- Source: 1942 in comics
Notable events of 1942 in comics.
Events and publications
= January
=January: Holyoke Publishing purchases the publishing rights to Cat-Man Comics and Captain Aero Comics from Helnit Publishing.
4Most Comics (1942 series) #1 - Novelty Press
Action Comics (1938 series) #44 - DC Comics
Adventure Comics (1938 series) #70 - DC Comics
All-American Comics (1939 series) #34 - DC Comics
All-Star Comics (1940 series) #8 - DC Comics: First appearance of Wonder Woman
Batman (1940 series) #8 - DC Comics
Big 3 (1940 series) #7 - Fox Feature Syndicate: Final Issue
Bulletman (1941 series) #3 - Fawcett Comics
Captain America Comics (1941 series) #10 - Timely Comics
Captain Marvel Adventures (1941 series) #6 - Fawcett Comics
Cat-Man Comics (1941 series) #6 - Holyoke Publishing
Crack Comics (1940 series) #20 - Quality Comics
Daring Mystery Comics (1940 series) #8 - Final issue, renamed Comedy Comics starting with issue #9.
Detective Comics (1937 series) #59 - DC Comics
Flash Comics (1940 series) #25 - DC Comics
Marvel Mystery Comics (1939 series) #27 - Timely Comics
Master Comics (1940 series) #22 - Fawcett Comics
More Fun Comics (1936 series) #75 - DC Comics
Mystery Men Comics (1939 series) #30 - Fox Feature Syndicate
Sensation Comics #1 (1942 series) #1 - DC Comics
Star Spangled Comics (1941 series) #4 - DC Comics
Superman (1939 series) #14 - DC Comics
Target Comics (1941 series) #11 - Novelty Press
The Eagle (1941 series) #4 - Fox Feature Syndicate, Final Issue
The Flame (1940 series) #8 - Fox Feature Syndicate, Final Issue
U.S.A. Comics (1941 series) #3 - Timely Comics
U.S. Jones (1941 series) #2 - Fox Feature Syndicate, Final Issue
V…- Comics (1942 series) #1 - Fox Feature Syndicate
Weird Comics (1940 series) #20 - Fox Feature Syndicate, Final Issue
Whiz Comics (1940 series) #26 - Fawcett Comics
Wonderworld Comics #33 - Fox Feature Syndicate, Final Issue
= February
=February 10. In Italy, after the outbreak of the war with USA, Tuffolino, by Federico Petrocchi and Pier Lorenzo De Vita, replaces Topolino (Mickey Mouse), until then the only American comic tolerated by the Fascist censure. The new comic, a shameless plagiarism of the Disney original, with human characters instead of animals, lasts until December 1943.
Action Comics (1938 series) #45 - DC Comics
Adventure Comics (1938 series) #71 - DC Comics
All-American Comics (1939 series) #35 - DC Comics
All-Star Comics (1940 series) #9 - DC Comics
Blue Beetle (1939 series) #11 - Fox Feature Syndicate
Captain Aero Comics (1941 series) #2 - Holyoke Publishing
Captain America Comics (1941 series) #11 - Timely Comics
Captain Marvel Adventures (1941 series) #7 - Fawcett Comics
Cat-Man Comics (1941 series) #7 - Holyoke Publishing
Crack Comics (1940 series) #21 - Quality Comics
Detective Comics (1937 series) #60 - DC Comics
Dime Comics #1 - Leo Bachle reinvents the Canadian national personification Johnny Canuck as a superhero comic.
Flash Comics (1940 series) #26 - DC Comics
Green Mask (1940 series) #9 - Fox Feature Syndicate
Jingle Jangle Comics #1 - Eastern Color
Marvel Mystery Comics (1939 series) #28 - Timely Comics
Master Comics (1940 series) #23 - Fawcett Comics
More Fun Comics (1936 series) #76 - DC Comics
Mystery Men Comics (1939 series) #31 - Fox Feature Syndicate, Final Issue
Sensation Comics (1942 series) #2 — DC Comics: In this issue the Wonder Woman characters Etta Candy and Doctor Poison make their debut.
