A list of stories published in the J.B. Allen/Amalgamated Press/Fleetway Publications weekly boys' comic Sun between 1947 and 1959.

1066

Published: 3 November to 22 December 1951[1]
Artist: Roy Davis[1]

Both the Normans and the Saxons muddle their way towards the Battle of Hastings.

55BC

Published: 10 June to 16 September 1950[1]
Artist: Roy Davis[1]

Julius Caesar leads his legions to invade Britain, only to find the Ancient Britons to be a strange bunch, and his own troops no better.

Addy

Published: 2 March 1948 to 25 June 1949[1]
Artist: Edward Banger[1]

The misadventures of a bumbling navy admiral.

The Adventures of Boy Colin

Published: 9 October 1954 to 29 October 1955[1]
Writer: Jacques Van Melkebeke[1]
Artist: Paul Cuvelier[1]

Colin and his friends Prince Wong and Singh hunt for treasure in the Temple of Jade.

  • Reprints of "L'Extraordinaire Odyssée de Corentin Feldoé" from Tintin.[1]

The Adventures of Marco Polo

Published: 21 August to 2 October 1954[1]
Artist: Michael Hubbard[1]

Marco Polo and father Nicolo Polo are entertained at the court of Kublai Khan.

Alfred the Great

Published: 4 November 1950 to 17 February 1951[1]
Artist: Roy Davis[1]

King Alfred finds novel ways of repulsing an invasion by bumbling Vikings.

All at Sea

Published: 24 January to 17 October 1959[1]
Artists: Geoff Campion, Fred Holmes[1]

The adventures of sailors Stripey, Nobby and Jock.

Alley Cat Ollie

Published: 28 July 1951 to 10 January 1953[1]
Artist: Harry Hargreaves[1]

A cat's attempts to catch fish and birds causes disaster on the streets.

Battler Britton

Published: 7 January 1956 to 17 October 1959[1]
Artists: Geoff Campion, Eric Bradbury, Ian Kennedy, Reg Bunn, Carlos Freixas[1]

The adventures of a World War II British fighter ace.

Billy the Kid

Published: 16 August 1952 to 17 October 1959[1]
Writer: Mike Butterworth[1]
Artists: Geoff Campion, Stephen Chapman, Eric Parker, Selby Donnison, Colin Merritt, C. L. Doughty, Fred Holmes, Ian Kennedy, Jesús Blasco, Eric Bradbury, Reg Bunn, Don Lawrence, R. Charles Roylance, Keith Shone[1][lower-alpha 1]

William Boney retires to a peaceful life on a ranch but when trouble brews dons the mask and black outfit of Billy the Kid once more, riding his horse Satan to drive off villains.

  • Continued in Lion. Also featured in Knockout and Cowboy Picture Library, later reprinted as "The Black Avenger" in[1] Campion modelled the character on actor Robert Taylor, who had portrayed Billy the Kid in the 1941 film version.

Buck Jones

Published: 7 July to 22 December 1951[1]
Artist: Geoff Campion[1]

Sheriff Buck Jones deals with outlaws and kidnappers.

The Canyon Kids

Published: 29 December 1951 to 22 March 1952[1]
Artist: Eric Bradbury[1]

Hayseed children Elmer, Emmie, Homer, Nibbler, Hot Shot, Lollipop Lou, Tubby, Cedric and Gumboil build bizarre devices.

The Centurion's Secret

Published: 2 March to 8 June 1948[1]
Writer: David Morris[1]
Illustrator: Bob Wilkin[1]

John Trevor, his children Eric and Kaye and the archaeologist Professor Warwickson set off to a Roman wall in Northumberland to search for a cache of documents reputedly buried there by Centurion Paulus. However, they find landowner Mr. Russell to be strangely uncooperative.

The Chums of St. Clemens

Published: 7 January to 9 September & 7 to 28 October 1950[1]
Writer: Percy Clarke (under the pseudonym Martin Fraser)[1]

The adventurers of pupils at an English boarding school.


The Cisco Kid

Published: 5 April to 27 June 1958[1]
Writer: Ron Reed[1]
Artist: Jose Luis Salinas[1]

Caballero Cisco Kid hunts outlaws, aided by Mexican sidekick Pancho.

  • Reprints of King Features newspaper strip.[1]


Clip McCord

Published: 27 May 1950 to 5 May 1951[1]
Artist: Reg Bunn[1]

Ace Daily Bugle reporter Clip McCord is recruited by the secret service to stop the machinations of criminal mastermind the Hawk, aided by assistant Mary Trent.

