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Fox Feature Syndicate

Fox Feature Syndicate[1] (also known as Fox Comics, Fox Publications, and Bruns Publications, Inc.) was a comic book publisher from early in the period known to fans and historians as the Golden Age of Comic Books. Founded by entrepreneur Victor S. Fox, it produced such titles as Blue Beetle, Fantastic Comics and Mystery Men Comics.

Fox Feature Syndicate
IndustryEntertainment
Founded1930s
DefunctMid-1950s
HeadquartersMassachusetts
Key people
Victor S. Fox
ProductsComic books

It is not related to the company Fox Publications (a Colorado publisher of railroad photography books), nor 20th Century Fox (formed from Fox Studios and later renamed 20th Century Studios in 2020) and its associated companies.

Background

Victor S. Fox and business associate Bob Farrell launched Fox Feature Syndicate at 480 Lexington Avenue in New York City in the late 1930s. For content, Fox contracted with comics packager Eisner & Iger, one of a handful of companies creating comic books on demand for publishers entering the field. Writer-artist Will Eisner, at Victor Fox's request for a hero to mimic the newly created hit Superman, created the superhero Wonder Man for Fox's first publication, Wonder Comics #1 (May 1939), signing his work "Willis". Eisner said in interviews throughout his later life that he had protested the derivative nature of the character and story, and that when subpoenaed after National Periodical Publications, the company that would evolve into DC Comics, sued Fox, alleging Wonder Man was an illegal copy of Superman, Eisner testified that this was so, undermining Fox's case;[2] Eisner even depicts himself doing so in his semi-autobiographical graphic novel The Dreamer.[3] However, a transcript of the proceeding, uncovered by comics historian Ken Quattro in 2010, indicates Eisner in fact supported Fox and claimed Wonder Man as an original Eisner creation.[4]

After losing at trial, Victor Fox dropped Eisner and Iger, and hired his own stable of comic creators, beginning with a New York Times classified ad on December 2, 1939. Joe Simon became Fox Publications' editor.

As one of the earliest companies in the emerging field, it employed or bought the packaged material of a huge number of Golden Age greats, many at the start of their careers. Lou Fine created the superhero The Flame in Wonderworld Comics; Dick Briefer created Rex Dexter of Mars in the eponymous series. George Tuska did his first comics work here with the features "Zanzibar" (Mystery Men Comics #1, Aug. 1939) and "Tom Barry" (Wonderworld Comics #4). Fletcher Hanks wrote and drew Stardust the Super Wizard in Fantastic Comics in 1939 and 1940. Matt Baker, one of the few African-American comic book artists of the Golden Age, revamped – in more than one sense – the newly acquired Quality Comics character Phantom Lady in 1947, creating one of the most memorable and controversial examples of superhero "good girl art".

Future comics legend Jack Kirby, brought on staff here after freelancing for Eisner & Iger, wrote and drew the syndicated newspaper comic strip The Blue Beetle (starting Jan. 1940), starring a character created by Charles Nicholas Wojtkowski in Mystery Men Comics #1 (Aug. 1939). Kirby retained the house name "Charles Nicholas" for the comic strip, which lasted three months. Kirby, additionally, created and did one story each of the Fox features "Wing Turner" (Mystery Men #10, May 1940) and "Cosmic Carson" (Science Comics #4, same month).

Fox Feature Syndicate sponsored a "Blue Beetle Day" at the 1939 New York World's Fair on August 7, 1940, beginning at 10:30 a.m. and including 300 children in relay-race finals at the Field of Special Events, following preliminaries in New York City parks. The race was broadcast over radio station WMCA.[5]

Throughout the 1940s, Fox produced comics in a typically wide variety of genres, but was best known for superheroes and humor. With the post-war decline in superheroes' popularity, Fox, like other publishers, concentrated on horror and crime comics, including some of the most notorious of the latter. Following the establishment of Comics Code Authority in the mid-1950s, Fox went out of business, selling the rights to the Blue Beetle to Charlton Comics.

