A list of stories published in the J.B. Allen/Amalgamated Press/Fleetway Publications weekly boys' comic Comet between 1946 and 1959.
Air Taxi edit
Air cargo pilot Bill and co-pilot Lynn find their latest assignment - transferring the Red Arrow racing car to France - attracts the attention of thieves.
- Front cover strip.
The Astounding Adventures of Marco Polo edit
Explorer Marco Polo and warrior maid Shireen encounter pirates and mystics in the Far East.
The Banner of the Silver Lion edit
After his father is killed in battle, noble Simon de Montfort must deal with his avaricious brother Amory.
Billy Bunter edit
- Published: 17 December 1947 to 17 February 1951 (text); 9 February 1952 to June 1958 (strip)
- Illustrator: C. H. Chapman (text)[1]
- Artists: Reg Parlett, George Parlett, Tom Laidler, Reg Bunn, C. H. Chapman (strip)[1]
The antics of the Fat Owl of the Reach and the Famous Five - rugged Form Captain Harry Wharton, sporting star Frank Nugent, excitable Bob Cherry, stoutly proud Yorkshireman Johnny Bull and Indian Prince Hurree Jamset Ram Singh - at Greyfriars School.
- The initial text stories were abridged reprints of Charles Hamilton's stories from The Magnet before a switch to picture strips. Bunter was already running in a cartoon in Knockout when he started appearing in Comet, and the two strips would run parallel until 1958.
Bob Harley edit
- Published: 10 May 1952 to 13 June 1953[1]
- Illustrators: Graham Coton, Steven Chapman, Reg Parlett[1]
Police officer Bob Harley of Scotland Yard investigates the theft of an atomic motor by the treacherous scientist Doctor Nikolas.
- Text story.
Boss of the Lazy O edit
Englishman Roy Summers takes charge of the Lazy-O ranch, and soon finds himself helping neighbour Jeff Willard fight off cattle rustlers.
- Text story.
Bowmen of King Harry edit
- Published: 29 October 1955 to 28 January 1956[1]
Archers Pip Parkin, Tom Hayfork and Hubert the Minstrel try to play their part in Henry V's French campaign, albeit hindered by their cowardly, rotund superior Sir Rollo Bluster.
Buck Jones edit
Lawman Buck Jones keeps the peace in the Wild West.
- Based on a fictionalised version of the film star.[2] Later continued in Sun. Initial episodes were reprinted from Amalgamated Press' Buck Jones series until new Bunn-drawn material started on 8 October 1949. Jones also appeared in Cowboy Picture Library.[1]
Buffalo Bill edit
- Published: 20 May to 16 September 1950; 17 October 1953 to 17 October 1959[1]
- Writer: Mike Butterworth[a]
- Artists: Fred Meagher, Geoff Campion, Derek Eyles, Steven Chapman, Patrick Nicolle, Fred Holmes, Jesús Blasco, Colin Merritt, Alejandro Blasco, Francisco Hidalgo, Eugenio Giner, Romeu, Julio Vivas, Adriano Blasco, Edward Drury[1][a]
Buffalo Bill Cody leads the scouts of Custer's 7th Cavalry out of Fort Abraham Lincoln. He soon develops a bond of honour and respect with noble Sioux chief Sitting Bull despite their opposing roles in the Indian Wars.
- The initial 1950 run was reprints of a European strip. From the return on 17 October 1953 until 23 January 1954 the story was a reprint of the United Feature Syndicate newspaper strip, with some additional material by Philip Mendoza.[1] From 30 January 1954 British creators produced original material, in self-contained 8-page stories; this high page count for a weekly story led to the employment of a rotating group of artists. This also saw the character take over on the front cover. Alongside his appearances in Comet, Buffalo Bill also featured in issues of Cowboy Picture Library and Thriller Picture Library.[2] In 1966 the strips were modified and reprinted in Lion as "Texas Jack".[3]
Cabin in the Woods edit
- Published: 4 May to 24 August 1948[1]
- Writer: Arthur Catherall[1]
- Illustrator: Bob Wilkin[1]
Young Robin Legrice helps his game warden father Dan fend off villainous trappers Skookum Pete and Yorky, with help from his city girl cousin Jeanne.
- Text story.
Christine and Patch the Circus Starlets edit
Young girl Christine and her dog Patch try to launch a career at the travelling Grand Circus.
- Cartoon.
Chuckle Club edit
The Circus of Sandstep edit
- Published: 5 September to 2 December 1947[1]
- Writer: Arthur Catherall[1]
Adventurous pair Tony Barstow and Penelope Chambers help find missing circus trick pony Wimsy.
- Text story.
