Back in the spring of 2005 I was working at the CBC in
Printed in black and white and often on cheap paper, the comics had a rough charm about them — a charm only amplified by their names: the Polka-Dot Pirate, Freelance, Canada Jack, Stuffy Bugs and Senorita Marquita.
Anyway, as obscure as the Whites were it dawned on me that no one had actually confirmed who the first real "made in
Created by
Pretty great huh?
White's Iron Man (which preceded Marvel's by a couple of decades) was the sole survivor of a destroyed civilization who lived and brooded underwater, surfacing occasionally to help out a couple of trouble magnets named Ted and Jean.
After countless hours of independent research I wrote a short pithy piece about Canada's Iron Man for the CBC Arts Online site, which all things considered was a perfect match. Looking back on this fine hero, it kills me the amount of blind adulation nationalistic comic fans heap on characters with little to no Canadian connection. Meanwhile, perfectly thought out home-grown characters are left to moulder in neglect. I mean,
Nothing against the US of A's Iron Man, but he's never exactly been a heavy hitter. Apart from his changing costume, he just seemed like Donald Trump or Gordon Gekko in armour.
I just wish I was on the ball! As is, I feel like i was either three weeks too late or three years to early. I guess it's Better late than never.
(ps: I urge anyone curious about the Canadian Whites to visit Golden Age Canadian Comics Books. I have no idea who's responsible for this site, but it's the first I've ever seen to offer full scans of these rare books. A true gem!)
4 comments:
Oh, that's Scott Dutton's site.
"Canada's Iron Man was ahead of the curve; part Submariner (he preceded Namor) and part Tony Stark."
By this you mean our Canadian Iron Man debuted before Namor did? Mar '41 is before 1939? Canadian math at its finest! ;)
Hey there,
I know the post I'm responding to is several years old but I came across it looking up information about Iron Man.
You may know this already, but I came across the Digital Comic Museum last weekend and it's a great source of Golden Age books, if you're still into that.
http://digitalcomicmuseum.com/index.php?cid=271
Enjoy!
Holy sweet hannah!
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