According to Nicky Wright: "Competing well in the 'most sexy, sadistic, and violent' category, Victor Fox's Murder Incorporated and Blue Beetle are noteworthy.... When historians describe sleaze, sex, and violence as Fox's obsession, they are masters of understatement. His best artists, Jack Kamen and Matt Baker, are much revered and collected for their good girl art. Of special note is the company's breasty crime-fighter-in-bedroom-lingerie, Phantom Lady...along with the wild and scantily attired Rulah, Jungle Goddess".[6]

Boyd Magers said of the publisher: "Never one to overlook a secondary sale, Fox often repackaged four remaindered (unsold) comics into a 25¢ Giant with a new cover, hence Hoot Gibson's Western Roundup, 132 pages dated 1950. However, since Fox always started their stories on the inside front cover (where other publishers ran an ad), these repackaged comics are always missing the first page of story content. Also, since Fox used remaindered issues, contents will vary from copy to copy of Hoot Gibson's Western Roundup".[7]

Fox Feature Syndicate, located at 60 East 42nd Street, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization in July 1950, listing liabilities of $721,448 and assets of $932,878, which included $567,800 in uncollected accounts receivables. Central Color Press of the same address filed likewise, listing liabilities of $513,587 and assets of $603,427. Fox was listed as president of both corporations.[8]

Victor Fox

Early life and career background

Fox Publications founder Victor Fox was born Samuel Victor Joseph Fox on July 3, 1893, in Nottinghamshire, England, the fourth of six children born to Russian emigres Joseph and Bessie Fox.[9] He had older sisters Annie (b. July 1884), Rosie (b. September 1885), Fanny E. (b. April 1892), and younger sisters Etta G. (b. March 1898) and Marrion (b. May 1900).[9] The family relocated to the United States in March 1898, and within two years were living in Fall River, Massachusetts.[9] By 1917, patriarch Joseph, a storekeeper, moved the family to New York City, where he opened a women's clothing business; the family lived at 555 West 151st Street.[9]

U.S. Attorney Charles H. Tuttle in 1929 arrested several individuals including a Victor S. Fox for illegal "boiler-room" stock-trading. Reports of Fox's September 4 arraignment said his Allied Capital Corporation had offices at 49 Broadway and 331 Madison Avenue, and that Fox also had "desk room" at 230 Park Avenue as Fox Motor and Bank Stock, Inc., and as American Common Stocks, Inc. His hearing was set for September 18. Another individual, J.A. Sachs, was named in the same warrant.[10] A report the following month gave the latter's name as John A. Sacks and identified him as president of Allied Capital and Fox as a director; the two were temporarily enjoined from continuing sales of securities.[11] On November 27, Fox and three other individuals connected with Allied Capital — Fred H. Hallen, I. Lloyd Zimmer, and William McManus — were indicted on charges of mail fraud.[12] In 1944, an individual named Victor S. Fox, identified as a former partner of the Cornwall Shipbuilding Company, testified in the prosecution of U.S. Army Captain Joseph Gould[13] who was convicted for conspiracy to accept bribes to award $1,000,000 worth of army contracts to the Cornwall Shipbuilding Company.[14]

It is unclear if the individual(s) in these accounts may be future comics publisher Victor Fox. However, a 1946 New York Times real-estate article identifies "Victor S. Fox" as a "magazine publisher" who purchased for occupancy a five-story residential building at 59 E. 82nd Street.[15] In October 1947, a syndicate headed by Fox and also including Central Color Press of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, purchased Potsdam Paper Mill, Inc., of Potsdam, New York, in order to have what one report called "a completely integrated operation".[16]

Comics publisher

Historian Jon Berk has written that Fox was an accountant/bookkeeper at the publishing firm that would become DC Comics, where he was privy to sales figures that convinced him to launch his own comic book company.[17] Fellow historian Gerard Jones, writing in his book Men of Tomorrow: Geeks, Gangsters, and the Birth of the Comic Book, was unable to find documentation of this,[18] and Christopher Irving wrote that Fox learned about DC's success while with another magazine distributed by Independent News, DC's distributor.[19]