Claude Duval edit
- Published: 19 September 1953 to 17 October 1959[1]
- Writer: Mike Butterworth[1]
- Artists: Fred Holmes, Eric Parker, Patrick Nicolle[1]
The dashing Frenchman Claude Duval daringly leads the Royalist cavalry during the English Civil War. He also protects the Crown from the machinations of the duplicitous French and their Roundhead co-conspirator, Major Midas Mould.
- Renamed "The Gay Cavalier" from 15 September 1956.[1] The comic strip's repurposing of highwayman Duval as a Royalist hero would inspire the Associated-Rediffusion television series The Gay Cavalier, starring Christian Marquand as Duval and Ivan Craig as Mould.[2][4]
Commando One edit
- Published: 28 June 1958 to 17 October 1959[1]
- Artist: Ferdinando Tacconi[1]
Captain Rex Royal of the Commandos is parachuted behind German lines to aid the resistance on Crete in 1942.
The Cowboy with a Thousand Faces edit
A sheriff and master of disguise uses his skills to deal with outlaws.
- Text story.
Dick Barton edit
Detective Dick Barton and partner Snowy White investigate flying saucers.
- Front cover story. Barton appeared some three years after the end of the BBC Radio programme. The third and final serial, "Dick Barton and the Grey Ghost", was a modified version of a Sexton Blake story from Knockout, drawn by Roland Davies.[1] Barton also appeared in Super Detective Library.[5]
Don Deeds edit
Young bank teller Don Deeds finds himself drawn into an adventure when racketeers target colleague Miss Jones. Later Deeds and female friend Mai-Mai got entangled in a Martian invasion of Earth.
Dr. Grunter's Zoo School edit
- Published: 29 March 1952 to 3 January 1959[1]
A mathematically gifted polar bear teaches other animals.
Dr. Pennyfeather edit
- Published: 8 April 1950 to 3 February, 7 July & 11 August 1951[1]
- Artist: Denis Gifford[1]
A bumbling schoolmaster is undone by his pupils.
- Cartoon, paired with "Scamp" on the front cover.
The Flying Gunmen edit
- Published: 20 October to 18 November 1950[1]
- Writer: George E. Rochester[1]
- Illustrator: Roland Davies[1]
Chick Brown and Polly Western are passengers on an airliner when it is hijacked and taken to a deserted island.
- Text story.
The Gene Autry Story edit
- Published: 24 February to 15 December 1951[1]
- Text story. A biography of actor Gene Autry, illustrated with stills from his films.[1]
The Golden Scarab edit
British adventurer Mike Thompson is dragged into a Web of intrigue during a visit to Algiers in French North Africa, as - aided by handmaiden Nina - he must recover the Golden Scarab from Sheikh Ali Pasha.
- Text comic, printed on the front cover.
Guy Gallant edit
Captain Guy Gallant of the Sea Witch hunts for pirate Don Diego - known as the Grandee - in the Sargasso Sea sea.
- Front cover story.
Island of Peril edit
- Published: 2 May to 15 August 1959[1]
Searching for pearls on a Pacific island, Bob and Pat Shaw clash with the unscrupulous Red Harry.
- Reprint from Super Detective Library.[1]
Jack the Giant Tamer edit
Arriving on a desert island, Jack soon takes control of one the giant natives.
- Text story.
Jet-Ace Logan edit
- Published: 15 September 1956 to 17 October 1959
- Writers: Mike Butterworth, David Motton[1]
- Artists: Geoff Campion, John Gillatt[1]
A hundred years in the future, RAF pilot Jim "Jet-Ace" Logan and his trusty co-pilot Plumduff Charteris keep Earth safe from alien aggressors.
- Continued in Tiger and Thriller Picture Library.
Jimmy and Jacko the Merry Monks edit
Two English-speaking monkeys get into scrapes in the jungle.
Jimmy's Magic Cat edit
- Published: 11 November 1950 to 17 February 1951[1]
- Writer: George E. Rochester[1]
- Illustrator: Robert MacGillivray[1]
Jimmy and June Watson discover their cat Tutty is actually a transformed Egyptian sorcerer.
June edit
- Published: 13 August to 17 December 1949[1]
- Writer & Artist: Norman Pett[1]
Naïve but plucky young girl June is sent back to the time of King Arthur by her uncle's time machine.
- Front cover story. June was designed by Pett as a younger, more wholesome version of his Daily Mirror newspaper strip heroine Jane.
Jungle Lord edit
Searching for his lost parents in the jungle, Dick Seymour soon comes into conflict with the Ivory trader Snape. Seymour is aided by multiracial local girl Bibi.
- Front cover story.
