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At Good Old Siwash

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George Helgesen Fitch (1877-1915) was an American author, humourist, and journalist perhaps best known for his stories about fictional Siwash College. Fitch was born in Galva, Illinois. He graduated from Knox College in 1897. He worked as a reporter for a number of midwest newspapers and eventually became frequently published in national magazines, breaking in with his popular "Megaphone" series satirizing urban America. He also penned a syndicated column called "Vest Pocket Essays". He was elected to the Illinois House of Representatives in 1912. Knox, his alma mater, was the basis of a series of popular stories set at "Good Old Siwash College". First appearing in the Saturday Evening Post in 1908, they focused on characters like the Swede Ole Skjarsen, Petey Simmons, and the fraternity Eta Bita Pie. The Siwash stories were the basis for the movie Those Were the Days (1940) starring William Holden as Simmons, which was filmed at Knox. Amongst his other works The Big Strike at Siwash (1909), Bridge Whist (1910), The Automobile (1910), At Good Old Siwash (1911), My Demon Motor Boat (1912), Homeburg Memories (1915) and others.

228 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1911

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George Fitch

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Author 8 books24 followers
March 22, 2016
I think most people today have probably never heard of this book and I'm amazed that it was recently reprinted.

My dad used to read this to me when I was little, although it is not a children's book. It's a book written in 1910 and tells stories about some boys at Siwash College, their fraternities (like Eta Bita Pie), and their star football player, Ole Skjarsen.

It's been awhile since I've read it, and I'm pretty sure a lot of it wouldn't be politically correct these days, but I'll always have fond memories of this book. And of laughing while my dad read Ole's nearly indecipherable Swedish dialect out loud.
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