Super-Chief

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Super-Chief
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Jon Standing Bear, the third Super-Chief. Art by Phil Jimenez.
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance (I) All-Star Western #117 (March 1961)
(II) The Adventures of Superman Annual #9 (1997)
(III) 52 Week 22 (October 2006)
(IV) Superman #709 (May 2011)
Created by(I) Gardner Fox (writer)
Carmine Infantino (artist)
(II) Mike W. Barr (writer)
Dale Eaglesham (artist)
(III) Geoff Johns (writer)
Greg Rucka (writer)
Grant Morrison (writer)
Mark Waid (writer)
Eddy Barrows (artist)
(IV) Chris Roberson (writer)
Eddy Barrows (artist)
In-story information
Alter ego(I) Flying Stag
(II) of Dry Wells
(III) Jon Standing Bear
(IV) of Wisconsin
Team affiliations Justice League
Black Lantern Corps
Supermen of America
Justice Riders
Notable aliasesSaganowahna
AbilitiesSuper-strength, super-speed, and extended lifespan

Super-Chief is the name of several fictional characters, including three superheroes and one supervillain, in the DC Comics universe. Created by Gardner Fox and Carmine Infantino, the first Super-Chief debuted in All-Star Western #117 (March 1961). [1]

Contents

The second (villainous) Super-Chief debuted in The Adventures of Superman Annual #9 (1997) in a story by Mike W. Barr (writer) and Dale Eaglesham (artist). The third Super-Chief debuted in 52 Week 22 (October 2006), which was written by the writers' consortium of Geoff Johns, Greg Rucka, Grant Morrison and Mark Waid, and artist Eddy Barrows. The fourth debuted in Superman #709 (May 2011) and was created by writer Chris Roberson and artist Eddy Barrows.

Fictional character biography

Flying Stag

Flying Stag was a member of the Wolf Clan in the 15th century. He was by far their best warrior and knew he would be able to win the contest to become Royaneh, or Supreme Chief, of the Iroquois. Out of jealousy, Flying Stag's rivals trapped him in a pit where he prayed to the Great Spirit Manitou for help (the term "Manitou" is Algonquian). A meteorite fell from the sky and when Flying Stag wore it he gained incredible powers. He honored Manitou and called himself Saganowahna, or Super-Chief. He became a hero and married White Fawn. The powers of the mystical meteorite caused him to outlive everyone he knew.

Super-Chief experienced a temporary time jump into the 20th century during the event known as Crisis on Infinite Earths . He allied himself with several Western heroes along with the superhero Firebrand and her former lover Cyclotron at one point during the Crisis.

According to Swamp Thing vol. 2 #85 (1989), Super-Chief survived until at least the late 19th century, but it was revealed that he suffered brain damage from living for four centuries.

Super Chief is one of the reanimated Black Lanterns in Weird Western Tales #71.

Villainous Saganowahna of Dry Wells

In Adventures of Superman Annual #9 (1997), a young Native American is revealed to be in possession of the meteorite amulet and has agreed to use the powers of Saganowahna to clear out the town of Dry Wells to make way for a gambling resort. He is defeated by Superman.

Jon Standing Bear

A new Super-Chief is introduced in 52 Week 22. A young Native American veteran and ex-con named Jon Standing Bear travels to Metropolis. He saves a young girl named Sierra from sexual assault by throwing a sleazeball through the window of their bus. No charges are pressed because the man already had a rape conviction. [2]

Jon attends the funeral of his estranged father. Before his death of a liver disease, Jon's father had been caring for Jon's grandfather. Both had been upset with Jon, claiming he'd neglected his heritage and his obligations. Saying Jon is the last of the line, Jon's grandfather charges him with the duty of becoming Super-Chief. Per the old man's request, Jon suffocates his grandfather, releasing him from life, and takes the meteorite fragment. [2]

Super-Chief joins an effort by Firestorm to found a new Justice League of America. [3] In its first mission, the "JLA" attempt to settle a chronal disruption created by the now-villainous robot majordomo of Booster Gold, Skeets. Skeets kills Super-Chief, and Jon ends up in an otherworldly location. An elder named Flying Stag, apparently the original Super-Chief, indicates that Jon is no longer among the living and repossesses the amulet. Flying Stag admonishes Jon's ignorance of the price that must be paid for magic. Railing about his failures, Jon disappears into a vortex of clouds. [3]

Super-Chief's corpse appears as a Black Lantern in the Blackest Night series. [4]

After the 52 series was over, writer Grant Morrison commented: "If there had been space in the last issue I would have included a coda to the Super-Chief story. I had plans for Jon Standing Bear's return but we couldn't fit them in when issue #52 went from 52 pages to 40. I'm sure he'll turn up somewhere else". [5]

Saganowahna of Wisconsin

The Super-Chief of Wisconsin agrees to join the Supermen of America. Art by Jamal Igle from Superman #714 (October 2011). Super-Chief of Wisconsin 2011.jpg
The Super-Chief of Wisconsin agrees to join the Supermen of America. Art by Jamal Igle from Superman #714 (October 2011).

At the beginning of Superman #709, a new young Super-Chief is seen thanking Superman for an assist on capturing runaway supervillains in the Colorado desert. Superman refers to him as "Saganowahna" and the young man claims that he gains his powers from a "manitou stone" he wears around his wrist; he claims that some believe the stone to be Kryptonian in origin, though Superman is skeptical of the idea. Evidently, the powers have a set time limit for daily use. The stone later proves to be a fragment of a Kryptonian sunstone that Superman scattered through time.

Saganowahna wears a uniform consisting of a red jacket with a yellow symbol on the back, a white shirt, black tights, and red boots. He is a Native American man who wears a mohawk. It is insinuated that Saganowahna is a Wisconsin native, because he invites Superman to visit Green Bay the next time the Metropolis Meteors play against the Green Bay Packers.

This new Super-Chief later accepts membership in Superman's new team, the Supermen of America. [6]

Powers and abilities

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References

  1. Markstein, Don. "Super-Chief". Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Retrieved 2 April 2020.
  2. 1 2 52 Week 22 (October 2006)
  3. 1 2 52 Week 24 (October 2006)
  4. Blackest Night #4 (December 2009)
  5. "THE 52 EXIT INTERVIEWS: GRANT MORRISON - NEWSARAMA". Forum.newsarama.com. Archived from the original on 2007-10-11. Retrieved 2011-04-02.
  6. Superman #714 (October 2011)