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Punching Day: Charles Fitzgerald - ADVENTUROUS MOON BALL COP 🌭

Several weeks ago, for reasons no good decision maker would ever understand, I was reading an issue of Mr. District Attorney. It's a comic from the late '40s about a district attorney who punches. It wasn't this one where he really fucked up infiltrating The Law Offices of Fishhead, Lionman, Wolfowicz, Sparrowface, Squirrelberg, Ratmaybe, and The Bulldog...

... or this one where he decided a thirty pound alien was an Earth man in a Martian suit...

... but an entirely other issue, where I came across a page which was not part of the story. It was ADVENTUROUS COP:

ADVENTUROUS COP was not an advertisement for anything. It's not a show or a toy; they simply wanted readers to know about the 30-year-old exploits of Captain Charles Fitzgerald, daredevil boxing cop racer! He probably should have died hanging from girders! He definitely should have died on looping airplanes! Okay, bye! And those last three sentences are the exact thesis statement for the article you're reading now. Let's learn more about ADVENTUROUS COP.

The first fact we're told about Charles Fitzgerald is that he's an amazing cop but also successful at 18 different dangerous careers. I was curious, so I found a 1921 newspaper article that listed them all. He was a high diver and parachute jumper! A strong man and pugilist! A drugstore clerk, bartender, cigar store clerk, car salesman, hotel clerk, and maybe they could have edited this list a little bit!

I understand a man has to make ends meet between parachute jumping gigs, but do we need to list "Automobile salesman" alongside "Railroad fireman?" This feels like someone sat down to interview Evel Knievel and then wrote a piece on how his garage sale went.

I dug around for every bit of Captain Charles Fitzgerald information I could find. I didn't turn up a lot of fun stories about his time as a "Produce dealer" from 100 years ago, so I'll focus on the jobs mentioned in ADVENTUROUS COP.

When men were men, our language was mighty and manly, and there's no manlier way of putting it than "Charles could handle men, so he mounted up and entered boxing only to tangle with Dick." No notes. I'm rock hard like a real man. Now let's take a look at what happened with his boxing career:

It looks like his first fight ended in a draw when he was knocked out by a pop drinker in the crowd. Then his manager was run over by a train. This, along with "other reasons," convinced him to change careers. Maybe those "other reasons" were too dull to mention, but this is a man who will tell a newspaper reporter about the time he sold fruit. So I don't think he's being vague because those details are boring. I'm saying Charles Fitzgerald definitely, definitely killed a man with his hands.

You might have noticed when that newspaper article suddenly screamed, "He Dives Off Rumson Road Bridge, Dropping 86 Feet Into Shallow Water." They weren't starting a new article about a different guy. Charles really did that and I Guess Journalists Changed Subjects In This Manner 100 Years Heretofore! Anyway, we'll get to his suicidal bridge dives in a bit, after He Stood Upon a Looping Plane, Much Like a Goddamn Maniac.

Charles had some experience doing aerial stunts such as "jump off a plane" and "fall out of a plane," and he used this expertise to develop a new stunt. He wanted to stand on the wing of a plane while it did a loop. No one had ever done it before, and Charles wasn't sure it would work. Luckily, he was a man of science and performed extensive tests:

The experiment would be simple-- he would spin a can to verify the centripetal force of a looping airplane. Or maybe centrifugal? It doesn't matter because Charles absolutely didn't know. He didn't even have a can. He had to borrow one from his landlady. You know the type, "the kind they rush the growler with." So he put a little bit of water in it, put a bean on top, and whirled it around. We all know it now, but this was the birth of the saying, "If the bean stays on the can, a plane can loop with man."

The results were good enough for him, so he hired a pilot and politely withheld most details of the plan so as not to implicate the young man in a murder. Things did not go as planned. Well, he stuck to the plane-- the bean science all checked out, but halfway into the loop, while he was upside down, the plane's loop stopped. Wait, that can't be right. What?

So, holy shit, okay. He sort of... I guess you could say while he was upside down, holding onto a stalled plane with bean gravity alone, he gave it a little kick so it could finish the loop? Is that how I'm meant to understand this? This rules. This fucking rules. He went from swinging his landlady's growler can to this in one step, and it worked! This young pilot he hired would not be haunted by a dying stranger's screams!

For this, Charles Fitzgerald should have been made nothing less than Captain of the Skies. Which he was.

