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Captain America
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Captain America

4,405 appearances · Golden Age · 1941–2026 · 157 key issues
Who is Captain America?

A frail young man from Brooklyn, Steve Rogers was deemed unfit for military service during World War II but was chosen for a secret Super-Soldier program. Injected with an experimental serum, he was transformed into a peak-human warrior and became Captain America, the living symbol of American ideals.

Few characters in Marvel's vast history can match the sheer staying power of Captain America, a Golden Age icon who first charged onto the page in 1941 — created by Carl Burgos in The Human Torch #3 — and has never really stopped running. With 3,440 catalogued appearances spanning an extraordinary 85 years, Cap is one of the most enduring figures in American comics, anchoring landmark series like Captain America and The Avengers through every era the medium has known. Collectors have flagged a staggering 157 of those appearances as key issues, a testament to how often this character lands at the center of the stories that matter most. Sharing pages with the likes of Iron Man, Thor, Spider-Man, and their alter egos Tony Stark and Peter Parker, Captain America has long been woven into the very fabric of the Marvel universe — a living through-line connecting its Golden Age roots to its modern mythology.

Identity

Real name. Steven "Steve" Rogers

Teams & affiliations
Avengers
★ First appearance
Captain America Comics #1
Mar 1941

Trivia

  • Captain America holds the distinction of being the first Marvel character to leap beyond the printed page, landing a 1944 movie serial in what stands as a remarkably early cross-media adaptation for any comic-book hero.origins.osu.edu
  • His debut comic cover depicted him landing a punch squarely on Adolf Hitler's jaw — a boldly provocative, pre-U.S.-entry anti-Nazi statement that has since earned its place as one of the most iconic pieces of wartime pop-culture propaganda ever produced.origins.osu.edu
  • When Captain America's postwar sales cratered, Marvel's predecessor made a desperate bid to recapture readers by reviving him in the 1950s under the blunt-force banner 'Captain America, Commie Smasher!' — a Cold War reinvention that traded his wartime soul for political expediency.origins.osu.edu
  • Stan Lee has written more of Captain America's comics than any other writer in our catalog — 199 issues.

Top series

Covers through the years — 1941–2020

The Human Torch #3 1941
The Human Torch #3
Captain America Comics #65 1948
Captain America Comics #65
Young Men #25 1954
Young Men #25
Strange Tales #114 1963
Strange Tales #114
The Avengers #28 1966
The Avengers #28
The Avengers #114 1973
The Avengers #114
Captain America #228 1978
Captain America #228
Marvel Fanfare #12 1984
Marvel Fanfare #12
Marvel Super-Heroes #3 1990
Marvel Super-Heroes #3
Avengers Forever #1 1998
Avengers Forever #1
Thor #3 2003
Thor #3
Avengers: The Initiative #8 2008
Avengers: The Initiative #8
The Amazing Spider-Man #1 2014
The Amazing Spider-Man #1
Incoming #1 2020
Incoming #1

Appearances (451–600 of 4,405, oldest first)

Les Dents de la Mer 2e Partie (1979)
Gamma la bombe qui a créé Hulk (1979)
Marvel Super Action (1977)
Black Panther (1977)
Spider-Woman (1978)
#13
Daffy Duck (1962)
Thor (1966)
Nick Fury, agent du S.E.R.V.O. (1979)
Godzilla (1977)
#23
The Comics Journal (1977)
X-Men Annual (1970)
#3
Marvel Team-Up (1972)
#84
Hulk Comic (1979)
The Incredible Hulk (1968)
The Spectacular Spider-Man Weekly / Spider-Man Comic (1979)
Fantastic Four Annual (1963)
#14
Marvel Two-in-One (1974)
Les Vengeurs (1980)
Année Zéro (1979)
Titan Pocket Book (1980)
#6
Namor (1979)
#8
Démon (1976)
#13
L'Inattendu (1975)
Captain Britain Summer Special (1980)
Iron Man (1980)
Captain America et Spider-Man (1980)
Hembeck 1980 [Hembeck Series] (1980)
#2
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (1979)
#6
Master of Kung Fu (1974)
#86
Daredevil (1964)
Spécial Strange (1975)
#20
Marvel Superheroes [Marvel Super-Heroes] (1979)
Captain America and the Campbell Kids (1980)
Hembeck: The Best of Dateline: @!!?# [Hembeck Series] (1980)
#1
Big Boss (1970)
#49
Miss Marvel (1980)
#5
Marvel Superhelden (1981)
#6
Fantastic Four (1979)
Le Manoir des Fantômes (1975)
#21
Warlord (1976)
#41
The Defenders (1972)
#91
Archie (1959)
Laugh Comics / Laugh (1946)
Archie Giant Series Magazine (1954)
The Spectacular Spider-Man (1976)
#54
Mustang (1966)
#65