Spy Smasher (1941 series) #3 - Fawcett Comics
Star Spangled Comics (1941 series) #5 - DC Comics
Target Comics (1941 series) #12 - Novelty Press
Whiz Comics (1940 series) #27 - Fawcett Comics
= March
=March 6: The Captain Marvel villain Ibac makes his debut.
March 6: Fox Feature Syndicate goes bankrupt, canceling several titles with Blue Beetle moving to Holyoke Publishing (issues 11-30) until Fox regained Blue Beetle in 1944.
March 11: Marten Toonder's Tom Poes story De Zieke Hertog marks the debut of Olivier B. Bommel's faithful butler Joost.
March 15: The final episode of Tailspin Tommy, at this point drawn by Reynold Brown, is published. .
The Dutch comics magazine Sjors is banned on Nazi orders. It will reappear after the war in June 1947.
The final issue of Blue Ribbon Comics is published.
The final issue of Human Top is published.
Action Comics (1938 series) #46 - DC Comics
Adventure Comics (1938 series) #72 - DC Comics
All-American Comics (1939 series) #36 - DC Comics
Batman (1940 series) #9 - DC Comics
Bulletman (1941 series) #4 - Fawcett Comics
Captain Aero Comics (1941 series) #3 - Holyoke Publishing
Captain America Comics (1941 series) #12 - Timely Comics
Captain Marvel Adventures (1941 series) #8 - Fawcett Comics
Cat-Man Comics (1941 series) #8 - Holyoke Publishing
Crack Comics (1940 series) #22 - Quality Comics
Detective Comics (1937 series) #61 - DC Comics
Flash Comics (1940 series) #27 - DC Comics
Marvel Mystery Comics (1939 series) #29 - Timely Comics
Master Comics (1940 series) #24 - Fawcett Comics
More Fun Comics (1936 series) #77 - DC Comics
Sensation Comics (1942 series) #3 — DC Comics
Star Spangled Comics (1941 series) #6 - DC Comics
Superman (1939 series) #15 - DC Comics
Target Comics (1942 series) #1 - Novelty Press
V…- Comics (1942 series) #2 - Fox Feature Syndicate, Final Issue
Whiz Comics (1940 series) #28 - Fawcett Comics
= Spring Issue
=4Most Comics (1942 series) #2 - Novelty Press
All Flash Quarterly (1941 series) #4 - DC Comics
All-Winners Comics (1941 series) #4 - Timely Comics
America's Greatest Comics (1941 series) #2 - Fawcett Comics
Green Lantern Quarterly (1941 series) #3 - DC Comics
Human Torch Comics (1940 series) #7 - Timely Comics
Leading Comics (1941 series) #2 - DC Comics
Minute-Man (1941 series) #3 - Fawcett Comics: Final issue
Sub-Mariner Comics (1941 series) #5 - Timely Comics
World's Finest Comics (1941 series) #5 - DC Comics
Wow Comics (1940 series) #5 - Fawcett Comics
Young Allies Comics (1941 series) #3 - Timely Comics
= April
=April 16: Marten Toonder's Tom Poes story Het Monster-Ei marks the debut of Wammes Waggel.
April 20: The first episode of Crockett Johnson's Barnaby is published.
Action Comics (1938 series) #47 - DC Comics
Adventure Comics (1938 series) #73 - DC Comics
All-American Comics (1939 series) #37 - DC Comics
All-Star Comics (1940 series) #10 - DC Comics
Batman (1940 series) #10 - DC Comics
Captain Aero Comics (1941 series) #4 - Holyoke Publishing
Captain America Comics (1941 series) #13 - Timely Comics
Captain Marvel Adventures (1941 series) #9 - Fawcett Comics
Cat-Man Comics (1941 series) #9 - Holyoke Publishing
Comedy Comics (1942 series) #9 - Timely Comics
Detective Comics (1937 series) #62 - DC Comics
Flash Comics (1940 series) #28 - DC Comics
Joker Comics (1942 series) #1 - Timely Comics. In its first issue Basil Wolverton's Powerhouse Pepper makes its debut.
