Hector Heathcote is a Terrytoons animated cartoon character. Created by Eli Bauer and Ralph Bakshi, he first appeared on July 18, 1959, in The Minute and a Half Man. He was voiced by John Myhers.[1] Terrytoons created the character for television, but the cartoons also received theatrical distribution.[1]
Hector is an 18-year-old orange-haired Colonial era patriot who turned up, often as an unsung hero, during various stages of American history.[2] In later cartoons he was accompanied by his faithful red-and-yellow dog Winston who talked with a slight English accent. Heathcote was also antagonized by a big bully named Benedict, who parodied the infamous American traitor Benedict Arnold.
While much of the cartoons were historical, occasionally some would focus on science, one example being where Hector talks through two tin cans and a piece of string, then is inspired by Winston to make use of electrical currents to upgrade such a device to travel long distances, thus inventing telecommunications. In the same episode, Hector is also a messenger boy in the employ of Mr. Benedict. Hector is motivated to find a way to communicate long distances after not desiring to deliver messages through "rain, sleet, nor gloom of night". Conversely, Mr. Benedict attempts to sabotage the concept before Hector can patent it, as that would put his messenger service out of business.
The Hector Heathcote Show aired on NBC Saturday mornings from October 5, 1963, to September 25, 1965, and is one of the early Saturday morning cartoons.[3] The series ran for two seasons, replacing The Shari Lewis Show. Additional cartoons in the program included Hashimoto-san, a Japanese mouse, and Silly Sidney the Elephant, a wacky pachyderm whose friends included Cleo the giraffe and Stanley, a cantankerous lion.[4] The show would end with a scene of Hector going to bed.
Hector is merchandised on lunch boxes, books and toys. Gold Key Comics published him in comic book form, but only produced one issue in 1964.