The King's Captain edit
- Published: 3 November 1951 to 19 January 1952[1]
- Writer: Leonard Matthews[1]
- Artist: Sep E. Scott[1]
Prince Rupert of the Rhine and his female comrade Black Velvet attempt to protect King Charles II from revolutionary factions.
- Later reprinted in Thriller Picture Library as "The Cavalier and the Crown".[2]
Kit Carson edit
- Published: 16 September 1950 to 1 August 1953 (strip); 8 August to 10 October 1953 (text)[1]
- Writer: Joan Whitford (under the pseudonym Barry Ford) (text)[1]
- Artists: Geoff Campion, Patrick Nicolle, Ron Embleton, Stephen Chapman, Robert Forrest, R. W. Plummer, Ron Smith, Peter Sutherland, Derek Eyles, Bill Lacey[1]
- Illustrator: Derek Eyles (text)[1]
Buckskin-clad Pioneer Railway Company trouble-shooter and scout Kit Carson fends off bandits and natives with his twin six-shooters.
- Carson's adventures were also featured in Knockout and Cowboy Picture Library.
Laredo - Texas Ranger edit
The exploits of Texas Ranger Laredo.
- Reprints of the Register and Tribune Syndicate comic strip "Laredo Crockett".
The Last of the Commanches edit
- Published: 22 December 1951 to 8 March 1952[1]
- Writer: Joan Whitford (under the pseudonym Barry Ford)[1]
Red Hand deals with unscrupulous cowboys.
- Text story.
The Lone Ranger edit
- Published: 2 March 1957 to 18 January 1958[1]
- Writer: Fran Striker[1]
- Artist: Charles Flanders[1]
The masked hero known as the Lone Ranger challenges the guilty and finds justice for the innocent with the help of partner Tonto.
- Reprinted from the King Features Syndicate newspaper strip.
Mick the Moon Boy edit
- Published: 29 March 1952 to 23 May 1959[1]
- Illustrator: C.M. Montford, Reg Parlett, George Parlett[1]
A technologically advanced boy from the Moon arrives in the Old West and helps lawmen.
- Text story.
Mickey's Pal the Wizard edit
Mickey Royston and his sister Betty gain revenge on their cruel uncle Silas Marley when the boy discovers a brass bottle containing the wizard Akbar Al Bagrag.
More Tales of the West edit
- Published: 2 June to 7 July, 29 September to 29 December 1951[1]
- Writer: Joan Whitford (under the pseudonym Barry Ford)[1]
- Illustrator: Derek Eyles, Steven Chapman[1]
- Text story. Renamed "Barry Ford's Tales of the West" from 29 September 1951.[1]
The Mystery of the Moor edit
Camping in Devon, Dick and Jill Martin stumble on criminal activity at a nearby abandoned mine.
- Text story.
The Mysterious Mr. Midson edit
Camling College student Derek Elliot finds out his grouchy master Mr. Milson is involved in a conspiracy.
- Text story.
Nelson edit
- Published: 4 June to 22 October 1955
- Artist: Eric Parker[1]
Horatio Nelson commands the Royal Navy to some of its finest victories.
Odd Job Jack edit
- Published: 28 June 1958 to 11 April 1959[1]
- Cartoon. Later reprinted as "Odd Job Bob" in Valiant.
The Old Timer edit
- Artist: Alan Frazer[1]
An elderly employee's poor timekeeping causes stress for his co-workers.
- Cartoon, front cover strip.
Paul Clifford edit
Highwayman Paul Clifford falls in love with lawyer's niece Lucy Brandon and vows to go straight,
- Reprint from Thriller Picture Library.[1]
Phantom of Gravestones Grange edit
- Published: 4 February to 28 April 1956[1]
- Artist: Eric Parker
Captain Dick Dashwood and his batman Tom Twitcher lead a detachment of Royal Dragoons, sent to capture archvillain Creepy Crawley from his trap-filled lair at Gravestones Grange.
Phil and Fritzi edit
- Published: 28 June 1958 to 3 January 1959[1]
- Artist: Ernie Bushmiller[1]
Phil and his girlfriend Fritzi cross wits.
- Reprints of the United Feature Syndicate newspaper strip "Fritzi Ritz".[1]
Pirate Gold edit
- Text story. Modified from a S. Walkey serial published in the story paper Chums.
Poochie edit
Outrageous talking dog Poochie gets totally in the face of miserly owner Mister Fogey.
The Purple Sunflower edit
Kidnappers target teenager Ron Yorke after he finds a mysterious purple flower in the street.
- Text story.