Charles was promoted to Commander of the New York Police Aviation Department, which is exactly what you might picture when you think "1920 Sky Cops." It was a deathwishing maniac who had never held a job for more than a month in charge of a single biplane, and it was shut down almost immediately. Why? Well, other than gorilla, I'm not even sure what type of crime you'd fight with a biplane. They probably had to discontinue the unit after Charles ditched their only plane to fall onto a mugger. I imagine this was what he said during the interview:

"What can I bring to the NYPD? Well, I have some fun airplane ideas and I was successful in flying until September 5, 1917, when I fell."

Every paragraph of every Charles Fitzgerald article is like this-- a series of skeleton-splintering catastrophes between jobs. I would never, ever, fact check a story as rad as this, but when I add up all the months and years he spent in full body casts from botched suicides, it doesn't leave enough time in a human lifetime for him to be a hotel clerk and a cowpuncher, much less a hotel clerk and a cowpuncher and a produce dealer. For instance:

He fell, on purpose, from a plane and when he detonated against the water at bone-shattering speed, the experts figured he must have hit the bottom. The bottom of the ocean. And according to century old microfilm, this was two weeks after getting out of the hospital from his last stunt, which was jumping a motorcycle onto a boat 45 feet off the dock.

That year, Charles Fitzgerald only did two things and both of them were getting his ass kicked by the ocean. But let's talk about a fight against water he won-- that bridge jumping thing from earlier:

If I'm being completely honest, a lot of these achievements don't make a ton of sense to me. I think I need some context to understand why Fitz was throwing dummies out of a car. Had something gone wrong and he was rescuing them? Was this a film where they needed it to look like four people took turns abandoning a falling car and three of them were already dead? Because that could be any movie. Shrek, for instance. Back to what I was saying, I found this article about it and it dedicates exactly one sentence to explaining how and why he drove off a bridge throwing dummies from the car. It does not help.

The newspaper writer quickly moved on from the dummy-throwing to talk about Charles' new job as an Oregon parachute jumper. Unfortunately, a series of accidents turned the jumping team of Godia, Godia, and Fitzgerald into Only One Sad Godia and Fitzgerald, and finally Two Closed Caskets and Fitzgerald. Like in his boxing career, he had to quit after all his business partners died. Wait, oh no. This might be a pattern. I think those bodies he tossed out of the car in his last Hollywood stunt might not have been "dummies."

Enough about the Earth, assholes. Let's talk Moon. Here's an article that ran in several newspapers around the country in 1921:

Charles Fitzgerald, Captain of the Air Police, had so few responsibilities as an airplane cop he was commanding science to shoot him at the moon. He demanded from anyone who would listen, "Which one of you little growler cans is gonna put me in a rocket ball and launch me at the moon?"

This is going to sound crazy, but he wasn't the only air police captain from that era to suggest something like this.

A year earlier, Captain Claude Collins of Philadelphia volunteered to go to Mars, and he only had two conditions: he needed to see them do it with a rocket first, and there had better be a two-way radio in there. Our hero, Captain Fitzgerald, did not have such cowardly stipulations. He wanted a ball to the moon, any ball, any conditions. Fuck you, Claude. Enjoy history as a little bitch.

But what would a moon trip entail in that era? Well, through sheer serendipity, I was reading a 1921 Boy's Life article about Captain Charles, and on the very same page was a feature about the fanciful absurdity of moon travel.

In 1921, they didn't quite have the math to hit the moon with a rocket, but they did have the math to solve how fast it would be going when it missed. And bad news-- it was rocket-meltingly fast. And on the same page, completely unrelated to how we'll never reach the moon, was a story about the man who disagrees, dangling maniacally from a steel girder. He told Boy's Life he dances and headstands on skyscrapers "just to keep in trim," which is either a typo or how daredevils told children, "I do this for the pussy" a hundred years ago. I love Captain Charles Fitzgerald so much. But not as much as he loved the idea of dying on the moon.

So they had enough rocket science back then to know a theoretical ball to the moon would be -at best- a one-way trip. Captain Fitzgerald knew this. He wasn't thinking he would blast up there, recover in a body cast for six months, take a job as a moon rancher, then one as a moon judoka, then come back with moon herpes. He was ready to get in the space bullet that would finally prove whether or not God had the sack to kill him. He literally called it his "last" adventure and said goodbye to his mother before he had even gotten permission from the space people to joyride their moon ball to his death. He was the best.