The Cruise of the Cormorant

Published: 11 November 1947 to 17 February 1948[1]
Writer: Arthur Catherall[1]

Holidaying off the coast of Spain in their uncle Toby's yacht Cormorant, Dick and Pam are drawn into a thrilling hunt for treasure.

Deadshot Sue

Published: 1 October 1949 to 7 January 1950[1]
Artist: Hugh McNeill[1]

Ace sharpshooter Sue Sage lives with her grandfather, little brother Timmy and little sister Lottie on Sundown Ranch. However, gambler and Sourdough City mayor Lou Largo plans to take over their spread.

Dick Turpin

Published: 17 February 1951 to 17 October 1959 (strip), 15 September 1956 to 4 May 1957 (text)[1]
Writer: Mike Butterworth[1][lower-alpha 1]
Artists: Hugh McNeill, Eric Parker, John McNamara, Edgar Spencely, Derek Eyles, Geoff Campion, Jesus Blasco, Eric Bradbury[1]
Illustrator: C. L. Doughty[1]

Unjustly outlawed, Dick Turpin and his female companion Moll Moonlight roam the roads of Britain, foiling villains such as Creepy Crawley. Later, Turpin allied with friend Jem Peters and servant Beetles.

  • Later reprinted in Thriller Picture Library. The text stories ran parallel to the picture strips. The latter were later reprinted as "Jack o' Justice" in Valiant; Moll retained her name in the reprints and continued as a supporting character when new material was printed.[1]

Ethelred the Unready

Published: 26 May to 21 June 1951[1]
Artist: Roy Davis[1]

The unfortunate King Ethelred lives up to his historical epithet.

  • Cartoon. Later reprinted in Tiger.[1]

The Farm of Secrets

Published: 29 March to 6 August 1949[1]
Writer: David Morris[1]
Illustrators: Bob Wilkin, David Williams[1]

Exploring their home of Dingle Farm, twins Roy and Julia Cranston discover a secret message, which shepherd Tom Marsden believes might lead to the fortune of his late uncle Simon. However they must unravel the mystery before cowhand Jake Taylor and sinister Mr. Manson are able to do so.

Find It Who Can

Published: 26 November 1949 to 1 April 1950[1]
Writer: John Hunter[1]
Illustrator: Derek Eyles[1]

Schoolboys Tom Standring and Billy Baldwin find a fragment of a map to the buried treasure of notorious pirate Paul Caron. However, their search sees the pair fall into the hands of a gang of smugglers.

Formula X

Published: 2 March to 21 December 1948[1]
Artist: Serge Drigin[1]

Detective Steve Murton tries to stop vital scientific papers from falling into the hands of sinister foreign agents, aided by his driver Ginger.

Fuzzy

Published: 11 November 1947 to 2 March 1948[1]
Writer: Bob Wilkin (under the pseudonym Wendy Wilkin)[1]
Artist: Bob Wilkin[1]

A smartly-dressed, cunning rabbit protects his friends from foxes.

  • Cartoon.

The Golden Whistle

Published: 6 December 1951 to 24 May 1952[1]
Illustrators: Philip Mendoza, Patrick Nicolle, Ron Smith, Robert MacGillivray, Reg Parlett[1][lower-alpha 1]

Schoolboy Tommy Brown has a magic whistle capable of bringing objects to life.

  • Text story. Renamed "Tommy's Magic Whistle" from 22 March 1952.[1]

Hal Hotspur

Published: 24 February to 25 August 1951[1]

Gallant knight Hal Hotspur and his squire Alain battle the villainous Fitz-Stephen.

The Happy Hussar

Published: 20 February 1954 to 2 February 1957[1]
Writer: Mike Butterworth[1]
Artists: Eric Parker, Julio Vivas, Philip Mendoza, Fred Holmes, Eric Bradbury[1][lower-alpha 1]

Max Bravo is a gallant, skilled rider in the French Army's 9th Hussars as Napoleon's forces battle through Central Europe. Bravo must also be wary of vicious rival Sergeant-Major Slashtrap.

Handy Andy

Published: 28 April 1951 to 18 October 1952, 28 June 1958 to 30 May 1959[1]
Artist: Hugh McNeill, Denis Gifford, Eric Bradbury, Reg Parlett[1]

Andy's attempts to show off his intelligence are constantly undermined by his dim-witted behaviour.