The Quest of the Jungle Queen edit
Jack Swift enters the jungle searching for a missing girl called Peta, finding out that she has been made Queen of a lost African tribe. Swift has to get her to safety before she is killed by treacherous high priest Tharka.
- Text story.
Riff and Raff the Lads of Our Village edit
Two cheerful boys help out the locals.
- Cartoon.
Robin Hood edit
Sherwood Forest outlaw Robin Hood plunders the prosperous and donates to the downtrodden.
Round the World in the Flying Fish edit
Siblings Jack and Jill join their Uncle Bob for a voyage in his new invention the Flying Fish, a technological wonder capable of travelling over land, under sea and through the air.
Rusty Riley edit
After being orphaned in The Blitz, Rusty Riley is adopted by kindly American Quentin Miles and taken to his horse ranch in Kentucky, where he makes fast friends with half-sister Patty and dog Flip.
- Reprints of the King Features Syndicate newspaper strip.[1]
Sally Bright edit
Resourceful teenage girl Sally Bright helps those in need.
- Text story.
Scamp edit
- Published: 28 January 1950 to 13 January 1951; 10 February 1951 to 6 March 1954[1]
- Artist: Fred Robinson[1]
Enthusiastic dog Scamp and partner-in-crime Kitty the cat cause mild disruption to their long-suffering owners.
- Cartoon. Front cover strip.
School at Castle Grim edit
- Published: 28 December 1948 to 16 July 1949[1]
- Writer: Jeffrey Trent[1]
- Illustrator: David Williams[1]
A fire forces a public school to temporarily relocate to the foreboding Castle Grim.
Scoop edit
Comet's own reporter Scoop goes to great lengths to get the story - usually in vain.
The Secret of Paul Barron edit
Agent Miles Mallory sets out to recover gold stolen by Paul Barron.
- Reprinted from Super Detective Library.
The Secret of the Sea Spider edit
- Published: 20 June to 12 September 1953[1]
- Illustrator: Philip Mendoza[1]
Digby Everard builds a huge mechanical vessel called the Sea Spider and seems to have turned to piracy; however, when his friend Guy Raynor investigates he finds Everard is instead aiming for illegal arms factories.
- Text story.
Shorty the Deputy Sheriff edit
- Published: 3 December 1949 to 13 June 1953[1]
- Artists: Hugh McNeill, Eric Bradbury, Reg Parlett[1]
A well-meaning, diminutive lawman causes disruption.
- Cartoon.
Sir Tich edit
- Published: 8 October 1949 to 25 March 1950[1]
- Artists: Geoff Campion, Norman Ward[1]
Despite his slight stature, gallant knight Sir Tich triumphs through a mixture of courage and pure luck.
- Cartoon.
The Sky Explorers edit
- Published: 26 January 1952 to 4 April 1953[1]
- Artist: Geoff Campion, Pete Sutherland, W. Bryce-Hamilton, Reg Parlett[9][1]
Young siblings Peter and Ann are whisked away by their Uncle Jolly to visit strange civilisations in his rocket ship - including an island of superannuated pirates, another populated by clockwork robots (built by Swiss inventors Von Tik and Von Tok), and the planet Jupiter.
- Originally a text comic before being transformed into the front cover strip, drawn by Parlett, from 28 June 1952.
Splash Page edit
- Published: 6 May to 16 September 1950 (strip), 7 October to 4 November 1950 (text)[1]
Artist/Illustrator: Alex Oxley[1] Top Daily World reporter Splash Page's investigative work puts him and his assistant Jill Brent in the centre of the story.
- Page debuted as an ally of Sexton Blake decades before in the story paper Union Jack.
Strongbow the Mohawk edit
- Published: 8 August 1953 to 1 June 1957[1]
- Artists: Geoff Campion, Stephen Chapman, Graham Coton, Robert Forrest, Philip Mendoza, Colin Merritt, Patrick Nicolle[1]
After the Mohawk tribe that raised him are slaughtered, white man Strongbow becomes a doctor in the town of TOWN while hunting for the killers. He later faces the likes of Choctaw rebel Black Lynx and evil Huron chief Rattlesnake, gains a doughty ally in Hawkeye the Hunter and meets the likes of General Custer and Davy Crockett.
- The story launched on the front cover before moving to the interior.[10]
Tarzan of the Apes edit
- Published: 24 February 1951 to 9 February 1952[1]
- Writer: Edgar Rice Burroughs
- Illustrators: Edward Drury, Eric Parker, Ron Smith, Graham Coton[1]
- Text story. Reprints of Edgar Rice Burroughs stories from All-Story Magazine and New Story Magazine with new illustrations.[1]
They Lived By the Gun edit
- Text story.
