Posted in: Comics, Heritage Sponsored, Vintage Paper | Tagged: Captain Flag, golden age, MLJ
The End of MLJ's First Series, Blue Ribbon Comics #22 at Auction
With MLJ's comic book line changing in the wake of the introduction of Archie, Blue Ribbon Comics ended with Captain Flag in issue #22.
Article Summary
- Blue Ribbon Comics was MLJ's first published and first canceled comic series, debuting in late 1939.
- Captain Flag, a patriotic hero, headlined the final issues after MLJ pivoted from pulp-inspired adventure tales.
- The series struggled with branding as MLJ shifted focus from "Blue Ribbon" to "Comics" to adapt in a crowded market.
- Blue Ribbon Comics #22 remains rare and sought after, offering the final appearances of Captain Flag and Mr. Justice.
As the comic book market was undergoing significant expansion in late 1939, MLJ Magazines — the entity that would one day be known as Archie Comics — entered the industry with their debut title, Blue Ribbon Comics. During its short lifespan, Blue Ribbon Comics offered a variety of adventure fiction and, soon, some superhero stories, embodying an era where comics were in part transitioning from pulp-inspired adventure to comic book superheroes. Issue #22 of Blue Ribbon Comics, which featured the patriotic superhero Captain Flag, is a fascinating example of a series struggling to stand out in a crowded market, a case of a pulp-legacy branding misfire eventually leading to its cancellation with that issue. It was the first comic book title that MLJ published, and the first title they canceled too, probably as a matter of timing and the state of the market at that moment. One of several issues of the series with a very low census population, there's a CGC GD/VG 3.0 copy of Blue Ribbon Comics #21 (MLJ, 1942), up for auction in the 2025 July 18 Golden Age Comics Century Showcase at Heritage Auctions.
The last issue of this oft-overlooked series, Blue Ribbon Comics #22 features Captain Flag without his trusty eagle sidekick Yank — whose final appearance was in issue #20. Introduced with issue #16, Captain Flag was a direct response to the rising tide of patriotic heroes that MLJ themselves had started with the Shield in Pep Comics #1. Not really that late to the party, Captain Flag was launched roughly six months after Marvel/Timely introduced their star-spangled hero, Captain America. Before then, Blue Ribbon's cover-featured characters had included the wonder dog Rang-A-Tang, the virtually forgotten character Corporal Collins, and Spectre-inspired Mr. Justice.
Though the title seemed to have hit its stride editorially with the introduction of Mr. Justice and Captain Flag, it's clear that MLJ realized with Blue Ribbon Comics #19 that they might have a branding problem. Blue Ribbon started out as a brand name used by MLJ principals Louis Silberkleit and Maurice Coyne in pulps, as the imprint Blue Ribbon Magazines and the titles Blue Ribbon Western and Blue Ribbon Sports. In keeping with that strategy, the "Blue Ribbon" portion of the title logo soon became a tiny part of the cover, with the central focus being simply "COMICS." This might have seemed like a sound idea when it was dreamed up in mid-1939 as publishers didn't really know how the comics business was going to play out yet, but in the crowded market of late 1941-1942 it didn't really work. With issue #19, which hit newsstands in the same month that Archie was introduced in Pep Comics #22, Captain Flag took up prominent space in the logo area. By issue #21, an editorial in the title was touting a shift to include "true life" stories in addition to adventure fiction.

