Wild Western

Wild Western

Wild Western #3 (Sept. 1948), the first issue published under the title. Cover art by Syd Shores.
Publication information
Publisher Atlas Comics
Schedule Bi-monthly
Format Anthology42
Publication date Spring 1948 – Sept. 1957
Number of issues 57
Main character(s) Kid Colt, Two-Gun Kid, Black Rider
Creative team
Writer(s) Stan Lee
Artist(s) Ross Andru, Dick Ayers, Dave Berg, John Forte, Tom Gill, Al Hartley, Russ Heath, Jack Keller, Joe Maneely, Chuck Miller, Jay Scott Pike, Werner Roth, Syd Shores, Joe Sinnott, Chic Stone, Pete Tumlinson, George Tuska
Editor(s) Stan Lee

Wild Western (originally titled Wild West) was a Western comic book series published by Atlas Comics, the 1950s forerunner of Marvel Comics. The omnibus series published 57 issues from 1948 to 1957. Kid Colt stories were usually the lead feature and a prominent cover element throughout the series' run, while most issues also featured the Two-Gun Kid and the Black Rider. Other recurring characters included Tex Taylor, Arizona Annie, the Apache Kid, and the Ringo Kid.

Publication history

The series published two issues as Wild West before changing its title to Wild Western. It was edited throughout by Stan Lee, who also contributed a number of stories as writer.

The primary recurring feature was "Kid Colt", which generally led each issue of Wild Western while simultaneously starring in his own title.

Other features starred the first of several Marvel characters dubbed the Two-Gun Kid, Clay Harder, who appeared in most issues from #1-42; the vigilante Tex Taylor, introduced in Wild West #1 and appearing through #11, when he was replaced by the short-lived feature starring the Prairie Kid; the female gunslinger Arizona Annie, who appeared in the first four issues before replaced by the Black Rider through #50; the Apache Kid in issues #15-22; and the Ringo Kid from #38 until the end of the book's run, initially drawn by Joe Maneely, with John Severin taking the reins in at least issues #46-47.

Other recurring features included "Tex Morgan", "Blaze Carson", "Red Hawkins, Gunhawk", the "Arizona Kid", the "Texas Kid", and "Arrowhead".[1][2]

References

External links


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