Pip, Squeak and Wilfred
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (September 2010) |
Pip, Squeak and Wilfred | |
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Author(s) |
|
Current status/schedule | Concluded |
Launch date | 1919 |
End date | 1956 |
Publisher(s) | Sunday Pictorial |
Genre(s) | Humour, Children's |
Pip, Squeak and Wilfred was a British
Character beginnings
The characters Pip, Squeak and Wilfred were created by Bertram Lamb, a journalist on the Daily Mirror, who was born in Islington, London, on 14 May 1887 and died in Switzerland in 1938. He never drew the cartoons but thought up the idea of the characters.
The origins of the characters are mentioned in the cartoon strips. Squeak was found in the
The WLOG fanclub
In 1927 the Pip, Squeak and Wilfred club began.
Cartoon films
A series of silent
Annuals
An early book was Pip, Squeak & Wilfred, Their "Luvly" Adventures, issued in 1921 by Stanley Paul & Co., London. This book recapped on the earliest Daily Mirror strips, showing how they were introduced. Luvly was one of Squeak's favourite words.
Pip and Squeak Annuals appeared each year from 1922, dated as the 1923 to 1939 annuals. A separate Wilfred's Annual also appeared, dated 1924 to 1938, featuring stories aimed at under-10 year olds. The 1934 Pip & Squeak Annual featured a 'magic red frame', which allowed the reader to see hidden pictures on several pages. The 1934 Wilfred's Annual similarly featured a pantomime cut-out insert. The final Pip & Squeak annual of 1939 incorporated Wilfred's Annual, which had ended the previous year, and is the rarest of the series owing to low sales and poor-quality paper being used. No annual was issued in 1940.
The annuals continued the 1920s type of fairyland surrealism in their pages until the last annual, by which time other more popular annuals such as Bobby Bear and Teddy Tail were more contemporary, leaving this series appearing rather dated in comparison, meaning later years of Pip and Squeak annual and especially Wilfred's annual sold in smaller quantities.
Three Uncle Dick's Annuals were issued from 1929 to 1931, dated as the 1930 to 1932 annuals, the first one’s full name being 'Uncle Dick's Competition Annual'. These annuals were aimed more at boys, with action stories and very little Pip & Squeak content. As their title suggests, the books were in an elaborate competition format where you had to solve quizzes, paint in pictures and similar to win prizes.
A short-lived revived Pip, Squeak & Wilfred annual was issued in the mid-1950s, since the characters had been revived in the Daily Mirror a few years previously. This featured the characters updated and now drawn by a new, uncredited, artist. A newly bow-tied Wilfred and a younger Auntie, both previously only saying the odd nonsensical word, were now made to speak fully, losing the innocence and surreal charm of the pre-war years to fit the 1950s better. Stanley, a young penguin, became a regular character, having been introduced in the later 1930s annuals. The annual featured stories with the characters as well as cartoon strips and other non-related stories.
A small paperback comic book, Adventures of Pip Squeak & Wilfred, was published in the early 1920s in the Merry Miniatures series by Home Publicity of London and was just 1.5 by 3 inches (3.8 by 7.6 cm) in size.
Newspaper supplements
The Daily Mirror featured a Saturday 4-page pull-out comic supplement, starting on Saturday 15 October 1921, titled The Adventures of Pip, Squeak and Wilfred : No 1 - Thrills in the Dog and cat. Later editions were reduced to 3 pages on 25 March 1922, then to 2 pages on 8 July 1922 until the supplement ended in 1924.
The popularity of Pip, Squeak & Wilfred was immense. The 16 December 1922 edition of the Daily Mirror reported 100,000 copies of the 1923 Pip and Squeak Annual had been sold.
In military terminology
War medals
After the First World War (1914–18), three medals were awarded to most of the British servicemen who had served from 1914 or 1915. They were either the 1914 Star or the 1914–15 Star, the British War Medal and the British Victory Medal. They were irreverently referred to as Pip, Squeak and Wilfred respectively.[3]
Royal Air Force
After the First World War the Royal Air Force named its three Blackburn Kangaroo training aircraft Pip, Squeak and Wilfred.
During the Second World War
In early 1944 the radio callsign GUGNUNC was used by
Palestine, 1936
During the first stage of the 1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine two anti-aircraft guns and one searchlight were taken, with their crews, from HMS Sussex (96) and mounted on trucks in order to provide fire support to ground units. These were named ‘Pip’ (a two-pounder QF 2-pounder naval gun), ‘Squeak’ (a QF 3-pounder Vickers gun) and ‘Wilfred’ (the searchlight).[6]
Operation Wilfred
Operation Wilfred was a 1940 operation, during the Phoney War, to mine the waters off the Norwegian coast in an attempt to restrict the supply of iron ore from Sweden to Germany. The name was coined by Winston Churchill and inspired by the comic series. In The Gathering Storm Churchill explains that the operation was so called because it was so small.[7]
Gun sites
Stationed in France to guard the airfields of the RAF's
Wilfred and Trotsky
According to the autobiography of the winner of the 2007 Nobel Prize for Literature,
References
- Citations
- ^ "Charity auction marks Rupert Bear's 90th birthday". BBC News. 8 November 2010. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
- ^ a b GRAVETT, Paul, "1001 Comics You Should Read Before You Die", Universe, page 53.
- ^ "British Campaign Medals of the First World War (WW1)". www.greatwar.co.uk. Retrieved 25 May 2019.
- ^ M. Westley K. Richard (22 January 2012). "The RAF Pip-Squeak Fighter Location System as used in the Battle of Britain 1940". Duxford Radio Society. Retrieved 6 July 2012.
- ^ The National Archives, file AIR27/1519 at folio 17.
- ^ ""B" Squadron Notes". XI Hussars Journal. 19: 81. January 1937.
- ISBN 978-0-395-41055-4.
- ^ 53 HAA Regt War Diary 1939–40, The National Archives, Kew (TNA) file WO 167/617.
- ISBN 0-06-017150-2.
- Bibliography
- Daily Mirror Newspaper Saturday Editions 15 October 1921 - 8 September 1923
- Pip, Squeak & Wilfred, Their "Luvly" Adventures (1921) Stanley Paul & Co, London
- Pip and Squeak Annuals 1923-1939
- Wilfred's Annual 1924-1938
- Uncle Dick's (Competition) Annual 1930-1932
- Cartoons Details
- Under My Skin: Part One of My Autobiography. To 1949. London: HarperCollins Publishers. (1994.)