Fitz never shut up about being the first man to explode on the moon, and neither did the media. There were several more national articles promoting this daredevil air cop's courageous idea to hurl himself into the stars just to see what happens. Unfortunately, the scientist trying to send people to the moon, Professor Robert Goddard, was getting pretty goddamn tired of explaining how he didn't want to send people to the moon. Here's an excerpt from the 2001 book, Sputnik: The Shock of the Century:

Years earlier, Professor Goddard made some throwaway comment about how hard it would be to hit the moon with a cannonball, and hundreds of people screamed, "Did someone say Moon Ball!? Put me in that moon ball!" Goddard was the Moon Ball guy for years, and he hated such foolish nonsense, but maybe stop having such awesome ideas if you want people to shut up about your awesome ideas, Professor. Put those heroes into balls and cannon them into space!

I have to make a confession. Like the comic book where I first heard of him, I have no idea what eventually happened to Captain Charles Fitzgerald, ADVENTUROUS COP.

The comic was like, "LAST WE HEARD, THIS FABULOUS COP WAS IN, I DON'T KNOW, SOUTH AMERICA, MAYBE? DOING GREAT, WE BET!" But after the press junket he did in the early 1920s lobbying for man to Moon Ball him, he vanished from all media. I found no statistical drops in any South American city's air crime, no obituary, nothing. So here's my theory-- he's still alive, and... on the moon.

No, listen: dying and getting to the moon were the only things Charles ever tried to do, and every time he failed at the first one he got closer to the second. I call this Fitzgerald's Balls-to-Moon ratio, and it mathematically proves no man can shake his dick at death this many times without earning a spot on a Moon Ball. It's maybe obvious in hindsight, but so was swinging a bean on a growler can. You're welcome, all of science.

...

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme, Aidan Mouat: Who travels to work in an Office Ball, goes home in a Home Ball, and on weekends it's PARTY BALL TIME BABY.

Comments

My theory is that Fitzgerald crashed through the roof of yet another hotel after falling from another plane, hit his head, and started hallucinating he was a hotel clerk again. Just this time he never came back.

Libluini

The Punchmaster was real and was a fuckin' cop the whole time?!

petertron

I wish we had the answers to all these awesome mysteries. But I do know that a growler is a bucket that you take to a pub and fill with tap beer to drink at home.

Bonnybedlam

Now I want to read the story of the spectator who can land a projectile full of water bang on the button and knock out a professional cow-and-man-in-the-moonpuncher.

Brendan McGinley

My head tells me "keep in trim" just means to keep in shape, but my heart fervently believes it is as Seanbaby said and the guy was bragging to BoysLife about what a poonhound he was.

Jeff Orasky

Look, Graves, I can believe your evidence and logic. Or I can believe my heart.

DeltaFoxtrot

Common sense tells me this gentleman is part of a fine American tradition of lying your balls off so you can be drowned in streams of hot running pussy. Common sense can fuck off, I choose to believe some mad asshole with a cannon fired this son of a bitch to the moon and he died fighting the moon beasts with his ghoul army.

Flippant Sausage

I read through two separate detailed histories of police aviation in New York and not one mention of a single Fitzgerald, let alone our boy. Also: the commander of the sky cops held the rank of Major, not Captain. Again, there is a record of who held that position and none of them are named Charles N. Fitzgerald. Chaz also has no IMDB page and any search for his stunt or movie career just leads to the same basic article where this all started. I think Chucky Fitz is full of shit.

Joshua Graves

To be semi-serious for a second: I was interested in him as well after this article and wasted my day looking into him, and couldn't find anything(the 'main' article that Seanbaby posted here is easy to find, but beyond that...). I went the other direction and tried to look into his early life first. I had no luck in finding anything about him. There were enough Charles Fitzgeralds in America at the time that I didn't have any luck weeding out the other ones in the censuses(I estimated he was born about 1885, as the article claimed he left home at the age of nine and listed the jobs in the twenty-six years since he set out, but after no good results, I expanded into looking at any who would be an adult at the time). In the 1920 census, I couldn't find any Charles Fitzgeralds who worked with the NY police or were listed as actors/daredevils... most of them were rail workers. A weirdly high number of them, actually. Regarding his other claims, there is always the possibility that the records got misplaced over a century, but that said, still nothing. I didn't find any reference to him in the Texas Rangers' records that are publicly accessible, nor in the NWMP personnel files, which are all online. The Tempe Normal School of Arizona(Now Arizona State University), which he claims to have graduated at the age of 16, apparently had the admission requirement of being at least 16 to even enroll at the school at the time, as well as being able to pass an entrance exam. Although there was apparently a remedial track for people who didn't complete high school, the age requirement seems set in stone, and if he didn't have any education after 9 years old, I'm not sure how much remedial high-school could help or why they would even accept his application if he didn't have any connections. I'm not saying that Fitzgerald exaggerated his life history in the 1921 article... but I'm strongly implying it. If anyone finds anything, I'd be glad to know about it.

