Difference between revisions of "Mr. Schwamp"

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==Mr. Schwamp==
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<table align="right"><tr><th>http://www.mayberry.info/graphics/mr_schwamp_floyds_barbershop.jpg<br />Mr. Schwamp...the man...the mystery.</th></tr></table>
<table align="right"><tr><th>http://www.mayberrygossipclub.com/graphics/mr_schwamp_floyds_barbershop.jpg<br />Mr. Schwamp...the man...the mystery.</th></tr></table>
 
Mr. Schwamp (or Schwump as he was known for years) is the older dark haired man you often see sitting on the bench outside the barbershop or in groups of people in Mayberry.
 
  
Over the years, every cast and crew member of The Andy Griffith Show has been asked if they know the name of the actor who played Mr. Schwamp. While all of them remember him none of them know his real name.  (Yes, Andy Griffith has been asked as has Producer Richard Linke.)
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=Mr. Schwamp=
 +
Mr. Schwamp (or Schwump, as he is better known) is the older dark haired man you often see sitting on the bench outside the barbershop or in groups of people in Mayberry.
 +
 +
Over the years, every cast and crew member of The Andy Griffith Show has been asked if they know the name of the actor who played Mr. Schwamp. While all of them remember him, none of them knows his real name.  (And yes, Andy Griffith has been asked, as has Producer Richard Linke.)  
  
'''There are 22 documented Schwamp episodes:'''<br>''Mr. Schwamp never spoke so you'll only see him in shots so watch closely.   A few times he is called by name, but usually he's just in the baxkground, sometimes waaaay in the background''
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 +
==Episodes==
 +
'''There are 26 documented Schwamp episodes:'''<br>''Mr. Schwamp never speaks so you'll have to watch closely to spot him. A few times he is called by name, but usually he's just in the background, sometimes waaaay in the background.''  
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
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===The Andy Griffith Show===
  
 
# [[My Fair Ernest T. Bass (TAGS Episode)|My Fair Ernest T. Bass (#112/A113F)]]
 
# [[My Fair Ernest T. Bass (TAGS Episode)|My Fair Ernest T. Bass (#112/A113F)]]
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# [[The Education of Ernest T. Bass (TAGS Episode)|The Education of Ernest T. Bass (#131A/133F)]]
 
# [[The Education of Ernest T. Bass (TAGS Episode)|The Education of Ernest T. Bass (#131A/133F)]]
 
# [[Otis Sues the County (TAGS Episode)|Otis Sues the County (#142A/141F)]]
 
# [[Otis Sues the County (TAGS Episode)|Otis Sues the County (#142A/141F)]]
 +
# [[The Luck of Newton Monroe (TAGS Episode)| The Luck of Newton Monroe #156]]
 
# [[Off to Hollywood (TAGS Episode)| Off to Hollywood #166]]
 
# [[Off to Hollywood (TAGS Episode)| Off to Hollywood #166]]
 
# [[Aunt Bee Takes a Job (TAGS Episode)|Aunt Bee Takes a Job #171]]
 
# [[Aunt Bee Takes a Job (TAGS Episode)|Aunt Bee Takes a Job #171]]
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# [[Otis the Artist (TAGS Episode)|Otis the Artist #175]]
 
# [[Otis the Artist (TAGS Episode)|Otis the Artist #175]]
 
# [[Aunt Bee Learns to Drive (TAGS Episode)|Aunt Bee Learns to Drive #180]]
 
# [[Aunt Bee Learns to Drive (TAGS Episode)|Aunt Bee Learns to Drive #180]]
 +
# [[Eat Your Heart Out (TAGS Episode)|Eat Your Heart Out #182]]
 
# [[The Barbershop Quartet (TAGS Episode)|The Barbershop Quartet #191]]
 
# [[The Barbershop Quartet (TAGS Episode)|The Barbershop Quartet #191]]
 
# [[The Lodge (TAGS Episode)|The Lodge #192]]
 
# [[The Lodge (TAGS Episode)|The Lodge #192]]
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# [[Floyd's Barbershop (TAGS Episode)|Floyd's Barbershop #210]]
 