Marvel Mystery Comics (1939 series) #30 - Timely Comics
Master Comics (1940 series) #25 - Fawcett Comics
More Fun Comics (1936 series) #78 - DC Comics
Red Ryder Comics, with issue #6, taken over from Hawley by Dell Comics.
Sensation Comics (1942 series) #4 — DC Comics
Spy Smasher (1941 series) #4 - Fawcett Comics
Star Spangled Comics (1941 series) #7 - DC Comics
Target Comics (1942 series) #2 - Novelty Press
Whiz Comics (1940 series) #29 - Fawcett Comics
= May
=May 15: In the U.S. internment camp for Japanese-Americans, Santa Anita, California at the Assembly Center, Chris Ishii creates the comic strip Li'l Neebo for the prisoners. The series is later continued by, respectively, Tom Okamoto and Jack Ito until 1944.
May 16: The British comics magazine Funny Wonder merges with another magazine Wonder.
The final episode of Tailspin Tommy, originally created by Hal Forrest, is published.
Action Comics (1938 series) #48 - DC Comics
Adventure Comics (1938 series) #74 - DC Comics
All-American Comics (1939 series) #38 - DC Comics
Bulletman (1941 series) #5 - Fawcett Comics
Captain Aero Comics (1941 series) #5 - Holyoke Publishing
Captain America Comics (1941 series) #14 - Timely Comics
Captain Marvel Adventures (1941 series) #10 - Fawcett Comics
Captain Marvel Adventures (1941 series) #11 - Fawcett Comics
Cat-Man Comics (1941 series) #10 - Holyoke Publishing
Crack Comics (1940 series) #23 - Quality Comics
Detective Comics (1937 series) #63 - DC Comics
Flash Comics (1940 series) #29 - DC Comics
Marvel Mystery Comics (1939 series) #31 - Timely Comics
Master Comics (1940 series) #26 - Fawcett Comics
More Fun Comics (1936 series) #79 - DC Comics
Sensation Comics (1942 series) #5 — DC Comics: In this issue the supervillain Paula von Gunther makes her debut.
Star Spangled Comics (1941 series) #8 - DC Comics
Superman (1939 series) #16 - DC Comics
Target Comics (1942 series) #3 - Novelty Press
U.S.A. Comics (1941 series) #4 - Timely Comics
Whiz Comics (1940 series) #30 - Fawcett Comics
= June
=June 11: Hergé's Tintin story The Secret of the Unicorn is prepublished in Le Soir. Halfway the story butler Nestor and the castle of Marlinspike Hall make their debut.
June 13: The final episode of comic strip The Shadow by Walter B. Gibson and Vernon Greene is published.
Action Comics (1938 series) #49 - DC Comics
Adventure Comics (1938 series) #75 - DC Comics
All-American Comics (1939 series) #39 - DC Comics
All Star Comics (1940 series) #11 - DC Comics
Batman (1940 series) #11 - DC Comics
Blue Beetle (1939 series) #12 - Holyoke Publishing
Captain Aero Comics (1941 series) #6 - Holyoke Publishing
Captain America Comics (1941 series) #15 - Timely Comics
Captain Marvel Adventures (1941 series) #12 - Fawcett Comics
Cat-Man Comics (1941 series) #11 - Holyoke Publishing
Comedy Comics (1942 series) #10 - Timely Comics
Detective Comics (1937 series) #64 - DC Comics
Flash Comics (1940 series) #30 - DC Comics
Joker Comics (1942 series) #2 - Timely Comics
Marvel Mystery Comics (1939 series) #32 - Timely Comics
Master Comics (1940 series) #27 - Fawcett Comics
More Fun Comics (1936 series) #80 - DC Comics
Sensation Comics (1942 series) #6 — DC Comics
Star Spangled Comics (1941 series) #9 - DC Comics
Target Comics (1942 series) #4 - Novelty Press
Yank, the Army Weekly #1 - Harvey Comics: In its first issue George Baker's Sad Sack makes its debut.