The Parallel Viewmaster

Now I'm obsessed with finding out what happened to Capt Fitz. He just disappeared. Granted it was 1921 and it probably wasn't that hard. It's a common name too, but I did find one article about a bank heist and the crooks being done in by fingerprinting and one of the crooks being named Charles Fitzgerald. I mean a former daredevil and cop looking for the ultimate thrill getting in with a minor gang and robbing a bank fits. I choose to believe this was him. and after he was arrested he escaped to the moon

DeltaFoxtrot

I know advertising standards are important and it is ‘technically’ ‘better’ if adverts for products actually contain ‘pertinent information’ and so on, but I think we lost something magical the day we decided ‘MIGHT SAVE YOUR DUMB ASS FROM PROXIMATE GORILLAS’ was no longer a legitimate way to sell hand soap.

Horse Macho

The more I think about the bean can thing, the more amazing it is. Like, this is a man who clearly has the basic idea of a scale proof of concept, but controls for absolutely zero variables other than “can trash swing around in a circle.” Like, is the can swinging at the same scale speed as an airplane flies? Is the radius of the loop comparable? Do you have the same friction and air resistance as a bean? Who cares! Time to meet up with a sketchy pilot i found on whatever Craigslist was in the 1920s. Better tell him not to look me in the eye, cause I can’t promise I won’t haunt this fucker if I die. Let’s go, I’m just like a bean!

Josh

“Look here Professor Go-Tard. I told my mama I’d do two things with my life: thrill-seek my way into fucking every woman on earth, and DIE ON THE FUCKING MOON! I ain’t let nobody stop me from achievin the first goal and there ain’t no way in plane-standin hell I’m gonna let you stop me from doing the second! Now if you ain’t gonna put me in that there moon ball I know two other balls that are gonna suffer for it.”

Pem

Why is an owl living in a cave?

Matthew Harris

The Godias were collateral damage in the mob’s quest for revenge

FancyShark

I know this was Punching Day, but I also want to believe this is Learning Day. I feel smarter...yet undeniably less masculine.

Benjamin Midkiff

Haha, I was going to comment the same thing, but also add: imagine what these seemingly tireless assholes could do if the actually picked up a cause. I'd watch a man risk death in high-diving accident for charity. Actually, I think that's a YouTube category too. Nevermind,

Vooster

Dead manager + "other reasons" = the mob definitely killed his mentor to convince him to throw a fight. Little did they know they merely created a superhero.

Brendan McGinley

We need to break down the context of the last bit though: the ad for gorilla batteries. What if—and hear me out—what if the gorilla vanished from the ad because it secretly went home to the moon to fight Charles Fitzgerald? We all know gorillas secretly come from the moon, that’s established scientific truth. But what if Fitz is still there, fighting moon apes in a gory orgy of pain and piñata violence? It’s like Doom with more opposable thumbs, and Fitz is our Doomguy.

Chris “Ace” Hendrix

That’s no moon. It’s Charles Fitzgerald’s testicle!

Zach Dewoody

Yeah. I know it takes some of the magic out of it but it just used to mean cowboy or ranch worker, but generally one hired by a ranch and not an owner. Like cowpoke, it derives from the old days of herding when they would have to "encourage" cows into pens, train cars, or any other things a cow didn't want to enter.

DeltaFoxtrot

"Unfocused white man with a dangerous lack of concern for personal injury" is just a category on YouTube these days.

Joshua Graves

There's a job listing for a Cowpuncher?

Talking Alpaca

yes my first landlady back in Tumwater also used a can to rush the growler (outhouse bidet)

sissyneck


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