Harold the Hare

Published: 8 July 1950 to 22 May 1952[1]
Artist: Roy Davis, Harry Hargreaves[1]

A hare called Harold has adventures in a world of anthropomorphic animals called Leafy Wood.

  • Cartoon. The character later returned in preschool title Jack and Jill, then headlined spinoff title Harold Hare's Own Magazine between 1959 and 1964,[1] and was later purchased from Fleetway by Look and Learn Ltd.[3]

Home in Happy Valley

Published: 17 February 1948 to 25 June 1949[1]
Illustrator: Bob Wilkin[1]

The Morton family move to a farmstead in seemingly idyllic Happy Valley, but soon find not all the locals are welcoming.

Jak of the Jaguars

Published: 29 March to 9 November 1952[1]
Artists: Patrick Nicolle, Philip Mendoza, Stephen Chapman[1]

Washed ashore as a baby following a shipwreck, a baby is saved by a jaguar and raised by a jungle tribe, becoming a skilled warrior called Jak.

Jeremy Blaze, the Boy Buccaneer

Published: 29 August 1953 to 14 August 1954[1]
Writer: Mike Butterworth[1]

Jeremy Blaze is the young captain of Royal Navy warship HMS Lightning, and soon starts making a name for himself as a daring and talented commander.

The Jester's Revenge

Published: 4 November 1950 to 10 February 1951[1]

Noble Count Roger of Lombardy is betrayed by his jester Odo, who imprisons heir Guy and allows the French to take control of their castle. Roger's loyal retainer Marius is able to escape the purge and swears to avenge his master.

John and Joan Randall

Published: 3 February 1948 to 24 December 1949[1]
Artist: R. W. Plummer[1]

Professor Randall takes his children John and Joan, as well as their dog Rover, on adventures in a spaceship to Venus and beyond.


The Jolly Giants of Jupiter

Published: 20 August to 26 November 1949[1]
Illustrator: Bob Wilkin[1]

Travelling by rocket with Professor Pooter, Peter Hayward and his cousin Molly land on Jupiter, finding the planet populated by amiable giants.

Jolly Wally

Published: 28 July to 22 September 1951[1]
Artist: Eric Bradbury[1]

Enthusiastic circus boy Jolly Wally and his (more intelligent) horse Trix get in a variety of scrapes.

Kindheart

Published: 11 November 1947 to 25 June 1949[1]
Artist: Walter Holt[1]

A dog with a heart on his fur does good deeds and makes sure mean types get their comeuppance.

King of the Wild Horses

Published: 26 May to 27 October 1951[1]
Artist: H. C. Milburn[1]

The piebald leader of a pack of wild horses wandering the plains protects his followers from the likes of Sharp Fang the wolf, Slithe the rattlesnake and Cougar the mountain lion.

The King's Musketeers

Published: 15 November 1952 to 3 January 1953[1]
Artist: H. M. Brock[1]

The Black Musketeers - including d'Artagnan, Athos, Porthos and Aramis - defend the throne of Louis XIII.

Lord of Sherwood

Published: 29 March to 21 June 1952 (text), 22 November 1952 to 20 April 1958 (strip)[1]
Writers: Lance Sterling (text) Mike Butterworth (strip), Joan Whitford (strip, under the pseudonym Barry Ford)[1][lower-alpha 1]
Illustrators: Stephen Chapman, Patrick Nicolle[1]
Artists: Patrick Nicolle, Fred Holmes, Geoff Campion, C. L. Doughty, Edgar Spencely, Reginald Heade, Jesús Blasco[1][lower-alpha 1]

Chased from his castle by Normans after his father is killed in the Crusades, Robin of Locksley and faithful servant Watt set up a base of operations in Sherwood Forest as they plan to fight back against their oppressors.

Marooned on Mars

Published: 9 July to 19 September 1949[1]
Writer and Artist: Norman Williams[1]

Martians planning an invasion of Earth kidnap boxer Tom Boyd to find out more about humans; he is freed by Martian Princess Gayra, and they set about thwarting the attack.

Mr. Peep

Published: 21 April 1951 to 1 March 1952[1]
Artist: Fred Robinson[1]

The nosey Mr. Peep finds out about various things in a clumsy, disruptive fashion.

Moko the Monk

Published: 4 February 1950 to 18 October 1952[1]
Artist: Robert MacGillivray, Harry Hargreaves[1]

A curious chimp tries out various pieces of human technology, with chaotic results.

