Great History Of The World

Great Comics Publications would regularly have small segments of non-fiction. Some might be a single-page history accounting, others would be a short biography of famous or infamous figures. There were shorts on folks like George Washington, Nathan Hale, Jean Lafitte, and William Tell. Another was labeled Great Manhunts about nasty criminals, although whether these cases existed is more of a mystery. One installment that was in each issue of Choice Comics was G-Men Vs. Crime which went over real case files of government agents pursuing crooks like the Fleagle Bros., Al Brady, as well as the unrelated Brady Gang. Another semi-redundant portion was World’s Greatest Spies going on about espionage from both sides of the tracks including Mata Hari, Frans von Papen, Heinrich Albert, and the heroic Louise de Bettignies. A separate bit titled Murder On The River was a tall tale of a young man named Danny Russell in New Orleans who gets out of a murder case thanks to the intervention of the gigantic woman Annie Christmas who according to folklore was really an African American, but for some reason was drawn as a white woman for the comic. While Great Comics might have gotten most of the historical accounts accurate, the single fable they covered failed to honor the correct person behind the myth.

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