In June of 2007, on various forums, I requested help from my fellow fans in compiling a list of Flagsuit Characters; those who like to dress and act in a way which will presumably make people see them as Particularly Patriotic American Heroes. I thought it would be appropriate to post the full list on the Fourth of July of that year, and I did. The First Draft had 155 entries. Then more suggestions came in from various readers, and a year later I posted a Second Draft with 205 entries. Now its time for the Third Draft, with 237 entries. (This draft has actually gained a bit more than 32 new listings, because I saw fit to delete a few of the previous ones.)
Here were my original guidelines:
To make it onto my final list, a character has to meet a few basic criteria:
1. He (or she) wears a costume that includes red, white, and blue. (The presence of other colors is also acceptable as long as all three of those are included. But if the costume only has two out of threered and blue without any white, for instancethen that doesn't count!)
2. The character obviously wants to be viewed (by the general public) as an exceptionally patriotic American hero. I'm not saying the person must "really" be a hero, or even has to be a citizen or legal resident of the USA, for that matter! I'm just saying that this is the image the character obviously wants to project! If there have been any villains who put on red-white-and-blue outfits in order to fool people into thinking they were heroes for awhile, I'm perfectly willing to count that! (But not if they were just impersonating Captain America, for instanceonly if they invented a fresh identity for the occasion.)
3. He (or she) must have appeared in at least one published comic book story. (I don't want costumed characters who only existed in movies, TV shows, videogames or other media.
I then offered examples of what I didnt wantSuperman was disqualified by both Rule #1 and Rule #2, as I saw it; Spider-Man was also disqualified by Rule #2.
Those rules still apply, if you're thinking of mentioning someone I've still managed to overlook!
I try to keep the listings as short and sweet as possible; I'm not writing an entire book here. I dont usually mention what a heros secret identity was, nor what powers he had (if any), nor (in most cases) in which title he first appeared. I do mention who published his adventures, though.
In cases where I personally have not been able to double-check such details as the exact physical appearance of the character (did the costume include red, white, and blue, all three colors at once, in a way which resembled the U.S. flag?) I have typed Unconfirmed at the end of the listing.
And I only list each character concept or role once, even if the same alias and costume have been used by multiple characters all belonging to the same company. There is only one listing for Captain America, for instance. I figure Steve Rogers was the original; so any other Captain America published by Marvel has just been a shameless knockoff of the basic concept!
On the other hand: There are four listings which each begin with the name American Eagle, because four different companies have each created at least one character apiece who wore a flagsuit while using that patriotic alias!
Theres always room for improvement, but this is the best Ive got at the moment. Happy Fourth of July!
(Someday I may do a more elaborate version of this list perhaps with each characters name linking to an image of him or her, and some details on secret identities and first appearances and whatnot; perhaps even turning it into a webpage with dozens of scanned images embedded in it. I dont know. But don't hold your breath!)
THE MASTER LIST OF U.S. FLAGSUIT CHARACTERS (THIRD DRAFT)
Aerobica (Catfish Comics) [Unconfirmed]
Agent Liberty (DC)
All-American (Homage. Astro City?) [Unconfirmed]
All-American (Marvel, New Universe timeline)
Amazon (Amalgam, a combo of Wonder Woman and Storm)
Amber Waves (Appears in the miniseries The American Way from DCs Wildstorm)
America Man (Cyclone Comics. He debuted in a black-and-white story, but his costume was obviously based on the U.S. flag)
The American (Dark Horse)
American Ace (Valiant)
American Beauty (Briefly appeared in Alan Moore's "1963" miniseries. Member of the Victory Vanguard in the WWII era) (Image)
American Champion (from the "Capes" series from Image) [Unconfirmed]
The American Crusader (Thrilling Publications)
American Dream (Marvel, the MC2 timeline)
American Eagle (DC. Anthropomorphic eagle who joined the Zoo Crew)
American Eagle (Henchman Publishing; the character is a student in the P.S. 238 series)
American Eagle (Marvel)
American Eagle (Nedor)
American Icon (Image. Appeared in a Wildguard miniseries)
American Knight (appeared in a comic called ActionFolksinger) [Unconfirmed]
American Liberty (from The Moth miniseries by Steve Rude, published by Dark Horse)
American Maid (Tick) [details unclear may have been in comics, may only have been in illustrated books of some other type?]
