Fates of Sgt. Rock
The ultimate fate of Sgt. Frank Rock is complicated. There were initially two versions of the character, one residing on
Earth-One and the other residing on
Earth-Two. According to a number of stories, he was killed on the last day of the war by the last enemy bullet fired. However, DC has also published a number of stories incorporating a post-war Rock into the modern stories of superheroes, including appearances alongside
Batman,
Superman, and the
Suicide Squad. In stories told after the demise of his own comic book, Rock's character was revived, explained to have survived the war, and went on to perform covert missions for the United States government. He also battled his old foe, the Iron Major, and went on an adventure to Dinosaur Island with his old second in command, Bulldozer. According to John Wells:Kanigher had established Frank's post-war survival in
OAAW #168, wherein he had Rock visit the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, and
Bob Haney picked up on that fact in
The Brave and the Bold. In issue #84, he'd had Rock and Easy cross paths with
Bruce Wayne during the war (in an episode obviously set on Earth-Two) and followed up with a present-day sequel in
Brave & the Bold #96. In that one, Bruce arrived at the United States Embassy in South America and was introduced to "our Military Attache and Chief of Embassy Security ... Sergeant Rock, U.S. Army". Two subsequent present-day episodes found Rock tracking a Satanic figure that he believed was Adolf Hitler (
B&B #108) and an Easy Company "ghost" that he'd been ordered to execute at the Battle of the Bulge (
B&B #117). In the bizarre
Brave & the Bold #124, Bob Haney and
Jim Aparo actually guest-starred as Rock and Batman trailed a terrorist organization called the 1000. Following this, he appeared as a
general and a
chief of staff for
Lex Luthor's administration. However, Frank Rock was involved with an incarnation of the Suicide Squad. At the end of the title, he peels off a mask and walks away from the team, while his companion "Bulldozer", assumed to be the original, stands up from his wheelchair, comments on how it was good to feel young again, and also walks away. Whether this was the real Frank Rock in disguise or an impostor is unknown; the series concludes with the line "Frank Rock died in 1945". The use of the Rock character in post-war stories had one major effect on Rock's backstory, according to Wells:All of the super-hero crossovers were more than Kanigher could take. In the letter columns of 1978's
Sgt. Rock #316 and 323 and 1980's
Sgt. Rock #347 and 348, he announced that his hero had not lived past 1945, blunting most of Haney's
Brave and the Bold episodes if nothing else. He also proclaimed: "It is inevitable and wholly in character that neither Rock nor Easy survived the closing days of the war". Indeed, in the letter column for
Sgt. Rock #374, Kanigher stated that:As far as I'm concerned ROCK is the only authentic World War II Soldier. For obvious reasons. He and Easy Company live only, and will eventually die, to the last man, in World War II. The first use of the Rock character after the demise of the series was an issue of
Swamp Thing, six months after the release of
Sgt. Rock #422. The story was set in May 1945, intimating that Sgt. Rock had survived the war in Europe and raised the question of whether Rock transferred to the Pacific theater. During
the Imperiex War set in the early 2000s, Rock acted as head of the Joint Chiefs, volunteering for the suicide mission to pilot a plane loaded with nuclear bombs as part of a plan to crack
Imperiex's armor and drain his energy. In a conversation with
Strange Visitor, he states that he would prefer to be dead rather than live for so long after the war and seeing so many other good men die while he survived. Following the victory against Imperiex,
Amanda Waller oversees his symbolic funeral in Arlington with other World War II heroes, informing Luthor over the phone that Rock had no interest in being remembered and would simply want to rest in peace with his peers. In keeping with Robert Kanigher's often-mentioned (in letter columns and interviews) but never-scripted conclusion to Rock's wartime adventures (Kanigher did not get the chance to write this tale himself before he died in 2002), Len Wein and Joe Kubert's 2010 back-up story "Snapshot: Remembrance" from the retrospective miniseries
DC Universe: Legacies #4 (depicting a July 4, 1976 DC war heroes' reunion) reveals that Sgt. Rock did die at the close of WWII. Flashbacks illustrate Rock being killed on the last day of the war in Europe, while using his body to shield a small child who had wandered into crossfire. Easy Company learns later that the final bullet that killed him was the last bullet fired in the war. The other DC war heroes attending this bicentennial reunion (and toasting the memory of Sgt. Rock) are Jeb Stuart of the
Haunted Tank, all four
Losers,
Ulysses Hazard/Gravedigger,
Mademoiselle Marie (who introduces her unnamed son, a soldier almost identical in appearance to Sgt. Rock—who is strongly implied to be his father) and the
Unknown Soldier disguised (with one of his signature latex masks) as Bob the bartender. ==Other versions==