By Scott Tipton
July 2, 2003
BORN ON THE FOURTH OF JULY
Here it is nearly Independence Day, and I’ll
bet you think you know what’s on the agenda. “Fourth of July, right? Gotta
be Captain America.” Think again, class. We here at COMICS 101 loathe being
predictable, so instead, today we’ll be covering every patriotic super hero to
hit the funnybooks except Captain America, and save good ol’ Cap for, I
don’t know, Bastille Day, or some other holiday we can rightfully ignore. So
settle in for a whirlwind tour of red, white and blue mystery men and women,
some considerably more well known than others. Let’s begin with the granddaddy
of them all, the very first star-spangled super-hero. And just to reiterate, I’m not
talking about Captain America.
Very few comic fans realize it, but Timely’s
Captain America was not the first of the flag-wearing superhero set. That honor
goes to The
Shield. Ever heard of him? Didn’t think so. The Shield first appeared in
the pages of PEP COMICS #1, published by MLJ Comics (the publisher that would
eventually become Archie Comics) in January 1940, well over a year before
Captain America’s first appearance in 1941.
The Shield was created by MLJ editor Harry
Shorten and artist Irv Novick, probably best known for his work on BATMAN some
35 years later. In the story, scientist Tom Higgins has devised a formula to
grant superpowers to normal humans. Just as he completed his work, Tom Higgins
was murdered by mysterious foreign agents. Higgins’ son Joe was thus inspired
to test the process out on himself, gaining steel-hard skin and super-strength.
Crafting a uniform for himself based on the American flag, Joe Higgins becomes
The Shield, and unlike most super-types who decide to go freelance with the
whole crimefighting thing, promptly reports to FBI boss J. Edgar Hoover to offer
his services.
The Shield was popular enough to earn a second
magazine he shared with fellow MLJ hero The Wizard, the logically named
SHIELD-WIZARD COMICS beginning in Summer 1940.
In time, The Shield gave in to the craze for boy
sidekicks that was sweeping comic books after the success of Robin in the Batman
comics, and soon found himself partnered up with … Dusty the Boy Detective.
Pretty unremarkable stuff. By the mid-‘40s, The Shield was muscled out of PEP
COMICS by Archie and his teen gang, and that was it for Joe Higgins. Archie
Comics tried reviving The Shield a couple of times, once in reaction to DC’s
Silver Age success, and again in the mid-60s after Marvel hit it big, but
neither series took off. DC licensed The Shield and the rest of Archie’s
superhero characters in 1991 for their new Impact! Comics imprint, but that too
was gone little more than a year later.
Quality Comics had much better luck with their
flag-waver, Uncle Sam. First appearing in Quality’s NATIONAL COMICS #1
(August 1941), the Uncle Sam strip was a product of Will Eisner’s shop, with
most of the art being handled by Lou Fine. Primarily just a carryover of the “Uncle
Sam” character made famous in Thomas Nast’s 19th-century political cartoons,
the strip gained popularity thanks to the unabashed patriotism of wartime
America and the gorgeous art of Lou Fine (as well as some fantastic covers by
Will Eisner and Reed Crandall). Although an attempt was made to give Uncle Sam a
superhero-type origin (something involving the Spirit of America merging with a
Midwestern patriot), it wasn’t really necessary. It was the artwork and
iconography that sold the strip.
When DC Comics bought up the Quality stable in
the ‘60s, Uncle Sam was in the forefront, appearing along with Phantom Lady,
Doll Man, Black Condor, the Ray and the Human Bomb (now dubbed the Freedom
Fighters) first in guest appearances in JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA, then in their
own book, FREEDOM FIGHTERS, which premiered in March/April 1976. The FREEDOM
FIGHTERS book only lasted 15 issues, and then it was back to guest-star limbo
for Sam and company. Uncle Sam still pops up from time in the DC Universe,
although I think at last sight he had been transformed into a more futuristic
character called the Patriot. It won’t last; that costume is too good to lose.
Besides, he’s one of the few characters on this list with his own action
figure…
Also making her debut appearance in MILITARY
COMICS #1 was Miss America, a.k.a. reporter Joan Dale, who was granted
magical powers by the spirit of the Statue of Liberty. Riiiiiight.
The Miss America stories didn’t have quite the
same punch as the Uncle Sam adventures, and her run in MILITARY COMICS lasted a
scant 7 issues. Although the Miss America strips were pretty run-of-the-mill,
she did sport a pretty snazzy costume. She was later somewhat awkwardly
shoehorned into DC history (and the Justice Society of America) when it was
realized that a new post-CRISIS Wonder Woman meant that there had never been a
Wonder Woman in the 1940s adventures of the JSA. DC’s writer/editor Roy Thomas
tried to make do with Miss America as a Wonder Woman replacement, but fans never
really bought the concept, and it’s been all but abandoned in recent years.
When Quality abandoned the Miss America concept,
Timely quickly snatched it up with their own version of Miss America,
making her first appearance in MARVEL MYSTERY COMICS #49 (November 1943).