The American Powerhouse (Malibus Bravura imprint, the Power & Glory miniseries)
American Star (Superdupeheroes or Superduperheroes) [Unconfirmed]
American Woman (Antarctic Press)
The Americano (Cyclone Comics. She debuted in a black-and-white story, but her costume was obviously based on the U.S. flag)
The Americommando (DC)
Archie the Gruesome (Timely)
Banner (DC. Fought Batman while wrapped up in a U.S. flag)
Battlestar (Marvel)
Battlin' American (Fantagraphics, a regular in the series "The Astonishing Lloyd Llewellyn") [Unconfirmed]
Billy Yank (DC) (Civil War era) [Unconfirmed]
Bloodtype (also known as Mister America II) (DC) [Unconfirmed]
Blue Eagle (Marvel, Squadron Supreme universe)
Bobby Bell (Archie. Only existed in a few Public Service Announcements in their comics)
Bravado (Acclaim)
The Buckies, or Bold Urban Commandos (Marvel) [unconfirmed]
Buckley [Former partner of First American, ABC/Wildstorm] [Unconfirmed]
Buckskin Blake, Defender of America's Liberty (Periodical House) [Unconfirmed]
Buddy (Fox. Juvenile sidekick to Fox's "The Eagle")
Captain America Jr. of the X-League II (merger of Captain America plus Captain Marvel Jr.) (Amalgam)
Captain America (Timely, later Marvel)
Captain Americana (He wore a standard business suit, but also carried a shield which resembled Captain America's original, non-circular model. He only appeared in one black-and-white story; Ive seen scans of a few panels. Given the name Captain Americana and his reportedly excessive patriotic fervor, it seems a safe bet that his shield was red-white-and-blue!) (Marvel)
Captain Americat (the funny-animal version of Captain America in the same timeline as Peter Porker, Spider-Ham) (Marvel)
Captain Battle (Lev Gleason)
Captain Commando (MLJ)
Captain Constitution the Premier Patriot (Ace) [Unconfirmed]
Captain Courageous (Ace)
Captain Curtis (Full Bleed Studios) [Unconfirmed]
Captain Dash (Made a single Golden Age appearance which established that he lived in the 31st Century) (Timely) [Unconfirmed]
Captain Fight (Fiction House)
Captain Flag (MLJ)
Captain Freedom (Harvey)
Captain From Texas (Marvelapparently a wild-west version of their Captain America concept)
Captain Glory (Harry A. Chesler) [Unconfirmed]
Captain Guts (The Print Mint)
Captain Red Blazer (Apparently he should not be confused with the Golden Age character Red Blazer) (Harvey)
Captain Star (Superheroes/Ace Books) [Unconfirmed]
Captain Terror (Timely)
Captain V (Published by either Fox Features or William H. Wise. Different online resources list one or the other as the publisher of the Captain's first appearance in "All Top Comics #1." Apparently this was a later alias of a Golden Age character who originally called himself The Puppeteer)
Captain USA (Hero who appeared in at least one Charlton comic in the late 60s, long before DC acquired the rights to their characters)
Captain USA (Ultraverse character; probably just appeared once)(Marvel)
Captain Victory (Ace) [Unconfirmed]
Captain Wonder (DC character who fought the Earth-1 Wonder Woman; probably out of continuity now)
Casey Jones from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles has reportedly worn a red-white-and-blue mask at times (I am not an expert on TMNT continuity so I dont know if he was trying to pass himself off as a very patriotic hero at the time, or what?)[Unconfirmed, with the characters patriotic fervor quite dubious]
Caspar Weinberger (When handled satirically in "Reagan's Raiders") (Solson)
Celeste (Superpowered character in the world of "Marshall Law"; wore red-white-and-blue costume. Marvel's Epic line) [Unconfirmed]
Citizen Steel (DC)
Citizen V (Marvel the original Golden Age character apparently didnt wear red and white and blue in his costume, but various successors using the same name in modern continuity have definitely done so)
Civilian Justice (BeyondComics)
Colonel America (Marvel Zombieverse) [Unconfirmed]
The Comedian (DC, the Watchmen timeline)
The Commander (Appears in the "I Hate Gallant Girl" miniseries) (Image)
Commander America of the Cosmic Avengers (Marvel) [Unconfirmed]
Commander Capitalism (Image)
Commander Liberty (Quantum Comics) [Unconfirmed]
Commander Steel (DC)