Thunderbolt Jaxon edit
- Reprints from Thunderbolt Jaxon. The character would later reappear in Knockout in 1958.[11]
The Tobacco Runners edit
Peter and June Kelsey stumble across a tobacco smuggling racket.
- Text story.
Tommy Hawk and Mo Cassin edit
- Published: 14 January to 26 August 1950
- Artist: Birch, Denis Gifford[1]
Under the Golden Dragon edit
- Published: 3 January to 29 May 1954[1]
- Writer: Mike Butterworth[1]
- Artist: Patrick Nicolle[1]
William the Conqueror's Norman army lands in 1066 to face the forces of King Harold.
- Later reprinted in Thriller Picture Library.
Vikings of the Spaceways edit
- Published: 27 January to 28 April 1951[1]
- Writer: Paul Flood[1]
- Illustrators: Reg Bunn, Patrick Nicolle[1]
Reporter Tom Pennant investigates a spate of spaceship disappearances, leading him and friend Prince Rudolph of Transitania to Deimos.
- Text story.
War Eagle edit
- Published: 1 February to 21 June 1958[1]
- Artist: Ferdinando Tacconi[1]
Raised by sea-eagles on an isolated rock in the North Atlantic, Eagle joins the RAF during World War II. His avian upbringing naturally allows him to swiftly become a fighter ace, and he is soon entrusted with the experimental Whiplash as his personal aircraft.
The Wheezes of Willie Wizzard edit
Inventor Willie Wizzard's innovations rarely work as intended.
- Text story.
The White Fox edit
- Published: 29 July to 19 August 1950[1]
- Writer: Jack Lewis (under the pseudonym Lewis Jackson)[1]
- Illustrator: Tom Laidler[1]
Visiting his mean uncle Squire Dean, Jack Dean crosses paths with
- Text story.
Adaptations edit
The Adventures of Gallant Bess edit
- Published: 3 June to 22 July 1950[1]
- Based on the British Lion film.[1]
Buffalo Stampede edit
The Coral Island edit
- Based on the novel by R.M. Ballantyne. Illustrations taken from the Knockout picture strip adaptation.[1]
Distant Drums edit
- Published: 19 April 1952 to 3 May 1953[1]
- Text story. Based on the Warner Bros. film; illustrated with stills.[1]
The Elusive Pimpernel edit
- Based on the British Lion film.[1]
The Exploits of Hereward the Wake edit
- Text story. Based on the novel by Charles Kingsley.[1]
Julius Caesar edit
King of the Khyber Rifles edit
- Published: 5 June to 24 July 1954[1]
- Artist: Philip Mendoza[1]
- Based on the Twentieth Century-Fox film.[1]
Knights of the Round Table edit
The Last Outpost edit
The Lion and the Horse edit
- Published: 6 to 27 December 1952[1]
- Text story. Based on the Warner Bros. film, illustrated with stills.[1]
The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw edit
- Text story. Based on the 20th Century Fox film, illustrated with stills.[1]
The Spanish Main edit
- Published: 8 August to 7 November 1953
- Artist: Patrick Nicolle
Treasure Island edit
- Based on the novel by Robert Louis Stevenson.[1]
Notes edit
References edit
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk dl dm dn do dp dq dr ds dt du dv dw dx dy dz ea eb ec ed ee ef eg eh ei ej ek el em en eo ep eq er es et eu ev ew ex ey ez fa fb fc fd fe ff fg fh fi fj fk fl fm fn fo fp fq fr fs ft fu fv fw fx fy fz ga gb gc gd ge gf gg gh gi gj gk gl gm gn go gp gq gr gs gt Holland, Steve; Ashford, David (1992). The Comet Collectors' Guide. Colne: Comic Journal/A&B Whitworth.
- ^ a b c d e Ashford, David (1992). "Cowboys and Cavaliers: The Comet Comic". The Comet Collectors' Guide. Colne: Comic Journal/A&B Whitworth.
- ^ a b Holland, Steve (2002). The Fleetway Companion. Rotherham: Comic Journal.
- ^ "BFI Screenonline: Gay Cavalier (1957)".
- ^ "Dick Barton - Spy Guys and Gals".
- ^ a b "Reg Beaumont".
- ^ "Bob Schoenke".
- ^ Ashford, David; Allen-Clark, John; Holland, Steve (1997). Knockout Comic - An Illustrated Guide. CJ Publications.
- ^ "Reginald Parlett".
- ^ 500 Great Comic Book Action Heroes. Barron's. 2003. ISBN 9780764125812.
- ^ The British Superhero. Univ. Press of Mississippi. 15 March 2017. ISBN 9781496807380.