During the
Golden Age of Comics (roughly 1935–1951), several comic books featured crime-fighters, "mystery-men", adventurers, and superheroes. DC Comics began publishing the anthology series
All Star Comics (sometimes referred to as
All-Star Comics) in 1940. In issue #3, DC had many of their superheroes join for dinner and share stories, declaring the gathering to be the first meeting of the
Justice Society of America. The JSA was the first comic book superhero team and became the main feature of
All Star Comics until it was canceled with issue #57 in 1951. Writer
Gerry Conway revived the
All Star Comics series in 1976, continuing the original numbering by starting with issue #58. By this time, DC had established that its modern-day adventures took place in the universe of Earth-One, whereas DC's Golden Age stories during the 1930s and 40s occurred in a parallel reality called
Earth-Two. While the Golden Age
Superman, introduced in 1938, had lived through World War II, the Earth-One Superman had not even been born until long after the war was over. While the modern-day Earth-One
Wonder Woman was a superhero in her prime, new stories revealed that the Golden Age Wonder Woman of Earth-Two had fought Nazis during World War II, then later semi-retired, married her dear friend Steve Trevor, and had a daughter named Hyppolyta Trevor (who became a hero called Fury and joined a team of heroes known as
Infinity, Inc.). The 1970s revival of
All Star Comics involved some flashback stories, but most of the issues took place in the modern day, showing the Justice Society members as older heroes decades after World War II. Conway also included younger heroes in the group, such as
Power Girl (an Earth-Two version of
Supergirl). His hope was to later have the younger members star in a spin-off series of their own, forming a team that could be called the All-Star Squadron. Management at DC worried that the team's name would be abbreviated as A.S.S., and so the group's name was changed to the Super Squad. A team known as the All-Star Squadron debuted years later in a
special insert in
Justice League of America #193 (August 1981). The team's official series
All-Star Squadron then began the following month with the creative team of writer
Roy Thomas, with artists
Rich Buckler and
Jerry Ordway. The comic book series lasted 67 issues from September 1981 to March 1987, with three annuals published as well. In
All-Star Squadron #1, series writer Roy Thomas published "An Open Letter to the Readers" wherein he described the impetus for the series. Namely, DC wanted a comic book telling tales of the
Justice Society of America (JSA). The last series to do so was the second volume of
All Star Comics, which lasted only seventeen issues from 1976 to 1979. Roy Thomas said that DC management gave him "a chance to write a return of the JSA". Instead of writing stories in the modern era of Earth-Two, Roy Thomas chose to set the series during World War II. Roy Thomas decided to include other Golden Age era characters that were not published by DC Comics during the 1930s and 40s but were acquired by the company in later years, such as the
Quality Comics characters.
All-Star Squadron established that most of these characters co-existed with the Golden Age DC heroes on Earth-Two. In a nod to the original JSA adventures in
All Star Comics, Thomas tried to include at least a cameo appearance by the Golden Age
Hawkman in every issue, since he was the one hero to appear in every Golden Age issue of the original
All Star Comics series, including the two issues that predated the formation of the Justice Society of America. Although Hawkman did not appear in every issue of the second
All Star Comic series, Roy Thomas wanted to create a new streak for the character in
All-Star Squadron. The artwork for issue #49 was printed without Hawkman's cameo included, making it the only issue of the series where he does not appear. The All-Star Squadron is an example of "
retroactive continuity" or "retcon", since the team was retroactively inserted into the history of DC superheroes and the series rewrote portions of DC canon published during the 1940s. The first known use of the term "retcon" was by Roy Thomas in the
letter column of
All-Star Squadron #20 (April 1983). Several story lines ironed out continuity errors, fleshed out characters' origins, explained inconsistencies in character development, and resolved lingering questions and plot threads. Roy Thomas had used the Marvel Comics series
