The Tower Treasure, first published in 1927 via the Stratemeyer Syndicate, helped usher in a new era of detective novels. Following in the footsteps of their father, renowned private investigator Fenton Hardy, sixteen-year-old Frank and fifteen-year-old Joe have a lot to prove before their father acknowledges they might possess his talent for solving mysteries. Laura Hardy, their mother, worries over the dangers in her husband's line of work and would prefer her sons never be involved, but Frank and Joe have the inclination to match wits against criminals, and they're waiting for an opportunity to prove themselves. That chance arises when their hometown of Bayport is victimized by a thief in a long red wig who nearly runs Frank and Joe's motorcycles off the road in his hurry to escape the crime scene. When their pal Chet Morton reports his prized roadster stolen, Frank and Joe suspect the man in the red wig. What more mischief will he cause?
Local inquiry connects the car theft to an armed holdup at the city steamboat office, an attempt thwarted before the robber ended up with any money. A break-in is also reported at the Tower Mansion, the main estate of the Applegate family for generations. After Major Applegate made his fortune in canny real estate deals, the mansion became the symbol of prosperity in Bayport, but all these years later only a middle-aged brother and sister, Hurd and Adelia Applegate, live there. People generally respect their reclusiveness, so imagine their surprise to find that thousands of dollars in jewels and bonds have been stolen from their home. The Hardys believe the man in the wig is guilty, but Hurd has another theory: the transgressor is Henry Robinson, caretaker of the Tower Mansion. He's a man of meager finances, and other than Hurd and Adelia only he knows the combination to the safe. Robinson's son, Slim, is friends with the Hardy boys and they know his father isn't corrupt, but Hurd is convinced of Robinson's guilt, and Chief Ezra Collig of the Bayport police tends to agree. The only way to get Robinson off the hook is to prove his innocence.
Linking the holdup attempt, the mansion robbery, and the man who almost ran Frank and Joe off the road requires diligence, but Fenton Hardy takes his sons seriously once they provide him evidence. His sleuthing in the big city turns up an identity for the perpetrator: John "Red" Jackley, a burglar with sufficient experience to finesse the Applegate safe open without the combination. Fenton and a handful of law officers catch up to Jackley on the run, but the outlaw gets into a serious accident before they apprehend him. Seconds before dying, he admits he robbed the Tower Mansion and stashed the loot in "the old tower" to retrieve later. He must have meant the old tower wing of the mansion, opposite from the new tower erected only a few years ago. The mystery seems to be solved, a huge relief to Robinson's family; not only were legal charges pending, but the Applegates fired Robinson, and his son Slim had to quit high school and forgo his dream of attending college to take a job with the grocer. If the jewels and bonds are in the old tower as Jackley claimed, Robinson will be exonerated. A thorough search reveals nothing, however; the treasure is still missing, and Robinson is under worse suspicion than ever. It's time for Frank and Joe to buck conventional wisdom and see if they can crack this case that has stumped their father...the first of many, many cases for the legendary Hardy boys.
Most of my life I've wanted to be like the Hardy boys: formidable in physical altercations, intelligent and observant detectives, always ready to stand up to bullies. The Tower Treasure gives us all that in its most primitive form. Before Frank and Joe had cutting-edge technology and extensive infrastructure in later versions of the series, they were just as proficient at hunting down the bad guy with nothing but their wits. The Tower Treasure isn't a brilliant mystery, but it deserves credit for the phenomenon it set into motion, and for the inestimable number of kids who grew to love reading because of the Hardy boys. Whether the original series or a new incarnation, Hardy Boys books will always mean something to me.