In January 1933,
Jerry Siegel wrote a short prose story titled "
The Reign of the Superman", which was illustrated by his friend
Joe Shuster and self-published in a science fiction magazine. It told the story of a bald villain with
telepathic powers. Trying to create a character they could sell to newspaper syndicates, Siegel re-conceived the "superman" character as a powerful hero, sent to Earth from a more advanced society. He and Shuster developed the idea into a
comic strip, which they pitched unsuccessfully. National Publications was looking for a hit to accompany their success with
Detective Comics, and did not have time to solicit new material. Jack Liebowitz, co-owner of National Publications, told editor
Vin Sullivan to create their fourth comic book. Because of the tight deadline, Sullivan was forced to make it out of inventory and stockpile pages. He found a number of adventurer stories, but needed a lead feature. Sullivan asked former coworker
Sheldon Mayer if he could help. Mayer found the rejected Superman comic strips, and Sullivan told Siegel and Shuster that if they could paste them into 13 comic book pages, he would buy them. The original panels were rewritten and redrawn to create the first page of
Action Comics #1: • Baby Superman is sent to Earth by his
scientist father in a "hastily-devised space ship" from "a distant planet" which "was destroyed by old age". • After the space ship lands on Earth, "a passing motorist, discovering the sleeping baby within, turned the child over to an orphanage". • The baby Superman lifts a large chair overhead with one hand, astounding the orphanage attendants with "his feats of strength". • When Superman (now named
Clark Kent) reaches maturity, he discovers that he can leap 1/8 of a mile, hurdle 20-story buildings, "raise tremendous weights", outrun a train, and "that nothing less than a bursting shell could penetrate his skin". • Clark decides that "he must turn his titanic strength into channels that would benefit mankind, and so was created 'Superman', champion of the oppressed...." Two new panels offering a "scientific explanation of Clark Kent's amazing strength" were added. The panels do not identify Superman's home planet by name or explain how he was named Clark Kent. ==Collectibility==