All-Flash | |
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Cover to All-Flash Quarterly #1 (Summer 1941) by E.E. Hibbard
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Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
Schedule | Quarterly (#1-5) Bi-monthly (#6-34) |
Format | Ongoing series |
Genre | Superhero |
Publication date | Summer 1941 - December 1947 / January 1948 |
Number of issues | 34 |
Main character(s) | The Flash |
Creative team | |
Writer(s) |
Gardner Fox Robert Kanigher John Broome |
Artist(s) | E. E. Hibbard Harry Tschida Lou Ferstadt Martin Naydel Lee Elias Carmine Infantino |
Creator(s) | Gardner Fox E. E. Hibbard |
All-Flash, originally published as All-Flash Quarterly, was a comic book magazine series published by All-American Publications and later National Periodicals (DC Comics). The series was the first solo feature given to the comic book character The Flash, who also appeared in the anthologies Flash Comics, All-Star Comics, and Comic Cavalcade. The book ran for 34 issues from 1941 to 1947. The series was originally published on a quarterly basis before changing over to a bi-monthly schedule with issue #6. Each issue regularly contained several stories featuring The Flash, as well as minor back-up features like Hop Harrigan, Butch McLobster, The Super Mobster, and Fat and Slat by cartoonist Ed Wheelan and, in later issues, Ton-O-Fun by Flash co-creator Harry Lampert.
The series debuted with a Summer 1941 cover date. Since the title Flash Comics was already in use another name was needed for the series, so it was decided that a contest was to be held in which readers were encouraged to submit their own ideas for the title of the new series. Twenty-five dollars in cash prizes were offered to the four best names submitted, with $10.00 promised to the 1st-place winner of the contest. To the first 500 who submitted a free copy of All-Star Comics #5 was offered. An advertisement for the contest appeared in the pages of All-Star Comics #4 stating "The Flash wins and becomes the next quarterly like Superman and Batman! Boys and girls! Here is a message from Gardner F. Fox and E.E. Hibbard, the author and artist of your favorite feature, the Flash!"
As you know, the FLASH not only appears here in All-Star Comics but is also a regular feature of the monthly magazine, Flash Comics! Now here is our problem:
If we call our Quarterly simply The Flash, which seems like the natural thing to do, our editors feel that too many of you readers would confuse it with Flash Comics, the monthly magazine.