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Speed Jaxon was a WWII-era comic strip by Jay Jackson (sometimes under the pseudonym Pol Curi) that ran in some African-American newspapers like the Chicago Defender. Conceptually, they were kind of similar to Buz Sawyer with a focus on wartime adventures, with the notable exception being that the titular hero was Black.

The other significant difference was that Jackson regularly wove in a message of inclusion and equality. In the examples below (all of which are slightly modified scans taken from the Billy Ireland Museum) you can see a number of examples where white American officers express very negative attitudes towards Speed which, in turn, he repsonds to with a mixture of resignation and quiet strength. He repeatedly tolerates the poor behavior, and then tries to prove how wrong people are about Blacks by just being a better hero than the white soldiers.

Of course, just being a better hero is a whole lifetime of issues to unpack. To those who've had to deal with it at all, the notion of having to do twice as much 200% better than their white counterparts in order to be given half as much is a refrain they've had to live their whole lives with. From what I've seen/read of the strip, though, Jackson himself didn't address that other than it was a simple matter of fact. I can only guess that in the 1940s, Jackson didn't feel he could hope for a loftier victory than just even having the chance to be treated as an equal. The dialogue is often a bit ham-fisted, but only in the same way many comic strips of the time were.

But there's another element at play here which seems to be handled with much greater subtlety. Speed's girlfriend in the initial installments was a Black schoolteacher named Carmen Brooks. I don't know what happened to her, but by the time we get to the sequences below, he's found a new love interest in Minta Washington. I can't find an instance where her actual heritage is expressly named (other than she's not Italian) but she's clearly identified as a European blonde. So she's not an American, but still decidedly pretty white. And she's seen here first holding hands (in the fifth piece I reproduce below) and then kissing Speed (in the eighth)! And in neither instance is any particular attention drawn to it; it's just two people interacting somewhat romantically.

Now, that Minta isn't American probably assuaged some possible concerns about showing an interracial couple (not to mention the fact that the strip only appeared in African-American newspapers) but Jackson still threw it out there as a completely normal and casual thing. In 1943, nearly a quarter century before Loving v. Virginia. Amazingly progressive, and extremely deftly handled, I think.

Maybe some of Jackson's overt messaging was a little over-the-top, but I wonder if that was done deliberately to slip these other elements in more surreptitiously. Distract readers with an obvious issue, and slide another one past them while they're complaining about the first. Maybe? I don't know. Frankly, I can't find hardly anything written about Jay Jackson, and even less on Speed Jaxon. I've only been able to find about 30 strips online, and can't even pin down when it first started or stopped. Which is a shame because Jackson seemed to know what he was doing, and creating an entertaining and progressive comic strips besides!
Lobo #2
I've talked before about Dell's Lobo from 1966, and how it featured the first Black character who had the comic named after him. In that previous post, I included scans of the first issue and linked to where you could find scans of the second. So it's available to be read.

But I'm wondering... why hasn't it ever been reprinted? I mean, this is a significant comic -- why hasn't it been reprinted? Is it just a legal issue surrounding who owns the rights? Unlike many of Dell's comics, Lobo featured an original unlicensed character and there's no copyright notice to work with, so the question of who legally has the rights to the story seems unclear. When I posted about this several years back, Britt Reid suggested that it probably is in public domain.

My guess is that no one has deemed that the expense of even just confirming the rights would be made up for by the reprint sales that might be generated. Which means that either A) we'll have to wait another half century to see it published again, or B) someone will gamble that whoever the copyright holder actually is won't take any legal action if it's published without their permission. I daresay the latter is a distinct possibility; I've seen similar stories reprinted in this manner.

It seems like an important issue that should be celebrated more than it is. But I suspect people downplay its sale-ability precisely because of the main character's skin color. And they'll claim it's not racist because it's just that sales wouldn't be very good, not realizing that the the biases that led them to that conclusion stem precisely from a system that discourages readers from seeing Black protagonists as worthwhile.

Racism in comics isn't always about whether Black characters are drawn into a comic enough. It's an entire culture (well, sub-culture, really) that has subtly, but unilaterally, placed more importance on Caucasian heroes than heroes of color. It's not accusing any single person of themselves being racist, but of an industry that, on the whole, has discouraged, overtly and covertly, the use of Black characters in heroic roles. And now that you're aware of that, and are willing/able to work against it...

Where's my Lobo reprints?
Thing #7
Ron Wilson first came to my attention in Thing #7. It wasn't a title I was reading regularly so I hadn't seen him name on the first half-dozen issues, but not only had he drawn this issue but he also appeared in it. It stood out to me because it was the first time I'd seen a comic creator's name in the credits for the first time and simultaneously learned what they looked like!

I was a big Fantastic Four fan and was eagerly trying to scrounge up every appearance of theirs I could, so with him working on Thing regularly and contributing to around half of Marvel Two-in-One's hundred issues, I saw a fair amount of his work early on in my comics hobby. But after Thing was cancelled, I didn't see much of him any more. He was still getting work, but mostly for licensed properities (notably Masters of the Universe and WCW) which never hit my radar at all, and some anthologies (largely for Marvel) that I generally avoided. (I do not care for the anthology format for Marvel and DC. They almost always come across as an excuse to get rid of a slush pile of inventory material.)

Despite an impressive body of work over several decades, I rarely see him talked about. His entire Wikipedia article reads as follows...
Ron Wilson was born in Brooklyn, New York and grew up in the Canarsie neighborhood.

Wilson entered the comics industry in the early 1970s at Marvel Comics where he produced both cover illustrations and interior artwork. He was the regular artist on Marvel Two-in-One from 1975 to 1978 and again from 1980 to 1983; while additionally working on titles such as Black Goliath, Power Man, The Hulk! and Captain Britain.