# [[Floyd's Barbershop (TAGS Episode)|Floyd's Barbershop #210]]
 
# [[The Statue (TAGS Episode)|The Statue #211]]
 
# [[The Statue (TAGS Episode)|The Statue #211]]
 +
# [[Barney Comes to Mayberry (TAGS Episode)|Barney Comes To Mayberry #212]]
 +
# [[Aunt Bee and the Lecturer (TAGS Episode)|Aunt Bee and the Lecturer #230]]
 
# [[The Church Benefactors (TAGS Episode)|The Church Benefactors #238]]
 
# [[The Church Benefactors (TAGS Episode)|The Church Benefactors #238]]
 
# [[Barney Hosts a Summit Meeting (TAGS Episode)|Barney Hosts a Summit Meeting #240]]
 
# [[Barney Hosts a Summit Meeting (TAGS Episode)|Barney Hosts a Summit Meeting #240]]
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# [[Sam for Town Council (TAGS Episode)|Sam for Town Council  #247]]
 
# [[Sam for Town Council (TAGS Episode)|Sam for Town Council  #247]]
  
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===Gomer Pyle, USMC===
 +
# One Of Our Shells is Missing (4/5/1967) - ''Pyle and Sgt. Carter are in an army surplus store trying to locate a missing mortar shell, when Mr. Schwump walks across the back of the pawn shop.''
 +
# Gomer, the Welsh Rarebit Fiend (3-1-1967)
 +
# Gomer, the Beautiful Dreamer (10-6-1967)
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 +
==Inconsistency==
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* In the episode "The Fun Girls", during the scene of the Community Dance, Mr. Schwump is seen behind Andy and Barney on the dance floor. When the camera pans, he is sitting in the corner with a lady drinking a soda through a straw!
 +
 +
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== Patch S. Wimmers ==
 +
 +
On '''April 1''', 2012 The Andy Griffith Show Rerun Watchers Club (TAGSRWC) played a "April Fools" joke on the visitors to their [http://facebook.com/tagsrwc  Facebook fan page ]. What follows is the content of the post:
 +
 +
<blockquote>
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Mr. Schwamp’s Identity Discovered!!! After decades of painstaking investigation and research by dozens of Mayberry enthusiasts, we have finally identified the actor who played Mr. Schwamp! With funding from TAGSRWC’S own Weaver’s Dept. Store (thanks, ol’ Ben!) and with several people working to assemble small pieces of the puzzle from a huge number of sources, we finally solved Mayberry’s Greatest Mystery!<br><br>
 +
 +
An obscure mention in the credits of an episode of “The Danny Thomas Show” from 1956 was the key breakthrough. That, combined with Census records and the power of Google and Ancestry.com and eventually Screen Actors Guild records led us to a definite conclusion.
 +
<br><br>
 +
We’re pleased to announce that the actor who played Mr. Schwamp was a man named…Patch S. Wimmers. Through U.S. Census records from 1950 and 1960 (found on Ancestry.com), we found that Patch S. Wimmers lived in North Hollywood, just blocks from the Desilu-Cahuenga Studios, where “The Andy Griffith Show” was filmed. He could’ve literally walked to work in Mayberry, which means he could’ve been available to work as an extra on a given episode on very short notice.
 +
<br><br>
 +
We further found that a Patch S. Wimmers lived in and was perhaps born in Camp Threw, Miss. The earliest listing we found for him was the 1920 Census, which says he was 16 years old and living with his parents (his father was in the Army Air Corps) and two siblings in Mississippi. At some point the young Wimmers moved to California. We speculate that maybe his father was transferred to a military base in California. (We’re not sure about that because his father is listed as residing in Poi Falls, OR, during some of that period.)
 +
<br><br>
 +
Patch is already spotted acting very Mr. Schwamp-ish (which is to say, not acting much at all) in “Christmas in Connecticut” in 1945 and in the 1946 Three Stooges feature film “Swing Parade.” He would have been 41 to 42 during that time. He doesn’t pop again in our research until the 1956 “Danny Thomas Show.” And then in TAGS in “My Fair Ernest T. Bass” in 1964. And the rest is history…26 episodes of TAGS and a few episodes of “Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.” and “Mayberry R.F.D.” and similar appearances.
 +
<br><br>
 +
We’re hopeful that we’ll now find many more appearances by “Mr. Schwamp/Patch S. Wimmers. But for now, on this here day, April 1, 2012, we’re just pleased to finally announce that Mr. Schwamp is Patch S. Wimmers of Camp Threw, Miss. (and most probably Poi Falls, OR).
 +
<br><br>
 +
Click on the photo for compete details about how this mystery was solved!</blockquote>
 +
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Clicking on the link provided in the post took you to http://WeaversDepartmentStore.com and the following notice:
 +
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<blockquote>
 +
<p align="center"><font color="#339933" face="Comic Sans MS, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="7"><strong>April Fool's!!!</strong></font></p>
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<p><font color="#660066" face="Comic Sans MS"><strong>In the words of Gomer Pyle, "What a&nbsp;dumb trick!"</strong></font></p>
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<p><font color="#339933" face="Comic Sans MS"><strong>But in the words of Ernest T. Bass, "Hee-hee-hee-ha-ha!"</strong></font></p>
 +
<p><strong><font color="#cc3333" face="Comic Sans MS">Pssst!&nbsp;So that others&nbsp;might enjoy&nbsp;the full experience, PLEASE <font color="#0066ff">don't give away the joke </font>with comments on our Facebook post that spill the beans, at least for a day or two.&nbsp;Of course, if you want to make comments that express amazement and congratulations&nbsp;for our&nbsp;"discovery" and thereby egg on other people to fall for the joke, that's great. Otherwise, just "Like" the post and "Share"&nbsp;it&nbsp;with others, if you like.&nbsp; Thanks!</font></strong></p>
 +
<p><font color="#3399cc" face="Comic Sans MS"><strong>And best of all, Ben Weaver has this to say: <font color="#3300cc">Free shipping</font> on&nbsp;your online Weaver's orders&nbsp;received now through April 15! Here's how you get it: Just type <font color="#3300cc">"Mr. Schwamp"</font> into the "Comments" area of your Weaver's Order Form, and we'll manually deduct the normal $5 shipping charge from your total before processing your order.&nbsp; See...April Fool's isn't totally foolish, after all!</strong></font></p></blockquote>
  
