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All-American Comics is a comics anthology and the flagship title of comic book publisher All-American Publications, one of the forerunners of DC Comics. It ran for 102 issues from 1939 to 1948. It ran for 102 issues from 1939 to 1948.
During All-American's existence, much cross-promotion took place between the two editorially independent companies, so much so that the first appearance of the Justice Society of America, in All Star Comics #3 (Winter 1940/41), included in its roster All-American characters the Atom, the Flash, Green Lantern and Hawkman, and the National ...
All Star Comics #1 (Summer 1940). Cover art is a collage of previously published panels by various artists. The original concept for All Star Comics was an anthology title containing the most popular series from the other anthology titles published by both All-American Publications and National Comics. [1]: 13–14
All-Star Comics Archives: 0 2005 1940 All-Star Comics #1–2 1-4012-0791-X: 1 1992 1940–1941 All-Star Comics #3–6 1-5638-9019-4: 2 1993 1941–1942 All-Star Comics #7–10 0-9302-8912-9: 3 1997 1942 All-Star Comics #11–14 1-5638-9370-3: 4 1998 1943 All-Star Comics #15–18 1-5638-9433-5: 5 1999 1943–1944 All-Star Comics #19–23 1-5638 ...
Both National Comics Publications and All-American Publications would introduce many new featured superheroes in American comic books in superhero comics anthology tales like More Fun Comics, Adventure Comics, Detective Comics, Action Comics, All-American Comics, Superman, Flash Comics, Batman, All Star Comics, World's Finest Comics, All-Flash ...
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All-American Men of War did not start with issue #1; it was a renaming of the 1948 series All-American Western, which itself was a renaming of the 1939 series All-American Comics. The title became All-American Men of War with issue #127, published in August–September 1952. [2] All-American Men of War published two issues before rebooting the ...
Ultra-Man (Gary Concord) is the name of two fictional comic-book superheroes, father and son, that first appeared during the 1940s, the period fans and historians call the Golden Age of comic books. Both were characters of All-American Publications, which merged, in 1946, with DC Comics-predecessor National Periodical Publications.