Invaders in a similar way to address and revise official Marvel fictional history. Several issues of the series offered detailed origin stories of various characters, sometimes with revised details. Characters who had origin issues dedicated to them included
Amazing-Man,
Starman,
Doctor Fate,
Liberty Belle,
Robotman,
Johnny Quick, and the
Tarantula. The story arc in issues #32-33 detailed how the
Freedom Fighters traveled from
Earth-Two to
Earth-X, an event indicated in an earlier Justice League story. With so many characters to choose from, the creative team decided to concentrate on "quite promising characters who have been ignored or underplayed for years", instead of only those Earth-Two characters who had popular counterparts on Earth-One. For examples,
All-Star Squadron did not focus much on the Earth-Two versions of Superman and Wonder Woman, nor on the Golden Age version of the Flash, Jay Garrick, whose counterpart Barry Allen was very popular as the Flash of Earth-One. Roy Thomas wrote: "If we lost the original
GL, we gained the Earth-Two
Robotman; if we dropped
Jay (Flash) Garrick, we picked up on
Johnny Quick;
Liberty Belle could stand in for
Wonder Woman till more super-powered ladies came along. We even tossed in an Earth-Two version of the venerable
Plastic Man, whose series in
Adventure Comics was just folding..." When Rich Buckler left the series after the fifth issue, editor
Len Wein hired artist
Adrian Gonzales as a replacement and notified Roy Thomas with a note stating "You're going to like Adrian Gonzales". He drew the series for 13 issues, during which the team had a crossover with the
Justice League of America. Jerry Ordway, who had inked the series since its start, became the series regular penciler starting with issue #19 (March 1983). He and Thomas then co-created the
Infinity, Inc. team, introducing it in
All-Star Squadron #25 (Sept. 1983).
All-Star Squadron #31 (1984) featured the group's first "full roster" general meeting, taking place at their headquarters. The All-Star Squadron HQ was depicted as the
Trylon and
Perisphere, actual structures in
Flushing Meadows, Queens, New York, constructed for the
1939 New York World's Fair. The Perisphere contained the Squadron meeting hall, while the Trylon was retrofitted as an aircraft hangar/vertical launch platform. The All-Star Squadron had a robotic butler named
Gernsback, based on the
Elektro robots from the fair and named after science fiction publisher
Hugo Gernsback. During the 1985–86 series
Crisis on Infinite Earths, Earth-Two and Earth-One, along with some other realities, merged into a new, unified reality with a revised history. The heroes of World War II now existed in the same timeline as modern heroes, simply operating at an earlier time. While it was not a major problem to establish that certain characters such as the Golden Age Flash (a man named Jay Garrick) and the later Flash (a man named Barry Allen) could co-exist and both operate during different time periods, this explanation did not work for heroes with direct counterparts. Golden Age heroes such as Superman, Wonder Woman,
Batman,
Robin, and
Green Arrow all of whom had the same secret identities, same basic origin stories, and largely similar supporting casts as their modern-day counterparts. For this reason, these particular Golden Age heroes, and some others, had to be removed from the history of the new, unified timeline. This also meant the canon of several recent
All-Star Squadron stories was now questionable, since the Golden Age versions of those same heroes made multiple appearances in the series. To clear the slate after
Crisis on Infinite Earths and re-launch the franchise,
All Star Squadron ended with issue #67 and the series was succeeded by
Young All-Stars. Since then, the All-Star Squadron has appeared in sporadic stories published by DC Comics. Article X was used again during the crossover
Final Crisis when Earth's superheroes needed to unite against the forces of
Darkseid and the evil
New Gods. In a 2025 interview, Thomas said of
All-Star Squadron that "I always say two things. One is that was my favorite comic of all time to write, above
Conan,
Avengers, or anything, because it combined the superheroes and the history, two of my great passions. And the other thing is that ... there is a possibility that if it hadn't been for that damn
Crisis on Infinite Earths ... we might have kept going, we'd be right up to three or four hundred issues by now." == Fictional history ==