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See also All-Star Squadron (disambiguation) for a complete list of references to clarify differences between these closely named or closely related articles.

All-Star Squadron
All-Star Squadron
Continuity: DC Universe
Type: Superhero team
Status: Inactive
Founding members: Doctor Mid-Nite; Hawkman; Johnny Quick; Liberty Belle; Plastic Man; Robotman
Former members: Air Wave; Amazing Man; Aquaman; Commander Steel; Firebrand; Guardian; Liberty Belle; Johnny Quick; Manhunter; Red Tornado; Merry, Girl of 1000 Gimmicks; Robotman; Sandy the Golden Boy; Sargon the Sorcerer; The Tarantula; TNT; Zatara
Base of operations: Trylon, Perisphere; New York City, New York (1940s)
Allies: 7 Soldiers of Victory; Freedom Fighters; Justice Society of America; Young All-Stars; Blackhawks; Squadron of Justice; Gernsback
Enemies: Axis Amerika; Per Degaton
1st appearance: Justice League of America #193
Final appearance: Young All-Stars #31 [1]

The All-Star Squadron is a fictional superhero team featured in comic books published by DC Comics. They first appeared in a back-up preview feature in Justice League of America #193, which then spun-off into their own ongoing series, The All-Star Squadron. The series was published from 1981 to 1987 spanning a total of 67 issues and 3 Annuals. A spin-off title, was published from 1987 to 1989 and spotlighted some of the younger members of the team, as well as some fresh new faces, while also spotlighting guest appearances by veteran members of the All-Star Squadron. All of the members of the All-Star Squadron were Golden-Age era DC Comics characters who carried their own stories in various anthology titles. Several of the team members were also membes of the Justice Society of America - a progenitor to the All-Stars.

Overview[]

After the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt gathered all available superheroes and mysterymen (as they were also called) and asked them to unite for battling sabotage and similar at the home front during World War II. Their activities were limited to the home front so they could not fall under the influence of Adolf Hitler's Spear of Destiny. The Squadron soon included also the members of the Justice Society of America (during war time also called the Justice Battalion), the Freedom Fighters and the Seven Soldiers of Victory. Later there was a sub group of younger heroes, dubbed the Young All-Stars, who also were part of the All-Star Squadron.

History[]

Late into the evening of December 6, 1941, President Roosevelt and Vice President Truman attempt to contact the Justice Society of America but no one answers as their headquarters is empty. In Los Angeles, Johnny Chambers and Tubby Watts cover a charity foot race among the Flash, Green Lantern, and Wonder Woman, with the Amazon winning by a nose. Wildcat presents Wonder Woman with a trophy noting that he had been wanting to meet the three heroes. The heroes take their leave and meet up (minus Wildcat) in nearby Echo Park where they encounter Solomon Grundy. None of the heroes have fought Grundy yet the villain claims to have fought them before. Grundy bests the costumed trio and is summoned by a mysterious voice to deliver them or "pay the penalty."

Roosevelt makes another attempt to contact the JSA with no luck. Meanwhile, in New York City, Sandman, Starman, and Johnny Thunder (with his personal Thunderbolt), are defeated by the notorious Sky Pirate. Simultaneously, Dr. Fate learns through the Orb of Nabu that Wotan has returned despite having been defeated "forever." The sorcerer quickly departs despite his wife's admonishment that he is not as powerful as before. Wotan uses a disguised Spectre to defeat his old nemesis, thereby defeating them both.

Somewhere in the South Pacific, Ensign Rod Reilly tries to dissuade his sister Danette from her risky volcano research. Elsewhere, in Gotham City, Superman, Batman, and Robin open a new USO club but are defeated by Professor Zodiak. In Washington, DC, the Atom, Dr. Mid-Nite, and Hawkman are attacked at the Lincoln Memorial by The Monster. When the trio best the horror-inspired villain, The Monster changes into an old man mentioning the name Degaton as the person responsible for the attack. Witnessing this is a mysterious man who then walks away "making strangely metallic sounds upon the rough concrete." As the clock strikes midnight, Roosevelt reveals he had hoped to have the JSA ready in case of a Japanese attack. Still unsuccessful in contacting them, the president is cautiously optimistic the United States will "come through this."

On the day of the bombing of Pearl Harbor, President Franklin Roosevelt gathered available superheroes at the White House and asked them to work together to battle sabotage and keep the peace on the home front during World War II. At the time, many of the Justice Society members had been captured by the villain Per Degaton, but the available heroes were asked to first guard against a potential attack on the American West Coast.

Degaton himself used some stolen Japanese planes to launch such an attack, so the new Squadron's first major mission was to stop the attack and rescue the captured heroes, who also became part of the new group. The rationale for not using the Squadron in combat situations in the European or Pacific Theaters of War was that Adolf Hitler had possession of the Spear of Destiny, a mystical object that gave him control of any superheroes with magic-based powers or a vulnerability to magic (including Superman, Green Lantern, Doctor Fate, and others) who crossed into territory held by the Axis Powers.

Members[]

Notes & Trivia[]

  • The book chronicled the adventures of a large team of superheroes, comprised mostly of featured characters owned by DC comics (including those purchased from other companies such as Quality Comics) that had appeared in the Golden Age of Comic Books. It included members of the Justice Society of America, Freedom Fighters, and Seven Soldiers of Victory, as well as a small number of solo heroes.
  • The All-Star Squadron was an example of retroactive continuity or retcon, as it rewrote the already-established history of DC superheroes that had been published during the 1940s. The first known use of the term retcon was by Roy Thomas in the letter column of All-Star Squadron #20 (April, 1983).
  • The Trylon and Perisphere, actual structures constructed in New York City for the 1939 New York World's Fair, housed the Squadron's headquarters. The All-Star Squadron had a robotic butler named Gernsback, who was based on the Elektro robots from the fair and was probably named after Hugo Gernsback.
  • Originally, the All-Star Squadron was supposed to exist on Earth-Two, a parallel world used by DC as the venue for stories occurring during the 1940s, and including heroes only published during that era as well as the early versions of characters still published up to the present day such as Batman and Superman (the contemporary versions of those characters existed on Earth-One). After the 1985 DC Comics event Crisis on Infinite Earths merged the parallel worlds into one continuity, the duplicate superhero versions were eliminated. The All-Star Squadron was then itself retconned and left only with the characters unique to that time period, so that Superman, Batman and Robin; Wonder Woman and Aquaman were not alive at that point in history, and were thus never Squadron members.
  • The Marvel Comics analog to the All-Star Squadron would be the All-Winners Squad. Like the All-Stars, the All-Winners Squad is made up of veteran World War II-era superheroes such as Captain America, the Sub-Mariner and the original Human Torch, but also includes lesser known costumed adventurers including the Angel, the Destroyer, Black Marvel, Miss America and the Whizzer. The All-Winners Squad debuted in the pages of All-Winners Comics #19.

See also[]

External Links[]

Appearances[]

References[]

  1. Last regular appearance; The All-Stars have made subsequent appearances in alternate realities, flashbacks and time travel stories.


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