Artist Jack "King" Kirby said of the employer who gave him his start drawing superhero comics: "Victor Fox was a character. He'd look up at the ceiling with a big cigar, this little fellow, very broad, going back and forth with his hands behind his back saying, 'I'm the King of Comics! I'm the King of Comics!' and we would watch him and, of course, smile a little because he was a genuine type".[20]

Writer/artist Joe Simon commented on Fox: "He was an accountant for DC Comics. He was doing the sales figures and he liked what he saw. So, he moved downstairs and started his own company.... I happened to get a job; I went over to Fox and became editor there, which was just an impossible job, because ... there were no artists, no writers, no editors, no letterers – nothing there. Everything came out of the Eisner and Iger shop. ... He was a very strange character. He had kind of a British accent; he was like 5'2", told us he was a former ballroom dancer. He was very loud, menacing, and really a scary little guy. He used to say, 'I'm the King of the Comics. I'm the King of the Comics. I'm the King of the Comics'. We couldn't stop him".[21]

Fox characters

Fox titles

Gallery of Fox Feature Syndicate covers

References

  1. ^ Per the Fox Feature Syndicate entry at the Michigan State University Libraries' Reading Room Index to the Comic Art Collection (), the company name used "Feature" singular rather than "Features" plural: "Fox Feature Syndicate — American comics publisher or publishers, sometimes informally called 'Fox Comics.' The corporate names 'Fox Feature Syndicate' and 'Fox Publications' both appear, with the latter consistently having an address in the state of Massachusetts".
  2. ^ Andelman, Bob. Will Eisner: A Spirited Life (M Press: Milwaukie, Oregon, 2005) ISBN 978-1-59582-011-2, pp. 44–45
  3. ^ The Dreamer: A Graphic Novella Set During the Dawn of Comic Books (DC Comics : New York City, 1986 edition) ISBN 978-1-56389-678-1. Reissued by W. W. Norton & Company : New York City, London, 2008. ISBN 978-0-393-32808-0, p. 42
  4. ^ Quattro, Ken. "DC vs. Victor Fox: The Testimony of Will Eisner", The Comics Detective, July 1, 2010. .
  5. ^ "Program Today at the World's Fair". The New York Times. August 7, 1940. Retrieved April 7, 2013. Abstract; full article requires fee or subscription
  6. ^ Comic Book Marketplace #65, "Seducers of the Innocent"
  7. ^ The Old Corral: Hoot Gibson
  8. ^ "Business Records > Arrangement Petitions". The New York Times. July 15, 1950. Retrieved April 7, 2013. Abstract; full article requires fee or subscription
  9. ^ a b c d Irving, Christopher (2007). The Blue Beetle Companion (PDF). Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 8. ISBN 978-1893905702.
  10. ^ "Tuttle 'Coup' Ends Tipster Concern". The New York Times. September 5, 1929. Retrieved April 7, 2013. Abstract; full article requires fee or subscription
  11. ^ "Halted in Stock Sales". The New York Times. October 3, 1929. Retrieved April 7, 2013. Abstract; full article requires fee or subscription
  12. ^ "4 Indicted in Stock Sales". The New York Times. November 28, 1929. Retrieved April 7, 2013. Abstract; full article requires fee or subscription
  13. ^ "Gould Court Hears of Contract Fund". The New York Times. November 7, 1944. Retrieved April 7, 2013. Abstract; full article requires fee or subscription
  14. ^ "Stiff sentence for Joe Gould". The Leader-Post. Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. November 15, 1944. Retrieved July 12, 2011.
  15. ^ "Four Apartments in Broadway Deal". The New York Times. May 29, 1946. Retrieved April 7, 2013. Abstract; full article requires fee or subscription
  16. ^ "Comics Group Buys Paper Mill". The New York Times. October 23, 1947. Retrieved April 7, 2013. Abstract; full article requires fee or subscription
  17. ^ Berk, Jon. "The Weird, Wonder(ous) World of Victor Fox's Fantastic Mystery Men", Part II March 11, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Comicartville Library, 2004. and .
  18. ^ Jones, Gerard. Men Of Tomorrow: Geeks, Gangsters, and the Birth of the Comic Book (2004) ISBN 0-465-03656-2
  19. ^ Cronin, Brian (March 22, 2013). "Comic Book Legends Revealed #411". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved March 31, 2013.
  20. ^ Jack Kirby interview, The Comics Journal #134 (Feb. 1990), reprinted in The Comics Journal Library, Volume One: Jack Kirby (2002) ISBN 1-56097-466-4, p. 25
  21. ^ Jack Kirby Collector #25 (Aug. 1999): "More Than Your Average Joe: Excerpts from Joe Simon's panels at the 1998 Comicon International: San Diego"
  22. ^ Bird Man at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on August 27, 2015.
  23. ^ Captain Savage (Fox Feature Syndicate, 1939) at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on April 9, 2012.
  24. ^ Per the Spider Queen entry in The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe: "Created by Elsa Lesau (believed to be a pseudonym for Louis and Arturo Cazeneuve) for Fox Features [sic] Syndicate; adapted for the Marvel Universe by Roy Thomas, Dave Hoover, and Brian Garvey. Roy Thomas had originally intended [the flashback, World War II supervillain team] Battle-Axis to consist of minor wartime heroes of Timely Comics (predecessor of Marvel), but [editor] Mark Gruenwald nixed that idea, and super-heroes from now-defunct wartime publishers were used instead...."

