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  1. Pigpen - Peanuts

    "Pigpen is a human soil bank who raises a cloud of dust on a perfectly clean street and passes out gum drops that are invariably black." —Charles M. Schulz

  2. Ron "Pigpen" McKernan - Wikipedia

    Ronald Charles McKernan (September 8, 1945 – March 8, 1973), known as Pigpen, was an American musician. He was a founding member of the San Francisco band the Grateful Dead and played in …

  3. Pigpen Cipher - Boxentriq

    In standard pigpen, the letters are written over two grids and two crosses. By changing the order of grids, you can make a cipher that looks like simple pigpen but will take a little longer to decrypt.

  4. "Pig-Pen" | Peanuts Wiki | Fandom

    On May 25, 1957, Charlie Brown walks to "Pig-Pen", who is chewing on something.

  5. Pigpen Cipher Decoder - Masonic Alphabet - Online Pig Pen Translator

    Tool to decrypt/encrypt the Masonic alphabet. The Freemasons' Pig Pen cipher (Pigpen) is explained with the substitution alphabet using geometric symbols, grids, crosses, and dots for secret writing.

  6. Ron "Pigpen" McKernan - Grateful Dead

    Nicknamed "Pigpen" for his funky approach to life and sanitation, he was born into a family that was generally conventional, except for the fact that his (Caucasian) father was an R & B disc jockey. And …

  7. Profile: Pig-Pen (Official) - YouTube

    Pigpen: first appearance July 13, 1954 Happily traveling in his own private dust storm, Pigpen is completely comfortable in his own (dust-streaked) skin. Despite his outward appearance, he...

  8. PIGPEN | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary

    The pigpen cipher uses a grid system or lines and dots to establish symbols for letters.

  9. Ron “Pigpen” McKernan: A Brief Biography - Extra Chill

    Nov 24, 2023 · Here, McKernan earned the nickname “Pigpen”, a moniker that stuck, though its origins are debated – some say it was due to his untidy habits, others attribute it to his resemblance to the …

  10. Pigpen Cipher - Crypto Corner

    The Pigpen (or Freemason) Cipher uses images from a table to represent each letter in the alphabet. It was used extensively by the Freemasons, and has many variants that appear in popular culture.