| Do you remember the day that Fenton Hardy and his two
sons, Joe and Frank, were walking with Aunt Gertrude and Chet Morton
down the side walk in downtown Haileybury, Ontario? You remember
that day, don't you? They were on their way to the post office to
send in another manuscript for publishing. The date was sometime
in June of 1940. They had been making that walk to the post
office, regularly, for almost 13 years. And they would continue to
make that trip for 6 more years.
Perhaps you would remember the event if I told you that those people were
actually one person and the name of that person was Leslie
McFarlane.
But wait a second, those names - Frank, Joe and Fenton Hardy - they
ring a bell!
OK, I will give you another hint. Leslie McFarlane may have carried
the manuscript to the post office but the writer's name on the
manu script was, in fact, Franklin W. Dixon.
Did you solve the mystery? It might have been called "The
Mystery of the Phantom Author".
Leslie McFarlane was the ghost writer of most of the famous Hardy
Boys series.
Leslie McFarlane was born on October 25, 1902, at Carleton Place,
Ontario, one of 4 sons of the local school principal. His father,
John McFarlane, decided to accept the position of principal at
Haileybury Public School in 1910 and off they went.
Leslie's growing up years were not unusual. He loved hockey and
sledding down the big hill of Browning Street with his friends. He
was a voracious reader who, when he finished his copy of Chums or
The Boy's Own Annual, would dive into his father's extensive
collection of books.
At the age of 14, McFarlane entered high school. He held a
series of part-time jobs over the next few years that would put him onto
the path toward fame and fortune (well at least fame!). At various
times he delivered the Saturday Evening Post, ran errands as a
junior bank clerk, operated the projector at the Grand Theatre and set
type at The Haileyburian newspaper. In 1915 he won an
I.O.D.E award for historical writing. At the age of 19, he was
awarded second place in a provincial writing contest for his work
entitled "Afraid".
After graduation McFarlane took a job as a reporter for the Cobalt
Daily Nugget for $8/per week. He lasted about one year and moved
on to the Sudbury Star where he worked for a whopping $25/week. It
took him another year to realize that the demanding life of a newspaper
reporter was not his bag of cookies. He quit.
McFarlane moved outside of Sudbury to a cottage on Ramsay Lake to
begin his life as a freelance writer. His big break came out of
tragedy in his home town of Haileybury. On October 4, 1922, great
fire engulfed much of the Temiskaming District and virtually obliterated
Haileybury. His mother fled to North Bay, as did many of the
resident of the town. McFarlane joined her there. McFarlane
listened with great interest to the stories of the fire and the
destruction it wrought. The story he wrote based on these
descriptions was submitted to the Sudbury Star and ran as the headline
story.
In 1926 , after have published a few article and features for the Toronto
Star Weekly, he headed south of the border to work for the Springfield
Republican newspaper in Springfield, Massachusetts. While
reporting the
city beat for the Republican, he responded to an advertisement
from Edward Stratemeyer, an author and publisher of children's
books. Stratemeyer sent McFarlane a copy of one of his Dave
Fearless Series, a series of mystery novel he had penned under the name Roy
Rockwood.
McFarlane was, at first, shocked that Stratemeyer would write under a
pen name but slowly he came to understand the logic. It allowed
more than one writer to pen novels in a series without disturbing the
series.
McFarlane was soon ghostwriting under the name of Roy Rockwood.
His first book was entitled "Dave
Fearless under the Ocean", for which he was paid the princely
sum of $100.
McFarlane wrote a total of seven Dave Fearless novels before he
informed Stratemeyer that he was tired of the character.
Stratemeyer wrote him back with an idea for a new mystery series
specifically written to appeal to young teenagers. "How about
writing the Hardy Boys Mysteries?"
That was beginning of the most famous young boys mystery series ever
written. Millions of copies have been read by tens of millions of
kids in over 20 different languages around the world. He continued
to write about Frank and Joe until 1946, three years after he joined the
National Film Board, when he penned his last in the series
entitled "The Phantom Freighter".
In 1953 McFarlane was nominated for an Academy Award for his
documentary Herring Hunt. Shortly thereafter, following the
death of his wife, he moved with his three ch ildren, Patricia, Brian and
Noah, to Toronto to work on documentaries and comedies at the CBC.
He had a short stint in Hollywood as a writer on the famous western TV
show, Bonanza, which starred fellow Canadian, Lorne Green.
But his heart lay in Canada, where he returned to write even more
novels, but now under his own name.
Novels such as, A kid of Haileybury and, in 1976, his
autobiography, The Ghost of the Hardy Boys.
On September 6, 1977, after a lengthy illness at the Oshawa General
Hospital, 74-year-old Charles Leslie McFarlane passed away. The
nation and all young boys mourned the loss of a great writer and a
friend.
His son Brian, the same Brian McFarlane of CBC's Hockey Night in
Canada, remembers the day, at the age of 10, that he learned
that his father was Franklin W. Dixon, the writer of the Hardy
Boys. "It was like finding out your dad was Santa
Claus".
Amen!
NOTE: An interesting fact just
crossed my desk on this story that the 1947 Hardy Boys Vol 26, generally
attributed to Leslie McFarlane was, in fact, written by his wife, Amy
McFarlane. According to letters from sources, when the assignment
to write The Phantom Freighter came in from the Syndicate, Leslie
was away fishing. Amy wrote and submitted the book. The Syndicate
were aware of this and not concerned. However The Phantom
Freighter was the last book written by Leslie McFarlane (and his
wife, Amy) for the Syndicate. |