External links

feature, syndicate, also, known, comics, publications, bruns, publications, comic, book, publisher, from, early, period, known, fans, historians, golden, comic, books, founded, entrepreneur, victor, produced, such, titles, blue, beetle, fantastic, comics, myst. Fox Feature Syndicate 1 also known as Fox Comics Fox Publications and Bruns Publications Inc was a comic book publisher from early in the period known to fans and historians as the Golden Age of Comic Books Founded by entrepreneur Victor S Fox it produced such titles as Blue Beetle Fantastic Comics and Mystery Men Comics Fox Feature SyndicateIndustryEntertainmentFounded1930sDefunctMid 1950sHeadquartersMassachusettsKey peopleVictor S FoxProductsComic booksIt is not related to the company Fox Publications a Colorado publisher of railroad photography books nor 20th Century Fox formed from Fox Studios and later renamed 20th Century Studios in 2020 and its associated companies Contents 1 Background 2 Victor Fox 2 1 Early life and career background 2 2 Comics publisher 3 Fox characters 4 Fox titles 5 Gallery of Fox Feature Syndicate covers 6 References 7 External linksBackground EditVictor S Fox and business associate Bob Farrell launched Fox Feature Syndicate at 480 Lexington Avenue in New York City in the late 1930s For content Fox contracted with comics packager Eisner amp Iger one of a handful of companies creating comic books on demand for publishers entering the field Writer artist Will Eisner at Victor Fox s request for a hero to mimic the newly created hit Superman created the superhero Wonder Man for Fox s first publication Wonder Comics 1 May 1939 signing his work Willis Eisner said in interviews throughout his later life that he had protested the derivative nature of the character and story and that when subpoenaed after National Periodical Publications the company that would evolve into DC Comics sued Fox alleging Wonder Man was an illegal copy of Superman Eisner testified that this was so undermining Fox s case 2 Eisner even depicts himself doing so in his semi autobiographical graphic novel The Dreamer 3 However a transcript of the proceeding uncovered by comics historian Ken Quattro in 2010 indicates Eisner in fact supported Fox and claimed Wonder Man as an original Eisner creation 4 After losing at trial Victor Fox dropped Eisner and Iger and hired his own stable of comic creators beginning with a New York Times classified ad on December 2 1939 Joe Simon became Fox Publications editor As one of the earliest companies in the emerging field it employed or bought the packaged material of a huge number of Golden Age greats many at the start of their careers Lou Fine created the superhero The Flame in Wonderworld Comics Dick Briefer created Rex Dexter of Mars in the eponymous series George Tuska did his first comics work here with the features Zanzibar Mystery Men Comics 1 Aug 1939 and Tom Barry Wonderworld Comics 4 Fletcher Hanks wrote and drew Stardust the Super Wizard in Fantastic Comics in 1939 and 1940 Matt Baker one of the few African American comic book artists of the Golden Age revamped in more than one sense the newly acquired Quality Comics character Phantom Lady in 1947 creating one of the most memorable and controversial examples of superhero good girl art Future comics legend Jack Kirby brought on staff here after freelancing for Eisner amp Iger wrote and drew the syndicated newspaper comic strip The Blue Beetle starting Jan 1940 starring a character created by Charles Nicholas Wojtkowski in Mystery Men Comics 1 Aug 1939 Kirby retained the house name Charles Nicholas for the comic strip which lasted three months Kirby additionally created and did one story each of the Fox features Wing Turner Mystery Men 10 May 1940 and Cosmic Carson Science Comics 4 same month Fox Feature Syndicate sponsored a Blue Beetle Day at the 