In the 1980s, after the cancellation of Marvel Two-in-One, Wilson teamed with writer John Byrne on The Thing (1983–1986). In 1983 he plotted and drew "Super Boxers" (Marvel Graphic Novel #8). He drew the entire run of Marvel's Masters of the Universe (1986–1988) and the Wolfpack limited series (1988–1989). Wilson's work also appeared in The Avengers, Captain America, Deadly Hands of Kung Fu, and What If. He also worked as cover artist for Marvel, pencilling not only covers for comic issues he worked on, but also for titles such as Iron Man, Thor and Defenders.

In 1990, Wilson illustrated an issue of Urth 4 for Continuity Comics and then returned to Marvel to draw WCW World Championship Wrestling in 1992–1993. His work appeared regularly in Marvel Comics Presents in 1992–1994. Wilson contributed to DC Comics Milestone Media imprint providing character design work and pencilled issues of Icon and Blood Syndicate (1994) as well as the DC universe mini-series Arion the Immortal in 1992.

In 2008, he provided a cover for the second issue of the pro wrestling-themed mini-series Headlocked published by Visionary Comics. As of 2012, Wilson was preparing a new creator-owned project: Battle Rappers. In 2022, he penciled an eight-page story for DC Comics' Milestones in History oneshot. His cover for Captain America #230 (inked by Bob Layton) was used as inspiration for one of the official movie posters for Captain America: Brave New World (2025). The film also features the character Dennis Dunphy, which Wilson co-created. He received a "Special Thanks" in the film's credits.
Ron Wilson
That's not nothing, of course, but that still seems pretty slight. Nothing really about his background or how he got into the business or his art style or anything like that. It's basically just a listing of what he worked on in paragraph form.

It's not like there's not info out there about him. He tables at conventions and there's a good 45 minute interview with him over at The Jamie Coville Experience.

I get that he never really hit "superstar" status, and he's not going to be as sought after as some other artists, but I thought he always turned in really solid work and I find myself periodically looking on ebay and at various dealers to see if I can score an original Two-in-One or Thing page he worked on. Particularly if you're a fan of 1970s and '80s Marvel, do yourself a favor and track down some of his work. His illustration style isn't en vogue these days, but he's got more storytelling chops than a lot of other folks I see out there these days!
I recently stumbled across this interesting piece by Wee Pals cartoonist Morrie Turner. Back in 1983, Turner collaborated with music conductor Michael Paul Gibson to adapt Igor Stravinsky's The Soldier's Tale into a comic/cartoon/children's story. (It's not really a comic, but not really a cartoon either. It's probably closest to a picture book, but the text is all narrated and the music is integral to the piece, so it's not really that either. But what exactly you would call this is besides the point anyway.)

The Bay Area Little Symphony who performed the music is only fully professional orchestra providing FREE in-school concerts for children around the Bay Area since 1975, and this seems very much in line with their mission. Turner worked with them a fair amount, doing multiple productions like this -- perhaps most notably a version of Peter and the Wolf. The Little Symphony's site gives him the title of "Cartoonist and Artistic Consultant" and they showcase much of his artwork, including coloring book pages that he drew for them. The site also notes that Turner would often appear at the concerts and draw cartoons of and for the children in attendance.

Actually, what the site says is, "This season we will be adding an exciting new visual dimension to our sound with live projected videos animated from drawings by Morrie Turner" but considering that Turner passed away in 2014, I have to presume that the site hasn't been updated in a while. That actually makes things a bit confusing for when/how Turner came to start working with them. The copyright notice for Turner's cartoons is dated 1999, but The Soldier's Tale piece is from 1983. And Gibson has noted that that was done after they had collaborated on Peter and the Wolf. I would have to guess that Turner had been working with Gibson since the early 1980s, but only began doing cartoons during the performances in the late 1990s?

In any event, here's a neat piece of comics-adjacent art...
Here are this week's links to what I've had published recently...

Kleefeld on Comics: Taking the Week Off
https://ift.tt/F3xt8M9


In the past week, I've had several unrelated instances where I was told, essentially, "Sean, could you not be you?" Nobody said those specific words, but the various "asks" I got were all about they expressly didn't want to see/hear what I had to say. Not because it insulted anyone, not because it was crass, not even because some disagreed with me. They were just bothered that something I said that did not interest them crossed their timeline and they had to see it.

I've had a fair degree of that over my life, but mostly when I'm among a kind of broad audience. What hit me with these was that they all came from ostensible geeks, but geeks who just didn't like my particular flavor of geekdom. And that brought back the same feelings of rejection that I got for decades before I found a community that... well, I wasn't exactly embraced, but I was at least allowed to sit at the table.

But dredging up some decades-old feelings of "go away; we don't want to have to even see you here" on top of the general stress and anxiety of [waves at everything] is a bit much for me right now, so I'm going to avoid being online as much as I can this week. I'll return to blogging next week.

But since it's now Black History Month, go find some comics by Black creators and read them in the meantime.
Here are this week's links to what I've had published recently...

Kleefeld on Comics: So Much Fun Reprints
https://ift.tt/sfxJ3oi

Kleefeld on Comics: Pirates A Graphic History Review
https://ift.tt/C6AQJ2h

Kleefeld on Comics: We Need More Courage in Comics
https://ift.tt/GjKRyLb

Kleefeld on Comics: 1963 Jimmy Swinnerton Interview
https://ift.tt/EDuI0NR

Kleefeld on Comics: Wonder Man Review
https://ift.tt/wVrUnsR