Commando Yank (Fawcett)
Commie Smasher (Appeared in the "Danger Unlimited" mini, published by Dark Horse, but probably owned by John Byrne)
The Conqueror (Hillman)
Cowboy (Marvel, part of Team America)
Dandy (Harry A. Chesler. Juvenile sidekick to Yankee Doodle Jones)
Deathlok (Marvel)
The Defender (Timely)
Dicky (Ace Periodicals. Golden Age hero; he was the kid sidekick of The Lone Warrior)
Diehard (A Liefeld-owned character who debuted at Image as part of "Youngblood")
Doctor Tomorrow (Acclaim)
Dollar Bill (DC, the "Watchmen" timeline)
Doodle (Prize Publications. He and his twin brother were the Golden Age duo called "Yank and Doodle")
Dr. Justice (from the "Capes series from Image) [Unconfirmed]
Dr. Stellar (Image, their Big Bang stories)
Dynaman (DC. He only existed as Dynaman in an Elseworlds timeline in the 4-part miniseries The Golden Age)
The Eagle (Fox Features Syndicate)
The Eagle (Wildstorm, a Red Menace miniseries]
Eaglet (Sidekick of Nedors American Eagle)
Enemy (created by Steven Grant; published by Dark Horse)
Father Patriot (A Golden Age character who claimed to be a spirit born in 1776. Fat, white-bearded, wore a flagsuit. I gather that his major accomplishmentpossibly his only recorded deed!was to be part of the Golden Age Major Victory's origin story, by bringing an ordinary American soldier back from the dead and providing him with a flagsuit costume (different from the design Father Patriot already wore!) and a nifty alias.) (Harry A. Chesler)
The Fighting American (published by various companies)
The Fighting Yank (Nedor)
First American (ABC/Wildstorm, which later became part of DC)
The Flag (Ace Periodicals)
Flag Boy (Superheroes/Ace Books) [Unconfirmed]
Flagg (Rising Stars universe, published by Image) (This character also known as Patriot)
Flagman, or possibly Flag-Man, or even Flag Manonline sources differ on how it was written, and it may have varied (Holyoke, later revived by AC)
Fortress America (Lone Star Press, the "Pantheon" series)
Freckled American (ABC/Wildstorm) [unconfirmed]
Free Spirit (Marvel)
Furious American (Chaos!) [Unconfirmed]
General Glory (DC)
George Bush (The one who was Reagans Vice President for 8 years and then was elected President in 1988a fictional version of him wore a flagsuit when handled satirically in "Reagan's Raiders") (Solson)
George P. Schultz (when handled satirically in "Reagan's Raiders") (Solson)
The Ghost of Flanders (Quality. Apparently later bought by DC, but never used by them)
Glitter (Marvel, New Universe)
The Great Defender (Quality, presumably now belongs to DC)
Hale Battle (The first sidekick of Captain Battle; apparently wore a flagsuit modeled on his mentors)
Homelander (from The Boys series, published by ABC/Wildstorm and then by Dynamite Entertainment) [Unconfirmed]
Honcho (Marvel, part of Team America)
Jack Flag (Marvel)
Joe Public (DC)
Justice (Image)
Justice (Marvel, First Line, previously Kid Justice) [Unconfirmed]
Kid America (sidekick to The American) (Dark Horse)
Kid Justice (Marvel, First Line, later Justice) [Unconfirmed]
Kid Quick (Nedor, later used by AC) [Unconfirmed]
The Last American (Marvel, published by Epic)
Left-Winger (Marvel)
The Liberator (Nedor)
Liberty (Image)
Liberty Belle (Charlton character originally; later acquired by DC; this one's name was "Caroline Dean," with no connection to DCs Liberty Belle from the Golden Age who eventually married Johnny Quick)
Liberty Girl (Existed in Marvel's past in Byrne's "Lost Generation" mini)
Liberty Girl (Heroic Publishing)
Liberty Lad (Image, their Freedom Force comic book based on the video game)
Lightning (Image, a name used by Rapture during her time in red-white-and-blue as part of the Special Operations Strikeforce)
Lodestar (DC) [Unconfirmed]
The Lone Warrior (Ace Periodicals)
Here were my original guidelines:
To make it onto my final list, a character has to meet a few basic criteria:
1. He (or she) wears a costume that includes red, white, and blue. (The presence of other colors is also acceptable as long as all three of those are included. But if the costume only has two out of threered and blue without any white, for instancethen that doesn't count!)