1939 New York World s Fair on August 7 1940 beginning at 10 30 a m and including 300 children in relay race finals at the Field of Special Events following preliminaries in New York City parks The race was broadcast over radio station WMCA 5 Throughout the 1940s Fox produced comics in a typically wide variety of genres but was best known for superheroes and humor With the post war decline in superheroes popularity Fox like other publishers concentrated on horror and crime comics including some of the most notorious of the latter Following the establishment of Comics Code Authority in the mid 1950s Fox went out of business selling the rights to the Blue Beetle to Charlton Comics According to Nicky Wright Competing well in the most sexy sadistic and violent category Victor Fox s Murder Incorporated and Blue Beetle are noteworthy When historians describe sleaze sex and violence as Fox s obsession they are masters of understatement His best artists Jack Kamen and Matt Baker are much revered and collected for their good girl art Of special note is the company s breasty crime fighter in bedroom lingerie Phantom Lady along with the wild and scantily attired Rulah Jungle Goddess 6 Boyd Magers said of the publisher Never one to overlook a secondary sale Fox often repackaged four remaindered unsold comics into a 25 Giant with a new cover hence Hoot Gibson s Western Roundup 132 pages dated 1950 However since Fox always started their stories on the inside front cover where other publishers ran an ad these repackaged comics are always missing the first page of story content Also since Fox used remaindered issues contents will vary from copy to copy of Hoot Gibson s Western Roundup 7 Fox Feature Syndicate located at 60 East 42nd Street filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization in July 1950 listing liabilities of 721 448 and assets of 932 878 which included 567 800 in uncollected accounts receivables Central Color Press of the same address filed likewise listing liabilities of 513 587 and assets of 603 427 Fox was listed as president of both corporations 8 Victor Fox EditEarly life and career background Edit Fox Publications founder Victor Fox was born Samuel Victor Joseph Fox on July 3 1893 in Nottinghamshire England the fourth of six children born to Russian emigres Joseph and Bessie Fox 9 He had older sisters Annie b July 1884 Rosie b September 1885 Fanny E b April 1892 and younger sisters Etta G b March 1898 and Marrion b May 1900 9 The family relocated to the United States in March 1898 and within two years were living in Fall River Massachusetts 9 By 1917 patriarch Joseph a storekeeper moved the family to New York City where he opened a women s clothing business the family lived at 555 West 151st Street 9 U S Attorney Charles H Tuttle in 1929 arrested several individuals including a Victor S Fox for illegal boiler room stock trading Reports of Fox s September 4 arraignment said his Allied Capital Corporation had offices at 49 Broadway and 331 Madison Avenue and that Fox also had desk room at 230 Park Avenue as Fox Motor and Bank Stock Inc and as American Common Stocks Inc His hearing was set for September 18 Another individual J A Sachs was named in the same warrant 10 A report the following month gave the latter s name as John A Sacks and identified him as president of Allied Capital and Fox as a director the two were temporarily enjoined from continuing sales of securities 11 On November 27 Fox and three other individuals connected with Allied Capital Fred H Hallen I Lloyd Zimmer and William McManus were indicted on charges of mail fraud 12 In 1944 an individual named Victor S Fox identified as a former partner of the Cornwall Shipbuilding Company testified in the prosecution of U S Army Captain Joseph Gould 13 who was convicted for conspiracy to accept bribes to award 1 000 000 worth of army