Whiz Comics (1940 series) #31 - Fawcett Comics
= Summer Issue
=All Flash Quarterly (1941 series) #5 - DC Comics. In this issue the villain trio Winky, Blinky, and Noddy make their debut.
All-Winners Comics (1941 series) #5 - Timely Comics
America's Greatest Comics (1941 series) #3 - Fawcett Comics
Green Lantern Quarterly (1941 series) #4 - DC Comics
Human Torch Comics (1940 series) #8 - Timely Comics
Leading Comics (1941 series) #3 - DC Comics
Sub-Mariner Comics (1941 series) #6 - Timely Comics
Wonder Woman (1942 series) #1 - DC Comics, which marks the first stand-alone series of William Moulton Marston and Harry G. Peter's Wonder Woman. In its first issue supervillain Ares makes his debut.
World's Finest Comics (1941 series) #6 - DC Comics
U.S.A. Comics (1941 series) #5 - Timely Comics
Young Allies Comics (1941 series) #4 - Timely Comics
= July
=The American comics magazine The Funnies changes its name to New Funnies.
Action Comics (1938 series) #50 - DC Comics
Adventure Comics (1938 series) #76 - DC Comics
All-American Comics (1939 series) #40 - DC Comics
Bulletman (1941 series) #6 - Fawcett Comics
Captain Aero Comics (1941 series) #7 - Holyoke Publishing
Captain America Comics (1941 series) #16 - Timely Comics
Captain Marvel Adventures (1941 series) #13 - Fawcett Comics
Cat-Man Comics (1941 series) #12 - Holyoke Publishing
Crack Comics (1940 series) #24 - Quality Comics
Crime Does Not Pay debuts with issue #22, continuing the numbering of Silver Streak Comics — Lev Gleason Publications
Detective Comics (1937 series) #65 - DC Comics
Flash Comics (1940 series) #31 - DC Comics
Gene Autry Comics (1941 series) #2 - Fawcett Comics
Marvel Mystery Comics (1939 series) #33 - Timely Comics
More Fun Comics (1936 series) #81 - DC Comics
Sensation Comics (1942 series) #7 — DC Comics
Star Spangled Comics (1941 series) #10 - DC Comics
Superman (1939 series) #17 - DC Comics
Target Comics (1942 series) #5 - Novelty Press
Whiz Comics (1940 series) #32 - Fawcett Comics
= August
=In Al Capp's Li'l Abner the comic-within-a-comic Fearless Fosdick makes its debut, though only as a reference. For his first adventure within the series itself readers have to wait until 19 June 1944.
Action Comics (1938 series) #51 - DC Comics
Adventure Comics (1938 series) #77 - DC Comics: In this issue Alfred Bester and Stan Kaye's Genius Jones makes its debut.
All-American Comics (1939 series) #41 - DC Comics
All Star Comics (1940 series) #12 - DC Comics
Batman (1940 series) #12 - DC Comics
Captain America Comics (1941 series) #17 - Timely Comics
Detective Comics (1937 series) #66 - DC Comics: In this issue the Batman villain Harvey Dent, better known as Two-Face, makes his debut.
Flash Comics (1940 series) #32 - DC Comics
Marvel Mystery Comics (1939 series) #34 - Timely Comics
More Fun Comics (1936 series) #82 - DC Comics
Sensation Comics (1942 series) #8 — DC Comics
Star Spangled Comics (1941 series) #11 - DC Comics
Target Comics (1942 series) #6 - Novelty Press
= September
=September 4: In Chester Gould's Dick Tracy the villain Pruneface makes his debut.
