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Includes a list of characters who are known only by their last name.

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde[]

Mrs. Hawkins was the landlady of a boarding house in the East End of London, England. One of her tenants was a dancing girl named Ivy Pearson. A patron of the bar named Edward Hyde had taken an unhealthy interest in Ivy and came to her room at the boarding house where he psychologically abused her.

The background of Mrs. Hawkins is largely unknown. It is also unclear which time era she was the most active, to say nothing of what year it was on the instances where she learned about the licentiousness of Mister Edward Hyde.

Mrs. Hawkins was an elderly woman during the time that Edward Hyde was patronizing her boarding house, implying that she had passed away of old age some time later. It is unknown when Mrs. Hawkins died, or how old she was at the time of her death. [1]

Dracula's Daughter[]

Hawkins was a middle-aged police constable that worked out of the town of Whitby in the 1930s. In 1931, he and another constable named Albert discovered the bodies of the vampire Count Dracula and his mad servant Renfield in a crypt in Carfax Abbey. The bodies were taken back to Whitby Jail where both men were tasked with overseeing them. Hawkins contacted a man named Squires at Scotland Yard and inquired as to what they were supposed to do with the bodies. Squire told them that Commissioner Basil Humphrey was going to send somebody to collect them at 10:00.

While Albert and he waited, Hawkins had to endure his partner's nervousness about having a vampire corpse in their holding cell. When Albert heard a strange noise coming from the cell, Hawkins went in to investigate. Albert thought they had rats. Hawkins saw the trail of something burrowing in the dirt floor of the cell, but never saw any rats. As he left, he handed Albert a pistol to defend himself in case the bodies decided to "get up and start walking". [2]

Notes[]

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References[]

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