contracts to the Cornwall Shipbuilding Company 14 It is unclear if the individual s in these accounts may be future comics publisher Victor Fox However a 1946 New York Times real estate article identifies Victor S Fox as a magazine publisher who purchased for occupancy a five story residential building at 59 E 82nd Street 15 In October 1947 a syndicate headed by Fox and also including Central Color Press of Wilkes Barre Pennsylvania purchased Potsdam Paper Mill Inc of Potsdam New York in order to have what one report called a completely integrated operation 16 Comics publisher Edit Historian Jon Berk has written that Fox was an accountant bookkeeper at the publishing firm that would become DC Comics where he was privy to sales figures that convinced him to launch his own comic book company 17 Fellow historian Gerard Jones writing in his book Men of Tomorrow Geeks Gangsters and the Birth of the Comic Book was unable to find documentation of this 18 and Christopher Irving wrote that Fox learned about DC s success while with another magazine distributed by Independent News DC s distributor 19 Artist Jack King Kirby said of the employer who gave him his start drawing superhero comics Victor Fox was a character He d look up at the ceiling with a big cigar this little fellow very broad going back and forth with his hands behind his back saying I m the King of Comics I m the King of Comics and we would watch him and of course smile a little because he was a genuine type 20 Writer artist Joe Simon commented on Fox He was an accountant for DC Comics He was doing the sales figures and he liked what he saw So he moved downstairs and started his own company I happened to get a job I went over to Fox and became editor there which was just an impossible job because there were no artists no writers no editors no letterers nothing there Everything came out of the Eisner and Iger shop He was a very strange character He had kind of a British accent he was like 5 2 told us he was a former ballroom dancer He was very loud menacing and really a scary little guy He used to say I m the King of the Comics I m the King of the Comics I m the King of the Comics We couldn t stop him 21 Fox characters EditThe Banshee Bird Man 22 The Blackbird Black Fury and Kid Fury Black Lion Blue Beetle later sold to Charlton Comics who later sold to DC Comics The Bouncer Bronze Man Captain Savage 23 Captain V Dagar the Desert Hawk The Dart amp Ace the Bat Boy Dynamite Thor The Eagle amp Buddy Steven Woods who as an adult takes on the name Blue Eagle Electro later known as Dynamo The Flame and Flame Girl The Gorilla with the Human Brain Green Mask and Domino Illuso The Jaguar Jaguar Man Jo Jo Congo King Lunar the Moon Man The Lynx Marga the Panther Woman Miss X The Moth Mothman Nightbird Phantom Lady obtained from Quality Comics via Iger Studios The Purple Tigress Rani Bey The Rapier The Raven Rex Dexter of Mars Rulah Jungle Goddess Samson Spider Queen later appeared in Marvel Comics s Invaders series 24 Stardust the Super Wizard Tangi Tegra Jungle Empress Thor The Topper Tumbler U S Jones Wonder Man The Wraith Yarko the Great Master Magician Zago Jungle Prince Zanzibar the MagicianFox titles EditMain article List of Fox Feature Syndicate publicationsGallery of Fox Feature Syndicate covers Edit References Edit Per the Fox Feature Syndicate entry at the Michigan State University Libraries Reading Room Index to the Comic Art Collection WebCitation archive the company name used Feature singular rather than Features plural Fox Feature Syndicate American comics publisher or publishers sometimes informally called Fox Comics The corporate names Fox Feature Syndicate and Fox Publications both appear with the latter consistently having an address in the state of Massachusetts Andelman Bob Will Eisner A Spirited Life M Press Milwaukie Oregon 2005 ISBN 978 1 