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Blackhawk is the eponymous fictional character of the long-running comic book series Blackhawk first published by Quality Comics and later by DC Comics.Primarily created by Chuck Cuidera with input from both Bob Powell and Will Eisner, [1] the Blackhawk characters first appeared in Military Comics #1 (August 1941).
Reed Leonard Crandall (February 22, 1917 – September 13, 1982) [1] [2] was an American illustrator and penciller of comic books and magazines.He was best known for the 1940s Quality Comics' Blackhawk and for stories in EC Comics during the 1950s.
DC Comics came to own the other two companies, so all the different incarnations of the Black Dragon Society now belong to them. All-Star Comics #12 had "The Black Dragon Menace" in which a Japanese spy ring called the Black Dragon Society of Japan steals eight American inventions and kidnaps their inventors.
Blackhawk (DC Comics), an aviator comic book hero and leader of a team named Blackhawks Blackhawk, a 1950 ABC radio series based on the comic book; Blackhawk, a 1952 Columbia serial based on the comic book; Blackhawk (Tornado), a Tornado/2000 AD comic book character; Blackhawks, a 2011 comic book series
Lady Blackhawk is an alias used by three fictional comic book characters appearing in American comic books. The first, Zinda Blake, was introduced in a DC Comics publication in 1959 (Blackhawk #133); [1] the second, Natalie Reed, appeared in a DC Comics title in 1988. The third, as-yet-unnamed, Lady Blackhawk debuted in a DC Comics title in 2011.
Charles Nicholas Cuidera, [2] also known as Chuck Cuidera (September 23, 1915 – August 25, 2001), [3] was an American comic book artist best known as the first illustrator of the Quality Comics aviator character Blackhawk, in Military Comics #1–11 (Aug. 1941 – Aug. 1942).
When Blackhawk and his men arrived to investigate the murder, they found Fear always a half-step ahead on her vendetta, ruthlessly avenging her father with a Tommy gun. Further Golden Age appearances by Miss Fear included Blackhawk Comics issues 13, 14, 17, 19, 20, and 22 (December, 1948). In these stories she developed a distinctly romantic ...
Blackhawk #74 (March 1954). Cover art by Dillin (pencils) and Chuck Cuidera (inks). Dick Dillin was born in Watertown, New York. [4] Determined since childhood to draw for comics, Dillin graduated from Watertown High School to become an art student at Syracuse University on the G.I. Bill, following his military service with the 8th U.S. Army in Tokyo, Yokohama, and Okinawa.