In the Timely version, Miss America was Madeline
Joyce, a liberty-loving teenager with a thirst to fight for justice, who finds
herself granted physical strength and the ability to fly by strange experiments
with electricity conducted by a mysterious scientist working for her millionaire
uncle. Timely’s only significant super-heroine, Miss America was successful
enough to warrant her own title, although she was soon overshadowed in the pages
of MISS AMERICA COMICS by the adventures of teen Patsy Walker. Miss America
(along with Captain America and Bucky, the Human Torch and Toro, the Sub-Mariner
and Timely’s Flash knockoff The Whizzer) also appeared in Timely’s
short-lived postwar superhero team series, the All-Winners Squad, which garnered
only two appearances in ALL-WINNERS COMICS. Miss America was later revived, much
like every other Golden Age character who ever appeared, by Roy Thomas, but
appeared only in WWII-era stories and flashback sequences in the pages of THE
AVENGERS.
National Comics had their own pack of
all-American heroes. The most popular was probably the Star-Spangled Kid and Stripesy.
First appearing in ACTION COMICS #40, the most notable thing about the series
was the reversal of the hero/boy sidekick concept: here, the kid was clearly in
charge, while the adult was the one following orders.
In their debut, readers met Sylvester Pemberton,
young son of a high-society prominent millionaire, and Pat Dugan, a
working-class auto mechanic. After Pemberton and Dugan fight off pro-Nazi agents
at a local movie house, they both overhear an offhand remark that “it’s too
bad the flag can’t come to life and rout those Nazis,” and independently
have the same idea: to bring Old Glory to life and fight for their country. They
each craft patriotic costumes for themselves, Pemberton becoming the
Star-Spangled Kid, and Dugan dubbing himself Stripesy. Eventually, the two
become partners, and Pemberton arranges for his father to hire Dugan as the
family’s chauffeur and in-house mechanic (just to make sure Stripesy
knew his place, I guess).
The duo had no superpowers to speak of, just
their fists and the Star-Rocket Racer, a souped-up flying car designed and built
by Dugan.
The Kid and Stripesy were also members of
National’s team of second-string superheroes, the Seven Soldiers of Victory,
alongside the Green Arrow and Speedy, the Crimson Avenger, the Shining Knight
and the Vigilante. The Seven Soldiers comics were pretty mediocre, and they soon
lost their spot in LEADING COMICS to funny-animal comics.
The Star-Spangled Kid and Stripesy were revived
in the Silver Age, where it was revealed in the pages of JLA that the team had
been lost throughout time since the ‘40s, and had barely aged since the end of
WW II. The Kid was given superpowers through a high-tech belt device (the “Cosmic
Converter,” to be precise) and appeared throughout the ‘70s and ‘80s in
both Justice Society guest shots and as the leader of INFINITY, INC., a team
book made up of the children of JSA members; the Kid was murdered in the final
issues of the series. Stripesy recently reappeared in the pages of STARS AND
S.T.R.I.P.E., in which he had to contend with his teenage stepdaughter Courtney,
who had found the late Pemberton’s power belt and taken it upon herself to
become the new Star-Spangled Kid.
An exceptionally fun series with scripts by Geoff
Johns and art by Lee Moder, STARS AND S.T.R.I.P.E. unfortunately only lasted 15
issues, although Johns transferred the Courtney character over to JSA, where she
remains a big part of the series. Pick up those STARS AND S.T.R.I.P.E. back
issues if you see them; very good stuff.
National was also home to Mr. America, who
first appeared as “Tex Thomson” way back in ACTION COMICS #1 in 1938.
Thomson was a world adventurer type who was turned into a superhero in ACTION
COMICS #40, when National realized just how popular the superhero craze had
become.
When Thomson was believed killed by foreign
agents on a mercy mission at sea, he returned as Mr. America, leaving red, white
and blue feathers as his trademarks and whistling “Yankee Doodle.” As if
that wasn’t quite silly enough, Mr. America had an overweight sidekick named
“Fatman,” who wore a lampshade on his head as a mask. Yeesh. Mr. America
underwent another change in ACTION #54, when he accepted an assignment from FDR
for overseas espionage duty and became the Americommando. The
Americommando’s adventures were just as unremarkable as Mr. America’s and he
quickly faded into obscurity.
A little more popular was Liberty Belle,
National’s only other major female superhero. First appearing in BOY COMMANDOS
#1 before settling into a lengthy run in STAR-SPANGLED COMICS, Belle was really
Libby Lawrence, a radio commentator who took on the identity of Liberty Belle to
fight subversives and Nazi agents on the homefront.