59582 011 2 pp 44 45 The Dreamer A Graphic Novella Set During the Dawn of Comic Books DC Comics New York City 1986 edition ISBN 978 1 56389 678 1 Reissued by W W Norton amp Company New York City London 2008 ISBN 978 0 393 32808 0 p 42 Quattro Ken DC vs Victor Fox The Testimony of Will Eisner The Comics Detective July 1 2010 Archive org Program Today at the World s Fair The New York Times August 7 1940 Retrieved April 7 2013 Abstract full article requires fee or subscription Comic Book Marketplace 65 Seducers of the Innocent The Old Corral Hoot Gibson Business Records gt Arrangement Petitions The New York Times July 15 1950 Retrieved April 7 2013 Abstract full article requires fee or subscription a b c d Irving Christopher 2007 The Blue Beetle Companion PDF Raleigh North Carolina TwoMorrows Publishing p 8 ISBN 978 1893905702 Tuttle Coup Ends Tipster Concern The New York Times September 5 1929 Retrieved April 7 2013 Abstract full article requires fee or subscription Halted in Stock Sales The New York Times October 3 1929 Retrieved April 7 2013 Abstract full article requires fee or subscription 4 Indicted in Stock Sales The New York Times November 28 1929 Retrieved April 7 2013 Abstract full article requires fee or subscription Gould Court Hears of Contract Fund The New York Times November 7 1944 Retrieved April 7 2013 Abstract full article requires fee or subscription Stiff sentence for Joe Gould The Leader Post Regina Saskatchewan Canada November 15 1944 Retrieved July 12 2011 Four Apartments in Broadway Deal The New York Times May 29 1946 Retrieved April 7 2013 Abstract full article requires fee or subscription Comics Group Buys Paper Mill The New York Times October 23 1947 Retrieved April 7 2013 Abstract full article requires fee or subscription Berk Jon The Weird Wonder ous World of Victor Fox s Fantastic Mystery Men Part II Archived March 11 2011 at the Wayback Machine Comicartville Library 2004 WebCitation archive Part I and Part II Jones Gerard Men Of Tomorrow Geeks Gangsters and the Birth of the Comic Book 2004 ISBN 0 465 03656 2 Cronin Brian March 22 2013 Comic Book Legends Revealed 411 Comic Book Resources Retrieved March 31 2013 Jack Kirby interview The Comics Journal 134 Feb 1990 reprinted in The Comics Journal Library Volume One Jack Kirby 2002 ISBN 1 56097 466 4 p 25 Jack Kirby Collector 25 Aug 1999 More Than Your Average Joe Excerpts from Joe Simon s panels at the 1998 Comicon International San Diego Bird Man at Don Markstein s Toonopedia Archived from the original on August 27 2015 Captain Savage Fox Feature Syndicate 1939 at Don Markstein s Toonopedia Archived from the original on April 9 2012 Per the Spider Queen entry in The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe Created by Elsa Lesau believed to be a pseudonym for Louis and Arturo Cazeneuve for Fox Features sic Syndicate adapted for the Marvel Universe by Roy Thomas Dave Hoover and Brian Garvey Roy Thomas had originally intended the flashback World War II supervillain team Battle Axis to consist of minor wartime heroes of Timely Comics predecessor of Marvel but editor Mark Gruenwald nixed that idea and super heroes from now defunct wartime publishers were used instead External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fox Feature Syndicate Fox Feature Syndicate at Don Markstein s Toonopedia Comicartville Library The Fox 1939 1942 Comic Covers Fox at the Grand Comics Database Connecticut Talent Connecticut Historical Society Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Berk Jon The Weird Wonder ous World of Victor Fox s Fantastic Mystery Men Part II Comicartville Library 2004 WebCitation archive Part I and Part II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fox Feature Syndicate amp oldid 1148085804, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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