Tuesday, April 15, 2025

MINOR SUPER-HERO ROUND-UP 043

A grab bag of old characters I skipped over back in the early days when I thought that this blog wasn't going to be completely self-indulgent. 

Mr Clue

He only had one adventure in which he solves the murder of a mayor by a police chief, but Mr Clue is too great a name not to take note of. (Master Comics 001, 1940)

the Red Gaucho

A swashbuckling hero in the Zorro mode, the Red Gaucho protects the South American nation of Santa Palos from threats both foreign and domestic before eventually just kind of wandering North to have adventures in a sort of generic Central America. He's a fun character! He has one of the biggest hats in comics!

The Red Gaucho is also a character I think about whenever the topic of white supremacy comes up. White supremacy is one of those topics that gets a lot of people very angry, but at its base it's simply the belief that the world consists of white people and everyone else and more specifically that it's white people versus everyone else in a competition to keep white people on top, where they belong. And the further back you go, the less people felt the need to hide the fact that that was their worldview, and possibly the place that that attitude is most on display is in early Golden Age comics - just read any set outside North America and you'll catch on to it pretty quickly.

Anyway, that is all to say that even though it's more subtle than a lot of other examples of this worldview in comics, ever since I noticed that every single appearance of the Red Gaucho includes a disclaimer assuring readers that he was in fact the child of two Americans and not some horrible South American - heavens forfend! - his smiling face pops into my head whenever the subject comes up.(Nickel Comics 004, 1940)

the Hawk:


On a less heavy note, here's the Hawk! Created by George Brenner, who also created the Clock, the Hawk has the distinction of being the first masked crimefighter to appear in a comic that would eventually be amalgamated into the DC Comics fold (the Clock had only appeared in Centaur comics up until this point and wouldn't make his way into a Quality book for a few months yet). A heady and heavily qualified distinction!

The Hawk is secretly T. James Harrington II, wealthy and useless playboy who hangs around looking bored until some crime happens and it's time for the Hawk to hit the streets. It's a bit Bruce Wayne/Batman only without the parental murder.



Unlike Batman, the Hawk leans pretty minimal on the costume front, with his major identifying feature being a set of slip-on claws. 

The Hawk also has a couple of assistants named Link and Rollo who are touted as the only people who know the Hawk's identity but who don't get much time to show their stuff in this, their one-panel appearance. Astute readers might note that the crook that the Hawk has just captured likely also knows his secret identity at this point but please note that Link and Rollo are identified as the only living people to know the secret. Sinister stuff!

DC has already gone with the Crimson Avenger as the Official First Golden Age Super-Hero but I reckon that the Hawk would be a fun guy to be brung back for some future story involving early mystery men antics. (Feature Funnies 002, 1937)

*Hero Update* Shock Gibson:



It had to happen someday: Shock Gibson disguises himself as a cowboy and in the process abandons his iconic helmet forever. Fare the well, helmet. (Speed Comics 007, 1940)

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