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TAGSRWC members enjoyed the experience and received a discount on their order from Weaver's for a few days.
  
 
[[Category:The Andy Griffith Show Characters|Schwamp, Mr.]]
 
[[Category:The Andy Griffith Show Characters|Schwamp, Mr.]]

Latest revision as of 20:14, 27 January 2024

mr_schwamp_floyds_barbershop.jpg
Mr. Schwamp...the man...the mystery.

Mr. Schwamp

Mr. Schwamp (or Schwump, as he is better known) is the older dark haired man you often see sitting on the bench outside the barbershop or in groups of people in Mayberry.

Over the years, every cast and crew member of The Andy Griffith Show has been asked if they know the name of the actor who played Mr. Schwamp. While all of them remember him, none of them knows his real name. (And yes, Andy Griffith has been asked, as has Producer Richard Linke.)


Episodes

There are 26 documented Schwamp episodes:
Mr. Schwamp never speaks so you'll have to watch closely to spot him. A few times he is called by name, but usually he's just in the background, sometimes waaaay in the background.


The Andy Griffith Show

  1. My Fair Ernest T. Bass (#112/A113F)
  2. The Rumor (#124A/125F)
  3. The Fun Girls (#122A/123F)
  4. The Education of Ernest T. Bass (#131A/133F)
  5. Otis Sues the County (#142A/141F)
  6. The Luck of Newton Monroe #156
  7. Off to Hollywood #166
  8. Aunt Bee Takes a Job #171
  9. The Cannon #172
  10. The Church Organ #174
  11. Otis the Artist #175
  12. Aunt Bee Learns to Drive #180
  13. Eat Your Heart Out #182
  14. The Barbershop Quartet #191
  15. The Lodge #192
  16. Big Fish in a Small Town #198
  17. Only a Rose #203
  18. Don't Miss a Good Bet #205
  19. Floyd's Barbershop #210
  20. The Statue #211
  21. Barney Comes To Mayberry #212
  22. Aunt Bee and the Lecturer #230
  23. The Church Benefactors #238
  24. Barney Hosts a Summit Meeting #240
  25. Mayberry, RFD #241
  26. Sam for Town Council #247

Gomer Pyle, USMC

  1. One Of Our Shells is Missing (4/5/1967) - Pyle and Sgt. Carter are in an army surplus store trying to locate a missing mortar shell, when Mr. Schwump walks across the back of the pawn shop.
  2. Gomer, the Welsh Rarebit Fiend (3-1-1967)
  3. Gomer, the Beautiful Dreamer (10-6-1967)

Inconsistency

  • In the episode "The Fun Girls", during the scene of the Community Dance, Mr. Schwump is seen behind Andy and Barney on the dance floor. When the camera pans, he is sitting in the corner with a lady drinking a soda through a straw!


Patch S. Wimmers

On April 1, 2012 The Andy Griffith Show Rerun Watchers Club (TAGSRWC) played a "April Fools" joke on the visitors to their Facebook fan page . What follows is the content of the post:

Mr. Schwamp’s Identity Discovered!!! After decades of painstaking investigation and research by dozens of Mayberry enthusiasts, we have finally identified the actor who played Mr. Schwamp! With funding from TAGSRWC’S own Weaver’s Dept. Store (thanks, ol’ Ben!) and with several people working to assemble small pieces of the puzzle from a huge number of sources, we finally solved Mayberry’s Greatest Mystery!

An obscure mention in the credits of an episode of “The Danny Thomas Show” from 1956 was the key breakthrough. That, combined with Census records and the power of Google and Ancestry.com and eventually Screen Actors Guild records led us to a definite conclusion.

We’re pleased to announce that the actor who played Mr. Schwamp was a man named…Patch S. Wimmers. Through U.S. Census records from 1950 and 1960 (found on Ancestry.com), we found that Patch S. Wimmers lived in North Hollywood, just blocks from the Desilu-Cahuenga Studios, where “The Andy Griffith Show” was filmed. He could’ve literally walked to work in Mayberry, which means he could’ve been available to work as an extra on a given episode on very short notice.

We further found that a Patch S. Wimmers lived in and was perhaps born in Camp Threw, Miss. The earliest listing we found for him was the 1920 Census, which says he was 16 years old and living with his parents (his father was in the Army Air Corps) and two siblings in Mississippi. At some point the young Wimmers moved to California. We speculate that maybe his father was transferred to a military base in California. (We’re not sure about that because his father is listed as residing in Poi Falls, OR, during some of that period.)

Patch is already spotted acting very Mr. Schwamp-ish (which is to say, not acting much at all) in “Christmas in Connecticut” in 1945 and in the 1946 Three Stooges feature film “Swing Parade.” He would have been 41 to 42 during that time. He doesn’t pop again in our research until the 1956 “Danny Thomas Show.” And then in TAGS in “My Fair Ernest T. Bass” in 1964. And the rest is history…26 episodes of TAGS and a few episodes of “Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.” and “Mayberry R.F.D.” and similar appearances.

We’re hopeful that we’ll now find many more appearances by “Mr. Schwamp/Patch S. Wimmers. But for now, on this here day, April 1, 2012, we’re just pleased to finally announce that Mr. Schwamp is Patch S. Wimmers of Camp Threw, Miss. (and most probably Poi Falls, OR).

Click on the photo for compete details about how this mystery was solved!

Clicking on the link provided in the post took you to http://WeaversDepartmentStore.com and the following notice:

April Fool's!!!

In the words of Gomer Pyle, "What a dumb trick!"

But in the words of Ernest T. Bass, "Hee-hee-hee-ha-ha!"

Pssst! So that others might enjoy the full experience, PLEASE don't give away the joke with comments on our Facebook post that spill the beans, at least for a day or two. Of course, if you want to make comments that express amazement and congratulations for our "discovery" and thereby egg on other people to fall for the joke, that's great. Otherwise, just "Like" the post and "Share" it with others, if you like.  Thanks!

And best of all, Ben Weaver has this to say: Free shipping on your online Weaver's orders received now through April 15! Here's how you get it: Just type "Mr. Schwamp" into the "Comments" area of your Weaver's Order Form, and we'll manually deduct the normal $5 shipping charge from your total before processing your order.  See...April Fool's isn't totally foolish, after all!

TAGSRWC members enjoyed the experience and received a discount on their order from Weaver's for a few days.