Comic Book History, Fascinating!
The origins of the comic book are somewhat controversial and
perhaps the jury is still out on comic book history. So lets go
back to the cartoonish broadsheets of the Middle Ages, which
were parchment products, created by anonymous woodcutters. These
could have been the very beginnings of the comic book.
As mass circulation of these broadsheets became possible, they
soon developed a market, particularly at public executions,
popular events for centuries (ugh), which drew thousands of
happy spectators. Many of these spectators would invest in an
artist's rendering of a hanging or burning, and thus making a
very lucky day for the broadsheet seller.
The broadsheet evolved into higher-level content as humor was
introduced. Eventually, all types of broadsheets emerged, which
were eventually bound in collections, the prototype of the
modern magazine and thus the comic book. Magazines formatted
like the popular Punch, an elegant British creation, became the
primary focus of documentary accounts of news and events,
fiction and humor.
One can see in Punch, the sophisticated evolution of a comic
book style, particularly in respect of the evolution of comics
in Great Britain. Still and all, from an historical standpoint,
the comic strip, and later the comic book, stood in the alley,
waiting to be born. And then some say Great Britain's Ally
Sloper's "Half Alley" was the first comic book. This was a black
and white tabloid that had panels of cartoons mixed with a
sliver of news; circa 1884.
Now while all this was going on in Great Britain, this inching
towards the comic book, the United States had its own brand of
evolution. Instead of magazines, US newspapers took the lead in
creating the comic book industry.
Newspapers, with their first steps, took their single image gags
and evolved them into multi-paneled comic strips. It was during
this period that William Randolph Hearst scored a knockout with
the Yellow Kid, which was actually printed in yellow ink.
So where did the actual comic book begin? Some say it was with
reprints of Carl Schultz' Foxy Grandpa, from 1901 to 1905.
Although others say it was Great Britain's Ally Sloper's Half
Alley. In 1902, Hearst published the Katzenjammer Kids and Happy
Hooligan in books with cardboard covers.
For a time, the Yellow Kid himself was a top contender. But it
depends how rigid you are in your description of a comic book.
These examples, for sure, were predecessors to the modern comic
book, which exploded in the 1930's.
The Whitman Publishing Company, in 1934, became one of the
pre-launchers for the modern comic book. They published forty
issues of Famous Comics, which was a black and white hardcover
reprint. The first regularly published comic book in the more
recognizable modern format though, was Famous Funnies. It
featured such memorable characters as Joe Palooka, Buck Rogers
and Mutt and Jeff.
Superheroes as we know them today took a strong foothold in the
1930's. In 1938, Max C. Gaines, who was one of the comic
industry giants, brought "Superman" to Dell Comics publisher,
Harry Donenfield.
Donenfield scored the comic coup of the century when he
published a story written by two teenagers, Jerry Siegel and Joe
Shuster- and so "Superman of Metropolis" (the title of their
short story they wrote in their own fanzine) was born. Superman
was to set a standard for comic book heroes that persist to this
day.