![]() “For several years now, we’d always wonder if there were maybe just a few more out there in the world, and then lo and behold, they became available this past spring. Benjamin Clark, museum curator, said that this is the full collection, which has never been in view together until now. The museum had four strips in its collection, but they acquired three more at a recent auction, not knowing there were more to be found. The exhibit features seven strips of an unpublished workplace humor strip titled “Hagemeyer,” made in the mid-1950s before “Peanuts” came about. The exhibit opened on Thursday, and is available for viewing through Jan. In its new exhibit called Adults by Schulz, the museum, made in memory of the Santa Rosa resident after he passed in 2000, showcases drawings where adults and teenagers take the center square space. Schulz Museum and Research Center in Santa Rosa recently acquired a new set of strips with characters never seen in his work before. ![]() Schulz is most famously known for his characters Charlie Brown and Snoopy in “Peanuts” on the funny pages, but the Charles M. ![]()
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