend of Truman's since World War I, told of visits to the Resort in 1932 and Truman's success at the Breezy Point slot machine:
Captain Billy was quite a shot with a shotgun. He was on the American Olympic team at one time. He had some traps out there, so we did a little shooting with him. He had a couple of guests, one of whom was Dr. Joe Mayo, the son of Dr. Charlie Mayo. Dr. Joe was killed a few years later in an automobile accident. He was the brother of Dr. Chuck Mayo who just retired from the Mayo Foundation. We did a little trap shooting at that time, but we went up there almost every night for dinner. It was a 35 or drive. We stopped at a barber shop at Brainerd going up, and he hit the jackpot in a machine in the lower lobby of the hotel. Then he hit the jackpot up at Breezy Point the same night.

In some issues of ''Whiz Bang'', Captain Billy wrote about his vacations in Los Angeles, Miami, New York and Paris, along with items about his celebrity friends, including Jack Dempsey, Sinclair Lewis and Ring Lardner.

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