Action Comics (1938 series) #52 - DC Comics
Adventure Comics (1938 series) #78 - DC Comics
All-American Comics (1939 series) #42 - DC Comics
All-Winners Comics (1941 series) #6 - Timely Comics
Captain Aero Comics (1941 series) #8 - Holyoke Publishing
Captain America Comics (1941 series) #18 - Timely Comics
Cat-Man Comics (1941 series) #13 - Holyoke Publishing
Comedy Comics (1942 series) #11 - Timely Comics
Crack Comics (1940 series) #25 - Quality Comics
Detective Comics (1937 series) #67 - DC Comics
Flash Comics (1940 series) #33 - DC Comics
Human Torch Comics (1940 series) #9 - Timely Comics
Joker Comics (1942 series) #3 - Timely Comics
Marvel Mystery Comics (1939 series) #35 - Timely Comics
More Fun Comics (1936 series) #83 - DC Comics
Sensation Comics (1942 series) #9 — DC Comics
Star Spangled Comics (1941 series) #12 - DC Comics
Sub-Mariner Comics (1941 series) #7 - Timely Comics
Superman (1939 series) #18 - DC Comics
Target Comics (1942 series) #7 - Novelty Press
Young Allies Comics (1941 series) #5 - Timely Comics
= Fall Issue
=All Flash (1941 series) #6, previously All Flash Quarterly - DC Comics
Green Lantern Quarterly (1941 series) #5 - DC Comics
Leading Comics (1941 series) #4 - DC Comics
Wonder Woman (1942 series) #2 - DC Comics
World's Finest Comics (1941 series) #7 - DC Comics
= October
=October 1: Bob Karp, Carl Barks and Jack Hannah create the first American adventure comics series based on Donald Duck. The series kicks off with the story Donald Duck Finds Pirate Gold.
October 11; Josè Carioca debuts in comics, in a Sunday table by Hubie Karp and Bob Grant.
In Belgium the Nazis ban the comics magazine Bimbo.
Action Comics (1938 series) #53 - DC Comics
Adventure Comics (1938 series) #79 - DC Comics
All-American Comics (1939 series) #43 - DC Comics
All Star Comics (1940 series) #13 - DC Comics
Batman (1940 series) #13 - DC Comics
Captain America Comics (1941 series) #19 - Timely Comics
Cat-Man Comics (1941 series) #14 - Holyoke Publishing
Detective Comics (1937 series) #68 - DC Comics
Flash Comics (1940 series) #34 - DC Comics
Marvel Mystery Comics (1939 series) #36 - Timely Comics
More Fun Comics (1936 series) #84 - DC Comics
Sensation Comics (1942 series) #10 — DC Comics
Star Spangled Comics (1941 series) #13 - DC Comics
Target Comics (1942 series) #8 - Novelty Press
= November
=Action Comics (1938 series) #54 - DC Comics
Adventure Comics (1938 series) #80 - DC Comics
Air Fighter Comics (1941 series) #2 - Hillman Periodicals
All-American Comics (1939 series) #44 - DC Comics
All-Flash (1941 series) #07, previously quarterly - DC Comics
All-Winners Comics (1941 series) #7 - Timely Comics
Captain Aero Comics (1941 series) #9 - Holyoke Publishing
Captain America Comics (1941 series) #20 - Timely Comics
Cat-Man Comics (1941 series) #15 - Holyoke Publishing
Crack Comics (1940 series) #26 - Quality Comics
Detective Comics (1937 series) #69 - DC Comics
Flash Comics (1940 series) #35 - DC Comics
Gene Autry Comics (1941 series) #3 - Fawcett Comics
Joker Comics (1942 series) #4 - Timely Comics
Marvel Mystery Comics (1939 series) #37 - Timely Comics
More Fun Comics (1936 series) #85 - DC Comics
Sensation Comics (1942 series) #11 — DC Comics
Star Spangled Comics (1941 series) #14 - DC Comics
Sub-Mariner Comics (1941 series) #8 - Timely Comics
Superman (1939 series) #19 - DC Comics
Target Comics (1942 series) #9 - Novelty Press
= December
=The Swedish comic strip Allan Kämpe by Eugen Semitjov makes its debut.
Action Comics (1938 series) #55 - DC Comics
Adventure Comics (1938 series) #81 - DC Comics
Air Fighters Comics (1941 series) #3 - Hillman Periodicals: In this issue Heap makes his debut.
