'Inspector Douglas Renfrew' was a former
Royal Flying Corps officer who joined the
Royal North-West Mounted Police, later the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police. The fictional literary character was created in 1921 by Laurie York Erskine. While Canadian Mountie fiction existed prior to 1921, it was Erskine's creation that led to imitation and, for a few short years in the latter half of the 1930s, a rise in popularity with the form of adventure fiction. The short stories that appeared in magazines were recycled for use in a series of ten novels, a long-running radio program and a series of eight motion pictures. The cry known as the Renfrew call—which children all over America imitated heard daily on the radio program—echoed through city streets and alleys. Actor
Ed Asner once recalled on the
Merv Griffin television program how Renfrew of the Mounted was his favorite radio program. •
1. Renfrew of the Royal Mounted (1922) •
2. Renfrew Rides Again (1927) •
3. Renfrew Rides the Sky (1928) •
4. Comrades of the Clouds (1930) •
5. Renfrew Rides North (1931) • ''6. Renfrew's Long Trail'' (1933) •
7. Renfrew Rides the Range (1935) •
8. Renfrew in the Valley of the Vanished Men (1936) •
9. One Man Came Back (1939) •
10. Renfrew Flies Again (1941) With limited funding and the enthusiasm that young idealists possess, Laurie York Erskine, along with three good friends, founded the Solebury School for Boys in October 1925. The private boys school was financially established as a result of Erskine's sale of a magazine serial for $20,000, titled
The Confidence Man. This inspired Erskine to write a number of adventure novels, in the hopes of making another sale to Hollywood, including
The River Trail (1923),
The Laughing Rider (1924),
Valor of the Range (1925),
The Coming of Cosgrove (1926), and
Power of the Hills (1928). When it became clear that Hollywood sought no interest in Erskine's novels, the author agreed to provide the publishing house additional Renfrew novels. Historically, the only novels that sold well for D. Appleton & Company were those with Inspector Douglas Renfrew and a letter from the company assured him continued publication of Renfrew novels. Erskine also wrote over 100 Renfrew short stories for
The American Boy magazine, most of them recycled for use in the Renfrew novels listed above. Erskine wrote a total of ten Renfrew novels. The hero of
The Laughing Rider was a Texas Ranger, William O'Brien Argent. The hero of
The River Trail was a Canadian Mountie named William Goeffrain. Magazine articles and reference guides incorrectly claim these two novels among the Renfrew canon. The ten Renfrew novels listed above were written and published partly out of necessity. Erskine donated the profits from his handiwork to the funding of the private boys' school. Erskine doubled as teacher by day and author by night. Six months after publication,
Renfrew Rides the Sky (published September 1928) was included in the official library of the Imperial War Museum at South Kensington, England.
Renfrew Rides North (published September 1931) was dedicated to seven of his students at Solebury School. ''Renfrew's Long Trail'' (published August 1933) was dedicated to the memory of Inspector Alfred Herbert Joy of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, whose gallant personality and indomitable spirit was presented in the figure of Inspector Jocelyn in the novel. ==Radio==