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Clint Barton
Clint BartonClint BartonClint Barton

Clint Barton

1,370 appearances Β· Silver Age Β· 1964–2026 Β· 62 key issues
Who is Clint Barton?

Orphaned young and raised in a circus, Clint Barton trained under the marksman Trick Shot to become a world-class archer. After initially clashing with Iron Man, he reformed and joined the Avengers as Hawkeye, later temporarily adopting the Goliath identity using Hank Pym's size-changing technology.

Few Marvel characters have earned their place at the table quite like Clint Barton β€” a street-level scrapper who debuted in Tales of Suspense #57 in 1964, conjured by Stan Lee and Don Heck at the height of the Silver Age, and has never stopped proving himself since. As a proud Avenger, he's spent six decades trading pages with the absolute titans of the Marvel Universe β€” Captain America, Iron Man, Thor β€” and somehow never gets lost in the shadow of gods and armored billionaires. With 1369 catalog appearances spanning from 1964 all the way to 2026 and 62 collector-recognized key issues to his name, his is one of the great long-game stories in comics, threading through The Avengers, Thunderbolts, and beyond. If you want a character who embodies the Marvel spirit of the underdog who simply refuses to quit, Clint Barton is absolutely worth your time.

Identity

Real name. Clinton Francis "Clint" Barton

Powers. No superhuman powers; peerless marksman/archer with a wide array of trick/specialty arrows, expert hand-to-hand combatant and acrobat (circus-trained)

Teams & affiliations
Avengers
β˜… First appearance
Tales of Suspense #57
Sep 1964

Part of the Goliath legacy

Clint Barton is one of 4 heroes to carry the Goliath mantle. See the whole Goliath family β–Έ

Trivia

  • Hawkeye's hearing loss became a permanent part of the character after a 1983 Avengers storyline, and Marvel later highlighted that he had used hearing aids for years when responding to a child fan.en.wikipedia.org
  • Clint Barton once operated as Goliath and used Hank Pym's size-changing particles to grow giant, making it one of the rare times he possessed actual superhuman abilities.en.wikipedia.org
  • In the comics, Clint Barton was responsible for killing Bruce Banner during Civil War II, a controversial event that remains one of Hawkeye's most debated story moments.en.wikipedia.org
  • Hawkeye served as the founder and leader of the West Coast Avengers, elevating a character often treated as a supporting team member into the headliner of a major spin-off title.en.wikipedia.org
  • Roy Thomas has written more of Clint Barton's comics than any other writer in our catalog β€” 82 issues.

Top series

Covers through the years β€” 1964–2022

Tales of Suspense #57 β˜… 1964
Tales of Suspense #57
The Avengers #60 β˜… 1969
The Avengers #60
The Avengers #114 β˜… 1973
The Avengers #114
The Avengers #181 β˜… 1979
The Avengers #181
The Amazing Spider-Man Annual #16 β˜… 1982
The Amazing Spider-Man Annual #16
The Avengers #300 β˜… 1989
The Avengers #300
Hulk: Future Imperfect #1 β˜… 1992
Hulk: Future Imperfect #1
Best of Marvel #1995 β˜… 1995
Best of Marvel #1995
Spider-Woman #7 2000
Spider-Woman #7
House of M #8 β˜… 2005
House of M #8
Dark Avengers #1 β˜… 2009
Dark Avengers #1
Marvel Now! Omnibus #[nn] β˜… 2013
Marvel Now! Omnibus #[nn]
All-New Wolverine #28 2018
All-New Wolverine #28
Fantastic Four Anniversary Tribute #1 2022
Fantastic Four Anniversary Tribute #1

Appearances (151–300 of 1,370, oldest first)

Marvel Triple Action (1972)
The Avengers Annual (1967)
Spidey Super Stories (1974)
#40
The Incredible Hulk (1968)
Hulk Comic (1979)
#37
Marvel Superheroes [Marvel Super-Heroes] (1979)
Captain America (1968)
The Spectacular Spider-Man (1976)
#54
Marvel Two-in-One (1974)
#75
The Amazing Spider-Man Annual (1964)
The Comics Journal (1977)
#67
Marvel Graphic Novel (1982)
Marvel Super Hero Contest of Champions (1982)
#1
Marvel Two-in-One Annual (1976)
#7
Spider-Woman (1978)
The Defenders (1972)
Marvel Fanfare (1982)
The Marvel No-Prize Book (1983)
#1
Super Spider-Man TV Comic (1981)
Hawkeye (1983)
U.S. 1 (1983)
#5
G.I. Joe, a Real American Hero (1982)
Phoenix (1984)
#1
Marvel Super-Heroes Secret Wars (1984)
West Coast Avengers (1984)
Marvel Age Annual (1985)
Rom (1979)
Iron Man (1968)
Comics Buyer's Guide (1983)
Secret Wars II (1985)
The Transformers (1984)
The Thing (1983)
#30
Fantastic Four (1961)
Cloak and Dagger (1985)
X-Factor (1986)
#12
Marvel Graphic Novel: Emperor Doom - Starring the Mighty Avengers (1987)
The New Mutants (1983)
#48
The West Coast Avengers Annual (1986)
#2
The Marvel Saga the Official History of the Marvel Universe (1985)
Mephisto vs. ... (1987)
#4
The Transformers: Headmasters (1987)
#3
Web of Spider-Man (1985)
#32
Solo Avengers (1987)