All-American Comics (1939 series) #45 - DC Comics
All Star Comics (1940 series) #14 - DC Comics
Batman (1940 series) #14 - DC Comics
Captain America Comics (1941 series) #21 - Timely Comics
Cat-Man Comics (1941 series) #16 - Holyoke Publishing
Comedy Comics (1942 series) #12 - Timely Comics
Detective Comics (1937 series) #70 - DC Comics
Flash Comics (1940 series) #36 - DC Comics
Joker Comics (1942 series) #5 - Timely Comics
Marvel Mystery Comics (1939 series) #38 - Timely Comics
More Fun Comics (1936 series) #86 - DC Comics
Sensation Comics (1942 series) #12 — DC Comics
Star Spangled Comics (1941 series) #15 - DC Comics
Target Comics (1942 series) #10 - Novelty Press
U.S.A. Comics (1941 series) #6 - Timely Comics
= Winter Issue
=Boy Commandos (1942 series) #1 - DC Comics
Comic Cavalcade (1942 series) #1 - DC Comics
Green Lantern Quarterly (1941 series) #6 - DC Comics
Leading Comics (1941 series) #5 - DC Comics
World's Finest Comics (1941 series) #8 - DC Comics
Eugen Semitjov begins publishing Allan Kämpe
= Specific date unknown
=The final issue of the Flemish comics magazine Wonderland is published, a supplement to the newspaper De Dag.
The first episode of Carl Grubert's The Berrys is published. It will run until 1974.
Bovil creates his comic strip Tusen Och en Natt, based on Arabian Nights. It will run until his death in 1949.
Vic Herman creates Winnie the Wac.
Philip Mendoza draws The Early Life of Winston Churchill, which is the earliest biographical comic about Winston Churchill.
During the internment of Japanese Americans Bennie Nobori draws the comic strip Yankee Reporter for the prisoners in camp Topaz in Central Utah.
Joe Simon and Jack Kirby leave Timely Comics and move to National Comics (now DC Comics).
Ángel Umpierrez launches his gag comic Don Cristóbal.
Golden Arrow (1942 series) #1 - Fawcett Comics
Births
= February
=February 6: Clive Collins, British cartoonist, (d. 2022).
Deaths
= April
=April 1:
John Devlin, American comics artist (assistant of Rube Goldberg, continued Looy Dot Dope) and editor (Quality Comics), dies at age 36.
Charles H. Wellington, American comics artist (Pa's (Imported) Son-In-Law), dies at age 48.
= May
=May 12: George William Wakefield, British comics artist (worked for Film Fun, made comics based on Laurel & Hardy), dies from a stroke at age 54.
May 14: René Bull, Irish comics illustrator and comics artist, dies at age 79.
= June
=June 21: Victor T'Sas, A.K.A. Vias, Belgian painter, advertising illustrator and illustrator (made various picture stories and text comics for Le Globe Illustré, Le Patriote Illustré, Pourquoi Pas? and publishing company Brepols), dies at age 75.
= July
=July 11: Antonio Salemme, Italian comics artist (Il Principe Azzurro), dies at age 48 or 49.
July 21: Giove Toppi, Italian comics artist (Topo Lino, Renato Gallo), dies at age 53.
= August
=August 10: Albert Guillaume, French caricaturist, illustrator and poster designer who also made some occasional pantomime comics, dies at age 69.
= September
=September 11: Horst Rosenthal, German-born French comics artist (made a series of text comics while incarcerated in Gurs internment camp, among them a comic strip starring Mickey Mouse named Mickey au Camp de Gurs), is executed in Auschwitz at the age of 27.
= November
=November 7: J. Norman Lynd, American comics artist (Family Portraits, continued Vignettes of Life), dies at age 63.
November 11: Billy DeBeck, American comics artist (Barney Google), dies at the age of 52.
November 26: Larry Whittington, American comics artist (Fritzi Ritz) dies in a car accident at the age of 39.
= Specific date unknown
=Emil Reinicke, German comics artist (published in Fliegende Blätter), dies at age 82 or 83.
