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Hambone's Meditations was a comic strip produced from 1916 to 1968, and syndicated initially by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate and later by the Bell Syndicate. Produced by two generations of the Alley family, the one-panel cartoon originated with the Memphis, Tennessee, newspaper The Commercial Appeal, where it ran on the front page. The title character was a stereotypical African-American man with wide eyes and exaggerated large lips. He dispensed folk wisdom in caricatured dialect.

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  • Hambone's Meditations was a comic strip produced from 1916 to 1968, and syndicated initially by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate and later by the Bell Syndicate. Produced by two generations of the Alley family, the one-panel cartoon originated with the Memphis, Tennessee, newspaper The Commercial Appeal, where it ran on the front page. The title character was a stereotypical African-American man with wide eyes and exaggerated large lips. He dispensed folk wisdom in caricatured dialect. (en)
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  • 8092 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
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  • 1120268558 (xsd:integer)
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dbp:altnames
  • Hambone Says (en)
  • The Meditations of Hambone (en)
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dbp:caption
  • Hambone's Meditations, by J.P. Alley from 1921 (en)
dbp:current
  • Nona Lane Alley (en)
dbp:genre
  • Humor (en)
dbp:illustrator
  • Cal Alley & James P. Alley, Jr. (en)
dbp:last
  • 1.6725528E9
dbp:publisher
  • Jahl & Co. (en)
dbp:status
  • Concluded gag-a-day strip (en)
dbp:syndicate
dbp:title
  • Hambone's Meditations (en)
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  • Hambone's Meditations was a comic strip produced from 1916 to 1968, and syndicated initially by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate and later by the Bell Syndicate. Produced by two generations of the Alley family, the one-panel cartoon originated with the Memphis, Tennessee, newspaper The Commercial Appeal, where it ran on the front page. The title character was a stereotypical African-American man with wide eyes and exaggerated large lips. He dispensed folk wisdom in caricatured dialect. (en)
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  • Hambone's Meditations (en)
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