  • Cartoon. Later graduated to the front cover.[1]

My Pal Wagger

Published: 29 March to 20 September 1952[1]
Writer: David Roberts[1]
Illustrator: Stephen Chapman[1]

A gypsy boy called Ned and his dog Wagger solve crimes.

The Mystery of Westford Manor

Published: 22 June to 26 October 1948[1]
Writer: Arthur Catherall (under the pseudonym Trevor Holloway)[1]
Illustrator: Bob Wilkin[1]

Brian King and Hilary Dene search for the lost treasure of buccaneer Henry DeLancey at the pirate's old home at Westford Manor.

The New Adventures of Monte Cristo

Published: 21 April to 1 September 1951[1]
Writer: Frank S. Pepper (under the pseudonym John Morion)[1]
Illustrator: Eric Parker[1]

The richest man in the world, the Count of Monte Cristo is also a tenacious adventurer who investigates international mysteries.

The Petrified Valley

Published: 17 August 1948 to 29 October 1949[1]

WA:Artist: Bill Holroyd[1] Professor Wimple and his young assistant Don investigate the mysterious Petrified Valley, a land ruled by an evil wizard.

Professor Peanut

Published: 26 November 1949 to 15 April 1950[1]
Artist: Hugh McNeill[1]

The misadventures of a forgetful scientist.

The Queer Adventures of Patsy and Tim

Published: 9 July to 26 November 1949[1]
Artist: Eric Parker[1]

Professor Digby invents the Dwindling Pill, capable of shrinking human beings. His nephew Tim and niece Patsy take them and are miniaturised for numerous adventures.

Roy Rogers - King of the Cowboys

Published: 9 February to 10 August 1957[1]

Sexton Blake

Published: 8 September to 1 December 1951[1]
Writer: Francis Warwick (under the pseudonym Warwick Jardine)[1]

Sherwood Outlaw

Published: 11 November 1947 to 17 September 1949[1]
Artist: Reg Beaumont[1]

Robin Hood strives to free Maid Marian from Baron Irvine.

Sinbad Sails Again

Published: 29 March to 26 July 1952[1]
Artists: Stephen Chapman, Michael Hubbard[1]

Sinbad undertakes a perilous sea journey to visit the Caliph of Baghdad.

  • From 7 June 1952 the feature reprinted "List of Knock-Out Comic stories#Sinbad the Sailor|Sinbad the Sailor]]" from Knockout.[1]

Sitting Bull

Published: 1 October 1949 to 9 August 1952[1]
Writer: Marijac[1][lower-alpha 1]
Artists: Dut, R. J. Plummer, Patrick Nicolle, Steve Chapman[1]

On the run after shooting the man who killed his father, Michael Kearney is taken under the wing of Sitting Bull, noble chief of the Lakota tribe.

  • Reprints of "Sitting Bull" by Marijac and Dut from Coq Hardi from 1 October 1949 to 19 May 1951 and 29 September 1951 to 15 March 1952. Other strips were in-house material. Sitting Bull also featured in a parallel story in Knockout, "Sitting Bull's Schooldays".[1]


Susan Starr, the Girl Reporter

Published: 11 November 1947 to 3 September 1949[1]
Writer: Arthur Catherall (under the pseudonym Peter Hallard)[1]

A writer for The Marport Evening News, Susan Starr's assignments often aren't as straightforward as they seem.

The Terrible Three

Published: 15 September 1956 to 21 June 1958[1]
Writer: Charles Hamilton (under the pseudonym Martin Clifford)[1]
Artists: Reg Bunn, Eric Parker[1]

The antics of St. Jim's pupils Tom Merry, Monty Lowther and Harry Manners.

  • The characters had been created for storypaper The Gem in 1907.

Tom Merry's Schooldays

Published: 25 October 1952 to 13 June 1953[1]
Writer: Charles Hamilton (under the pseudonym Martin Clifford)[1]
Illustrator: Robert McDonald[1]

Public schoolboy Tom Merry gets into scrapes.

  • Text story. Tom Merry had previously appeared in story paper The Gem between 1907 and 1939, and also featured in "The Terrible Three".[1]

Tough Tempest - Crime Buster

Published: 2 December 1950 to 14 April 1951[1]
Writer: Jacques Pendowner[1]
Illustrator: Eric Parker[1]

'Tough' Rod Tempest battles a European crime ring with designs on the jewels known as the Seven Stars of Wisdom.