Josiah Walker, aka Jos Walker, British comics artist (Sexton Blake), dies at age 55.
First issues by title
Boy Commandos, cover-dated Winter, published by DC Comics.
Comic Cavalcade, cover-dated Winter, published by DC Comics
Hangman Comics, cover-dated Spring, published by MLJ Magazines Inc.
Sensation Comics, cover-dated January, published by DC Comics.
V…- Comics, cover-dated January, published by Fox Feature Syndicate
Wonder Woman, cover-dated Summer, published by DC Comics.
Initial appearances by character name
Airboy in Air Fighters Comics #2 (November), created by writers Charles Biro and Dick Wood, and artist Al Camy - Hillman Periodicals
Air Wave in Detective Comics #60 (February), created by Murray Boltinoff - DC Comics
Boomerang in More Fun Comics #79 (May) - DC Comics
Dan the Dyna-Mite in Star Spangled Comics #7 (April), created by Mort Weisinger and Hal Sharp - DC Comics
Dan Turpin in Detective Comics #64 (June), created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby - DC Comics
Doctor Poison in Sensation Comics #2 (February), created by William Moulton Marston and Harry G. Peter - DC Comics
Etta Candy' in Sensation Comics #2 (February), created by William Moulton Marston and Harry G. Peter - DC Comics
False-Face in Leading Comics #2 (National Comics, Spring), created by Mort Weisinger and Creig Flessel
Gay Ghost in Sensation Comics #1 (January), created by Gardner Fox and Howard Purcell - DC Comics
Guardian in Star Spangled Comics #7 (April), created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby - DC Comics
Heap in Air Fighters Comics #3 (December), created by Harry Stein and Mort Leav - Hillman Periodicals
Kid Eternity in Hit Comics #25 (December), created by Otto Binder and Sheldon Moldoff - DC Comics
Liberty Belle in Boy Commandos #1 (December), created by Don Cameron and Chuck Winter - DC Comics
Mary Marvel in Captain Marvel Adventures #18 (December), created by Otto Binder and Marc Swayze - DC Comics
Metallo in World's Finest Comics #6 (June), created by Robert Bernstein and Al Plastino - DC Comics
Mister Terrific (Terry Sloane) in Sensation Comics #1 (DC Comics, January), created by Charles Resizenstein and Hal Sharpe
Paul Kirk, created by Jack Kirby, in Adventure Comics #58 (January), published by DC Comics
The Prankster in Action Comics #51 (August), created by Jerry Siegel and John Sikela - DC Comics
The Puzzler in Action Comics #49 (June), created by Jerry Siegel and John Sikela - DC Comics
Shade in Flash Comics #33 (September),created by Gardner Fox - DC Comics
Rag Doll in Flash Comics #36 (December), created by Gardner Fox - DC Comics
Robotman in Star Spangled Comics #7 (April), created by Jerry Siegel and Leo Nowak - DC Comics
Sal Maroni in Detective Comics #66 (August), created by Bill Finger and Bob Kane - DC Comics
Spider Widow in Feature Comics #57 (June), created by Frank Borth - DC Comics
TNT in Star Spangled Comics #7 (April), created by Mort Weisinger and Hal Sharp - DC Comics
Two Face in Detective Comics #66 (August), created by Bill Finger and Bob Kane - DC Comics
Wildcat in Sensation Comics #1 (January), created by Bill Finger and Irwin Hasen - DC Comics
Wonder Woman, created by William Moulton Marston, in All Star Comics#8 (January), published by All-American Publications
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Stan Lee
- Wonder Woman
- Jerry Siegel
- Aquaman
- Jack Kirby
- Daftar film terlaris
- Lex Luthor
- Dick Purcell
- In Old Arizona
- Komik Indonesia
- 1942 in comics
- List of DC Comics characters: W
- Archie (comic book)
- Liberty Belle (comics)
- Pluto Saves the Ship
- Timely Comics
- Mystic Comics
- List of Marvel Comics Golden Age characters
- List of years in comics
- Lasso of Truth