2. The character obviously wants to be viewed (by the general public) as an exceptionally patriotic American hero. I'm not saying the person must "really" be a hero, or even has to be a citizen or legal resident of the USA, for that matter! I'm just saying that this is the image the character obviously wants to project! If there have been any villains who put on red-white-and-blue outfits in order to fool people into thinking they were heroes for awhile, I'm perfectly willing to count that! (But not if they were just impersonating Captain America, for instanceonly if they invented a fresh identity for the occasion.)
3. He (or she) must have appeared in at least one published comic book story. (I don't want costumed characters who only existed in movies, TV shows, videogames or other media.
I then offered examples of what I didnt wantSuperman was disqualified by both Rule #1 and Rule #2, as I saw it; Spider-Man was also disqualified by Rule #2.
Those rules still apply, if you're thinking of mentioning someone I've still managed to overlook!
I try to keep the listings as short and sweet as possible; I'm not writing an entire book here. I dont usually mention what a heros secret identity was, nor what powers he had (if any), nor (in most cases) in which title he first appeared. I do mention who published his adventures, though.
In cases where I personally have not been able to double-check such details as the exact physical appearance of the character (did the costume include red, white, and blue, all three colors at once, in a way which resembled the U.S. flag?) I have typed Unconfirmed at the end of the listing.
And I only list each character concept or role once, even if the same alias and costume have been used by multiple characters all belonging to the same company. There is only one listing for Captain America, for instance. I figure Steve Rogers was the original; so any other Captain America published by Marvel has just been a shameless knockoff of the basic concept!
On the other hand: There are four listings which each begin with the name American Eagle, because four different companies have each created at least one character apiece who wore a flagsuit while using that patriotic alias!
Theres always room for improvement, but this is the best Ive got at the moment. Happy Fourth of July!
(Someday I may do a more elaborate version of this list perhaps with each characters name linking to an image of him or her, and some details on secret identities and first appearances and whatnot; perhaps even turning it into a webpage with dozens of scanned images embedded in it. I dont know. But don't hold your breath!)
THE MASTER LIST OF U.S. FLAGSUIT CHARACTERS (THIRD DRAFT)
Aerobica (Catfish Comics) [Unconfirmed]
Agent Liberty (DC)
All-American (Homage. Astro City?) [Unconfirmed]
All-American (Marvel, New Universe timeline)
Amazon (Amalgam, a combo of Wonder Woman and Storm)
Amber Waves (Appears in the miniseries The American Way from DCs Wildstorm)
America Man (Cyclone Comics. He debuted in a black-and-white story, but his costume was obviously based on the U.S. flag)
The American (Dark Horse)
American Ace (Valiant)
American Beauty (Briefly appeared in Alan Moore's "1963" miniseries. Member of the Victory Vanguard in the WWII era) (Image)
American Champion (from the "Capes" series from Image) [Unconfirmed]
The American Crusader (Thrilling Publications)
American Dream (Marvel, the MC2 timeline)
American Eagle (DC. Anthropomorphic eagle who joined the Zoo Crew)
American Eagle (Henchman Publishing; the character is a student in the P.S. 238 series)
American Eagle (Marvel)
American Eagle (Nedor)
American Icon (Image. Appeared in a Wildguard miniseries)
American Knight (appeared in a comic called ActionFolksinger) [Unconfirmed]
American Liberty (from The Moth miniseries by Steve Rude, published by Dark Horse)
American Maid (Tick) [details unclear may have been in comics, may only have been in illustrated books of some other type?]
