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✍️ 🎄 ✉️ This Peanuts Sunday strip was first published on December 20, 1964.
🎨 Charles M. Schulz created murals for his children featuring early versions of his characters. Originally painted on a bedroom wall of the family home in Minneapolis, c.1955, this running Snoopy behaves more like a real dog, as he did in the earliest years of Peanuts.
💙 It's #LinusDay! Linus Van Pelt debuted 69 years ago today in a strip published on 9/19/1952. 🍼 The gentle philosopher of the Peanuts Gang, he lives in the shadow of his big sister, Lucy, and clings to his security blanket for comfort.
🍽️ ⏰ Did you reset your clocks? This Peanuts strip was first published on February 3, 1974. #daylightsavings
📅 Lucy Van Pelt debuted 69 years ago today in this strip published on March 3, 1952. Introduced as wide-eyed and curious, Lucy soon evolved into the familiar fussbudget we know today. ✏️ Learn "How to Draw Lucy" on Thurs, March 11, at 4 pm PT! Register: https://t.co/1M0oCkojE5
February 13 marks 21 years since the final Peanuts Sunday strip ran in 2000, the day after Charles Schulz passed away at his Santa Rosa home. The comic strip outlived him, if only by a day, fulfilling Schulz's wish. His legacy lives on through his fans and the love of Peanuts.
📅 The first Peanuts Sunday strip debuted in newspapers on this day, January 6, in 1952. 📰 Prior to this, Peanuts strips had only appeared in the black-and-white 4-panel format on Mon-Sat. These days, many newspapers print Peanuts in color 7 days/week!
🙌 🙌 🙌 You can say that again! And a very "Happy New Year!" from the Schulz Museum!
🎄 This Peanuts strip was first published on December 24, 1978.
Snoopy’s Thanksgiving includes popcorn, toast, and jellybeans. What’s your absolute must-have dish on the Thanksgiving table? [Reproduced animation cel + background from "A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving," aired 1973. ©2007 Melendez Productions, Inc./Mendelson Productions/PWW]