Friday, June 19, 2026

SUPER HERO FILE 003: CAPTAIN AMERICA

(Captain America Comics 001, 1940)

Captain America! Hitler-Puncher Number One! Quite possibly in the top five of super-heroics' most well-known origins - a young man, physically unfit for the military but wishing to serve his country, is transformed into a super soldier with a combination of chemicals and radiation. The scientist responsible for this is murdered by an enemy spy rendering the young man a unique hero rather than the first of many. His first act as a hero is to bring the assassin to justice. A classic origin story, and one so well-trodden that my dad probably knows it. The really interesting thing about this origin is all the elements of it that were not there at first but rather accreted over time.



Perhaps the biggest difference between the initial presentation of Captain America's origin and the ones that would come later is the fact that Steve Rogers is simply not a character in the original. Okay, perhaps that is too far, but there is absolutely none of the stuff with Steve heading in to volunteer and getting turned away, and certainly none of the later addition of him as the downtrodden but good-hearted patriot. He's merely an emaciated canvas for the doctors to work on - he doesn't even get a word out until after Erskine is shot.

Not quite as thematically potent, perhaps, but the absence of the Vita-Ray treatment after Steve gets his Super Soldier Formula is very notable when you're expecting it. Turns out that that isn't added until the 60s! 


The assassination of Dr Erskine and its aftermath play out essentially the same as they always will, though the assassin is eventually specifically said to be electrocuted after crashing into the Vita-Ray machine, which obviously can't be the case here. Please also note Dr Erskine being called Professor Reinstein here, something that has been given a few different explanations over the years.


Steve Rogers is installed in the US Army as the lowest-ranked Private in history, which might be limiting to an on-the-go young super-hero except for the fact of the vexing conundrum of Camp Lehigh's location, which places him in close proximity to both East and West Coast locations depending on the needs of the story. Rogers' immediate superior, the belligerent Sergeant Duffy, has sadly all but disappeared from modern retellings. 

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SUPER HERO FILE 003: CAPTAIN AMERICA

(Captain America Comics 001, 1940) Captain America! Hitler-Puncher Number One! Quite possibly in the top five of super-heroics' most wel...