The American Powerhouse (Malibus Bravura imprint, the Power & Glory miniseries)
American Star (Superdupeheroes or Superduperheroes) [Unconfirmed]
American Woman (Antarctic Press)
The Americano (Cyclone Comics. She debuted in a black-and-white story, but her costume was obviously based on the U.S. flag)
The Americommando (DC)
Archie the Gruesome (Timely)
Banner (DC. Fought Batman while wrapped up in a U.S. flag)
Battlestar (Marvel)
Battlin' American (Fantagraphics, a regular in the series "The Astonishing Lloyd Llewellyn") [Unconfirmed]
Billy Yank (DC) (Civil War era) [Unconfirmed]
Bloodtype (also known as Mister America II) (DC) [Unconfirmed]
Blue Eagle (Marvel, Squadron Supreme universe)
Bobby Bell (Archie. Only existed in a few Public Service Announcements in their comics)
Bravado (Acclaim)
The Buckies, or Bold Urban Commandos (Marvel) [unconfirmed]
Buckley [Former partner of First American, ABC/Wildstorm] [Unconfirmed]
Buckskin Blake, Defender of America's Liberty (Periodical House) [Unconfirmed]
Buddy (Fox. Juvenile sidekick to Fox's "The Eagle")
Captain America Jr. of the X-League II (merger of Captain America plus Captain Marvel Jr.) (Amalgam)
Captain America (Timely, later Marvel)
Captain Americana (He wore a standard business suit, but also carried a shield which resembled Captain America's original, non-circular model. He only appeared in one black-and-white story; Ive seen scans of a few panels. Given the name Captain Americana and his reportedly excessive patriotic fervor, it seems a safe bet that his shield was red-white-and-blue!) (Marvel)
Captain Americat (the funny-animal version of Captain America in the same timeline as Peter Porker, Spider-Ham) (Marvel)
Captain Battle (Lev Gleason)
Captain Commando (MLJ)
Captain Constitution the Premier Patriot (Ace) [Unconfirmed]
Captain Courageous (Ace)
Captain Curtis (Full Bleed Studios) [Unconfirmed]
Captain Dash (Made a single Golden Age appearance which established that he lived in the 31st Century) (Timely) [Unconfirmed]
Captain Fight (Fiction House)
Captain Flag (MLJ)
Captain Freedom (Harvey)
Captain From Texas (Marvelapparently a wild-west version of their Captain America concept)
Captain Glory (Harry A. Chesler) [Unconfirmed]
Captain Guts (The Print Mint)
Captain Red Blazer (Apparently he should not be confused with the Golden Age character Red Blazer) (Harvey)
Captain Star (Superheroes/Ace Books) [Unconfirmed]
Captain Terror (Timely)
Captain V (Published by either Fox Features or William H. Wise. Different online resources list one or the other as the publisher of the Captain's first appearance in "All Top Comics #1." Apparently this was a later alias of a Golden Age character who originally called himself The Puppeteer)
Captain USA (Hero who appeared in at least one Charlton comic in the late 60s, long before DC acquired the rights to their characters)
Captain USA (Ultraverse character; probably just appeared once)(Marvel)
Captain Victory (Ace) [Unconfirmed]
Captain Wonder (DC character who fought the Earth-1 Wonder Woman; probably out of continuity now)
Casey Jones from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles has reportedly worn a red-white-and-blue mask at times (I am not an expert on TMNT continuity so I dont know if he was trying to pass himself off as a very patriotic hero at the time, or what?)[Unconfirmed, with the characters patriotic fervor quite dubious]
Caspar Weinberger (When handled satirically in "Reagan's Raiders") (Solson)
Celeste (Superpowered character in the world of "Marshall Law"; wore red-white-and-blue costume. Marvel's Epic line) [Unconfirmed]
Citizen Steel (DC)
Citizen V (Marvel the original Golden Age character apparently didnt wear red and white and blue in his costume, but various successors using the same name in modern continuity have definitely done so)
Civilian Justice (BeyondComics)
Colonel America (Marvel Zombieverse) [Unconfirmed]
The Comedian (DC, the Watchmen timeline)
