Superheroes continue to dominate pop culture right now, and as I’ve often said, I think hero tales work best when set in their original time period.
Here is Balladeer’s Blog’s look at the earliest stories about Luke Cage, who started out as Hero for Hire before Marvel Comics changed his name to Power Man.
HERO FOR HIRE Vol 1 #1 (June 1972)
Title: Out of Hell – A Hero
Villains: Diamondback, Shades and Comanche
Synopsis: Carl Lucas, a black man from New York, was framed for drug possession by his former friend Willis Stryker. While serving his sentence at horrific Seagate Prison in Georgia, Carl volunteered to be the subject of medical experimentation intended to create super-powered warriors for the government.
Albert Rackham, a racist prison guard with a grudge against Lucas had tampered with the experimental device hoping to kill him. Instead, Carl gained super-strength and bullet-proof skin.
Using those powers, Lucas escaped Seagate Prison but misled the authorities into thinking he died in the ocean while trying to get away. With Carl Lucas pronounced dead, our main character settled in New York City under the name Luke Cage and became a literal Hero for Hire, using his superpowers to earn a living.
After making a positive name for himself in a few fairly routine cases, Luke attracts the attention of the crime boss called Diamondback … who is really Willis Stryker, the friend who framed Carl Lucas years earlier. Continue reading
CAPTAIN AMERICA & THE FALCON Vol 1 #183 (March 1975)
Dialogue from the four combatants lets us know that Nomad came to Harlem looking for the Falcon and hasn’t been able to find him. Gamecock and his two underlings make it clear they were looking for Falcon, too, to kill him.
CAPTAIN AMERICA & THE FALCON Vol 1 #180 (December 1974)
CAPTAIN AMERICA & THE FALCON Vol 1 #178 (October 1974)
CAPTAIN AMERICA & THE FALCON Vol 1 #176 (August 1974)
NOTE: In spite of my joke above, I do recognize that THIS time that Cap quit let the Marvel Comics writers explore competing nationwide feelings of the time period. I would argue that this time also should have been the last time this gimmick was pulled. Everybody always knows that Steve Rogers will go back to being Captain America no matter how many times he quits.
CAPTAIN AMERICA & THE FALCON Vol 1 #174 (June 1974)
CAPTAIN AMERICA & THE FALCON Vol 1 #171 (March 1974)
A gang of armed men have blasted their way into Captain America’s jail cell, claiming to be on his side and offering to help him escape. Cap is torn, apprehensive that people will conclude he’s guilty if he escapes but fearful that if he stays nobody will be able to prove his innocence.
CAPTAIN AMERICA & THE FALCON Vol 1 #168 (December 1973)
CAPTAIN AMERICA & THE FALCON Vol 1 #165 (September 1973)
Nick Fury, who arrived recently with several armed S.H.I.E.L.D. agents in helicopters, is still explaining to Cap and Falc that Nightshade was being financed by the Yellow Claw. Fury and his agents arrived hoping to capture the Claw but that villain had already escaped.
ONE: While searching for the missing Aunt May, Spider-Man gets caught up in the ongoing gang war between Dr Octopus and Hammerhead to see who will succeed the arrested Kingpin as crime boss of New York. Click