Warrior the Wonder Dog

Published: 22 December 1951 to 15 May 1952[1]
Illustrator: Stephen Chapman[1]

Loyal hound Warrior helps a trapper called Jim in the wild North of America.

Where Adventurers Meet

Published: 9 December 1947 to 3 February 1948[1]
Writer: A. R. Channel[1]
Illustrator: Bob Wilkin[1]

Explorer Eric Thompson meets the Queen of the Crags.

Wild Bill Hickok

Published: 2 December 1950 to 22 December 1951 (text), 22 March 1952 to 26 March 1955 (text), 2 April to 31 December 1955 (strip)[1]
Writer: Joan Whitford (under the pseudonym Barry Ford)[1]
Illustrators: Derek Eyles, Geoff Campion, Stephen Chapman, Reg Bunn[1]
Artists: Geoff Campion, Eric Bradbury (strip)[1]

The escapades of frontier lawman Bill Hickok.

Young Joey

Published: 26 November 1949 to 19 May 1951[1]
Artist: Hugh McNeill, Ron Smith, Geoff Campion[1] n

Joey is taken on adventures by the genie Pip-Van-Winkle.

Adaptations

The Black Rose

Published: 26 August 1950 to 6 January 1951[1]
Artist: Hugh McNeill[1]

Branded

Published: 10 March to 30 June 1951[1]
Writer: Joan Whitford (under the pseudonym Barry Ford)[1]
Artist: Geoff Campion[1]

The Fighting O'Flynn

Published: 21 January to 1 July 1950[1]
Artist: Hugh McNeill[1]

Gene Autry in Loaded Pistols

Published: 13 to 20 May 1950[1]

Good King Wenceslas

Published: 23 December 1947[1]
Artist: Bob Wilkin[1]

Hills of the Brave

Published: 22 July to 12 August 1950[1]
  • Text story illustrated with stills, based on the Columbia film.[1]

The Inspector General

Published: 8 July to 19 August 1950[1]
Artist: Hugh McNeill[1]

Ivanhoe

Published: 28 June to 15 November 1952[1]
Artist: Patrick Nicolle[1]

King Solomon's Mines

Published: 13 January to 5 May 1951[1]
Artist: Hugh McNeill[1]

The King's Thief

Published: 15 October to 31 December 1955[1]
Artist: Eric Bradbury[1]

MacDonald of the Canadian Mounties

Published: 20 June to 22 August 1953[1]
Artist: Patrick Nicolle[1]

The Martian

Published: 25 October 1958 to 23 May 1959[1]
Artist: Robert Forrest[1]

Mighty Joe Young

Published: 10 December 1949 to 18 February 1950[1]
Artist: Robert MacGillivray[1]

No Dust on My Saddle

Published: 28 February to 25 April 1959[1]
Artist: Edward Drury[1]

The Prisoner of Zenda

Published: 10 January to 14 March 1953[1]
Artist: Patrick Nicolle[1]

The Red Rapiers

Published: 2 May to 5 September 1959[1]
Artist: Robert Forrest[1]

Rogues of Sherwood Forest

Published: 16 September to 25 November 1950[1]

Sand

Published: 4 March to 13 May 1950[1]
Artist: Derek Eyles, Geoff Campion[1]

She Wore a Yellow Ribbon

Published: 20 May to 1 July 1950[1]
Artist: Robert MacGillivray[1]

Sons of the Musketeers

Published: 1 to 22 March 1952[1]
  • Text story illustrated with stills, based on the RKO film.[1]

South of St. Louis

Published: 21 January to 29 April 1950[1]

The Spider and the Fly

Published: 24 December 1949[1]
  • Text story illustrated with stills, based on the GFD film.[1]

The Swiss Family Robinson

Published: 11 November 1947 to 3 August 1948[1]
Artist: Bob Wilkin[1]

A Ticket to Tomahawk

Published: 12 August to 28 October 1950[1]
Artist: Rodger[1]

When Worlds Collide

Published: 6 to 27 October 1951[1]

Winchester '73

Published: 19 August to 23 September 1950[1]

The Wind in the Willows

Published: 18 February to 28 November 1950[1]
Artist: Hugh McNeill[1]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Due to most British comics not crediting creators and incomplete records, credits may not be exhaustive

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 Holland, Steve; Ashford, David (1992). Sun Collectors Guide. Colne: Comic Journal/A&B Whitworth.
  2. Holland, Steve (2002). The Fleetway Companion. Rotherham: CJ & Publication.
  3. https://www.lookandlearn.com/characters/index.php?c=haroldhare
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