Liberty Belle’s only powers came from a tiny
replica of the Liberty Bell on her belt, made from the Bell itself, which would
grant her a temporary burst of strength and speed when the original Liberty Bell
was rung. Good thing she knew the guard in Philadelphia, I guess … Liberty
Belle was revived, along with every other Golden Age hero in the National and
Quality rosters, by Roy Thomas in the 1980s for membership in the WW II-era
ALL-STAR SQUADRON series, which united every World War Two superhero into a
single team under the command of President Roosevelt. Another good series to
look for in back issues…
In the 1950s, Captain America creators Joe Simon
and Jack Kirby tried to recreate the magic, this time with a satirical bite with Fighting
American, a parody of their old Captain America strips with a distinctive
Cold War edge.
The Red-bashing Fighting American and his
sidekick Speedboy, first published by Prize Comics in 1954, went toe to toe with
such menaces as Hottsky Trottsky, Super Khakalovich, Rhode Island Red and Poison
Ivan.
Although critically acclaimed in years to come,
Fighting American never really went over big with comic readers of the time.
More recently, when Marvel successfully sued Rob Liefeld over the similarities
between his proposed AGENT AMERICA series and Marvel’s Captain America,
Liefeld acquired the FIGHTING AMERICAN license and retooled his series to match
the terms of the lawsuit, but Liefeld’s new Fighting American came and went in
1997 after 8 issues total, with barely a peep from the marketplace.
In more recent years, both DC and Marvel have
introduced a few new star-spangled super types. In 1978, DC introduced Steel,
a World War II-era cyborg battling the Nazis both abroad and on the home front.
As described in STEEL #1, U.S. Marine Hank
Heywood volunteers to undergo his mentor’s bioretardant process to rebuild his
body after he’s critically wounded in an attack on his military base. As a
result of the procedure, Heywood’s pulped bones and skull are enshrouded in
steel casings, and micro-motors are implanted in his joints to allow him to move
the weight of his new steel skeleton. In addition, the “bioretardant formula”
was used to induce skin growth over most of Heywood’s charred body. At the end
of the ordeal, Heywood had become “Steel, the Indestructible Man.”
Steel’s comic only lasted five issues; he made
a few appearances in ALL-STAR SQUADRON, where he was dubbed “Commander Steel,”
but that was about it. Later, Hank Heywood resurfaced as an old man in the pages
of JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA, where it was discovered that the old crank had
subjected his grandson to the same procedure (seemingly unnecessarily, which is
pretty creepy when you think about it), and offered the then-down-on-its-luck
JLA a state-of-the-art headquarters if they would accept his grandson, the new Steel,
as a member.
They agreed, and young Hank Heywood III paid the
price, as the neophyte hero was murdered by longtime JLA enemy Professor Ivo not
long after his induction.
One of the funnier treatments of American-based
characters by DC Comics can be found in the pages of BATMAN AND THE OUTSIDERS, a
relatively short-lived team book combining Batman with disparate DC characters
both old and new. Written by Mike W. Barr and drawn primarily by Jim Aparo (and
later, Alan Davis), BATMAN AND THE OUTSIDERS is probably best known for its
wildly colorful and cartoony villains. Case in point: The Force of July,
a top-secret government strike force that wrongly believes Batman and his new
teammates to be anti-American subversive agents. This bunch was a sure sign of
how things had changed in comics by the 1970s and ‘80s: you’d never see a
bunch of symbolically American characters used as villains in the Golden or even
Silver Ages.
For those keeping track at home, the Force of
July consisted of team leader Major Victory, Lady Liberty, Mayflower, Sparkler
and Silent Majority. Hey, if you think these guys are goofy, remind me to tell
you about the Nuclear Family or the Duke of Oil sometime…
Most of Marvel’s more recent American heroes
tie into Marvel’s long-running CAPTAIN AMERICA series. Two extremely obscure
characters, the Spirit of ‘76 and the Patriot, were both
revealed to have filled in for Captain America when the original, Steve Rogers,
was missing in action at the end of World War II (frozen in a block of ice, as
it turns out. But we’ll get to that in a month or so…).
In a popular 1980s CAPTAIN AMERICA storyline,
after Steve Rogers refuses to take orders directly from the U.S. government, the
feds repossess his uniform and shield and hand them over to John Walker, also
known as Cap’s headline-hungry adversary the Super-Patriot, who is
hired as the replacement Captain America.One of Walker’s confederates is also
hired by the government, and swiftly dubbed Battlestar.
Rogers assumes a new costumed identity,
meanwhile, in a uniform similar to his traditional outfit. After Walker turns
out to be a loose cannon and is cut loose by the government, they publicly
return the uniform and shield to its rightful owner, and then quietly secure the
new uniform from Steve Rogers, which they then give to Walker, who continues to
work for the government in a quieter capacity as the U.S. Agent.
Although Battlestar seems to have faded into
Marvel Universe obscurity, the U.S. Agent can still be seen appearing in various
series from time to time.
Before anybody e-mails, yes, Scott realizes he
failed to include Yankee Poodle from CAPTAIN CARROT AND HIS AMAZING ZOO CREW.
Gotta draw the line somewhere , I say. If you disagree, or have another question
entirely, send it to Scott Tipton at stipton99x@moviepoopshoot.com.