Local Superman’s leap foiled
1943 June 30 ad
The “man of steel” first appeared in Action Comics #1 in
1938—and soon after, it entered our homes in the form of newspaper strips and
then made it into the American living room on the radio.
During WW II, the superman radio series became a big success—as
its listeners followed the quest for “true and justice.” If you are from that era and/or one from
today that follows the stranger from planet “Krypton—you are certainly familiar
with the most heard radio opening through the mid-1940s…
“Faster than a speeding bullet… More powerful than a locomotive… Able to leap tall buildings in a single
bound…” Look! Up in the sky! It’s a
bird! It’s a plane! It’s Superman!
With that backdrop—and with the fact that locally, radio
KRGV in Harlingen early in the 1940s aired the Superman series is where this
story begins.
The juvenile adventure series (from 5:45 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.)
that traveled through the Valley airways for only fifty minutes had a great
influence on many youngsters to leap from the highest tree…
And that’s exactly what happened—when the local “man of
steel” took flied from a tree and landed on a roof top as his friends from
Krypton looked on.
With war, rationing
and lack of extra money—kids (boys/girls) of the era found ways to fill their
stomachs with what nature and their surroundings had to offer.
Climbing trees was common then, and the Valley had a lot to
offer in –so-far as fruit producing trees. Kids In many cases could find
something sweet just around the corner from their own mesquite tree.
But on this day, the
kids forgot about their war wounds, the scraped knees and grazed elbows of the
past and went on a most adventurous trip up a pecan tree.
A pecan it is…It
was a sunny but windy day in 1942, when the adventures of the Brownsville
superman had its beginning. He was first
seen at 148 Elizabeth Street, the residence of Mrs. George Stell.
It was well known to
the neighborhood kids that Mrs. Stell had the peachiest pecan tree and set tree
was the rendezvous for the local Tom Sawyers when she was out.
But on this particular day—her arrival was sooner than
expected and found the tree loaded with youngsters. As the
kids watched her every move, they began tumbling out the tree and running for
cover.
Except for superman,
one lad, that was too high in the tree to make it to the ground without being
captured. He looked frantically around
and spotted a garage roof some few feet below.
And just like the comic strip character, but without a cape,
leaped for the roof and made it o.k., but something gave way. And faster than a speeding bullet, the local
Superman went straight through the roof and landed on the concrete floor. After some intensive questioning from Mrs.
Stell—it was revealed that he was not the real superman and said, “he didn’t
think he’d come back.” He also declared,
“That he didn’t like pecans anyways.”
Anna Edwards recently wrote that over-protective mothers who,
“Stop children from climbing trees and playing in mud are creating a nation of
‘cotton wool kids.’ “Many parents are
reluctant to let children take part in activities they themselves enjoyed.”
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