The Commander (Appears in the "I Hate Gallant Girl" miniseries) (Image)
Commander America of the Cosmic Avengers (Marvel) [Unconfirmed]
Commander Capitalism (Image)
Commander Liberty (Quantum Comics) [Unconfirmed]
Commander Steel (DC)
Commando Yank (Fawcett)
Commie Smasher (Appeared in the "Danger Unlimited" mini, published by Dark Horse, but probably owned by John Byrne)
The Conqueror (Hillman)
Cowboy (Marvel, part of Team America)
Dandy (Harry A. Chesler. Juvenile sidekick to Yankee Doodle Jones)
Deathlok (Marvel)
The Defender (Timely)
Dicky (Ace Periodicals. Golden Age hero; he was the kid sidekick of The Lone Warrior)
Diehard (A Liefeld-owned character who debuted at Image as part of "Youngblood")
Doctor Tomorrow (Acclaim)
Dollar Bill (DC, the "Watchmen" timeline)
Doodle (Prize Publications. He and his twin brother were the Golden Age duo called "Yank and Doodle")
Dr. Justice (from the "Capes series from Image) [Unconfirmed]
Dr. Stellar (Image, their Big Bang stories)
Dynaman (DC. He only existed as Dynaman in an Elseworlds timeline in the 4-part miniseries The Golden Age)
The Eagle (Fox Features Syndicate)
The Eagle (Wildstorm, a Red Menace miniseries]
Eaglet (Sidekick of Nedors American Eagle)
Enemy (created by Steven Grant; published by Dark Horse)
Father Patriot (A Golden Age character who claimed to be a spirit born in 1776. Fat, white-bearded, wore a flagsuit. I gather that his major accomplishmentpossibly his only recorded deed!was to be part of the Golden Age Major Victory's origin story, by bringing an ordinary American soldier back from the dead and providing him with a flagsuit costume (different from the design Father Patriot already wore!) and a nifty alias.) (Harry A. Chesler)
The Fighting American (published by various companies)
The Fighting Yank (Nedor)
First American (ABC/Wildstorm, which later became part of DC)
The Flag (Ace Periodicals)
Flag Boy (Superheroes/Ace Books) [Unconfirmed]
Flagg (Rising Stars universe, published by Image) (This character also known as Patriot)
Flagman, or possibly Flag-Man, or even Flag Manonline sources differ on how it was written, and it may have varied (Holyoke, later revived by AC)
Fortress America (Lone Star Press, the "Pantheon" series)
Freckled American (ABC/Wildstorm) [unconfirmed]
Free Spirit (Marvel)
Furious American (Chaos!) [Unconfirmed]
General Glory (DC)
George Bush (The one who was Reagans Vice President for 8 years and then was elected President in 1988a fictional version of him wore a flagsuit when handled satirically in "Reagan's Raiders") (Solson)
George P. Schultz (when handled satirically in "Reagan's Raiders") (Solson)
The Ghost of Flanders (Quality. Apparently later bought by DC, but never used by them)
Glitter (Marvel, New Universe)
The Great Defender (Quality, presumably now belongs to DC)
Hale Battle (The first sidekick of Captain Battle; apparently wore a flagsuit modeled on his mentors)
Homelander (from The Boys series, published by ABC/Wildstorm and then by Dynamite Entertainment) [Unconfirmed]
Honcho (Marvel, part of Team America)
Jack Flag (Marvel)
Joe Public (DC)
Justice (Image)
Justice (Marvel, First Line, previously Kid Justice) [Unconfirmed]
Kid America (sidekick to The American) (Dark Horse)
Kid Justice (Marvel, First Line, later Justice) [Unconfirmed]
Kid Quick (Nedor, later used by AC) [Unconfirmed]
The Last American (Marvel, published by Epic)
Left-Winger (Marvel)
The Liberator (Nedor)
Liberty (Image)
Liberty Belle (Charlton character originally; later acquired by DC; this one's name was "Caroline Dean," with no connection to DCs Liberty Belle from the Golden Age who eventually married Johnny Quick)
Liberty Girl (Existed in Marvel's past in Byrne's "Lost Generation" mini)
Liberty Girl (Heroic Publishing)
Liberty Lad (Image, their Freedom Force comic book based on the video game)
Lightning (Image, a name used by Rapture during her time in red-white-and-blue as part of the Special Operations Strikeforce)
Lodestar (DC) [Unconfirmed]
The Lone Warrior (Ace Periodicals)