Who was the first comic book super hero?

Then again, there’s this charming cover from 1943, Action Comics # 58:

http://www.supermanhomepage.com/images/comic-covers/Pre-Crisis-Covers/1943/act058s-tb.html

“Superman Says YOU Can Slap A Jap!” Buy war bonds, everybody! Yipes.

Yow, Dr. Occult goes back to '35? That’s pretty impressive…that’s only a year after Mandrake hit newspapers. For that matter, it’s only a couple of years after the comic book as we know it came to be!

Found this - Dr Occult flying in red cape and boots before Superman’s debut.

http://www.supermanartists.comics.org/superart/MoreFun016-page1-color.jpg

Also more about him here - warning very graphic intensive so might be slow to load.
http://www.supermanartists.comics.org/superart/JOE_SHUSTER2.htm

War propaganda is never subtle or refined.

Besides, he also used the term “Ratzis”.

Excellent links. It looks like Joe Shuster had been reading a little Flash Gordon before doing that spread of Occult in cape and boots. :slight_smile:

The giant robot in Federal Men is pretty cool, too.

When the classic 60s Marvel comics such as the Fantastic Four and the Hulk were reprinted in the UK in the 70s, the original enemies who were the “Reds” or the Russians became citizens of a mythical Eastern country called Bodavia and the villiain the “Red Ghost” became the “Mad Ghost” .

[QUOTE=Patr100]
Found this - Dr Occult flying in red cape and boots before Superman’s debut.

http://www.supermanartists.comics.org/superart/MoreFun016-page1-color.jpg

QUOTE]
He’s flying with the aid of a special belt. This, in my mind, is similar to Batman’s lack of super-powers.

Hell, the golden age Hawkman flew with the aid of a “belt of Ninth Metal” (?) and big wings strapped to his back. Always wondered how he flapped them without using his arms.

The Crimson Avenger was basically a lift from The Shadow, but this may or may not be significant. In The Great Comic Book Heroes, Jules Feiffer points out that nearly all the golden age artists merrily ripped each other off stylistically, and backs up his case with a fair number of art samples. For that matter, artists merrily ripped off movies, sci-fi novels, and each other for ideas… Philip Wylie is generally given credit for inventing the idea of a bulletproof man who can leap for miles.

Which “superhero” with “superpowers” came first…

Hercules or Samson?

Neither one–Gilgamesh. :slight_smile: