

Jack Monroe
Jack Monroe was a teenager in the 1950s who took an imperfect variant of the Super-Soldier Serum alongside William Burnside, the era's Captain America, granting him enhanced strength, speed, and durability — but also dangerous psychological instability. He later resurfaced as the hero Nomad, eventually partnering with Steve Rogers.
Few characters carry the weight of legacy and reinvention quite like Jack Monroe, who burst onto the scene in the Bronze Age pages of Captain America #286 (1983), courtesy of the sharp creative partnership of J. M. DeMatteis and Mike Zeck. Over an extraordinary four-decade publishing history spanning Captain America, Thunderbolts, and Marvel Comics Presents, Monroe has proven himself one of Marvel's most enduring figures — a character whose 75 catalogued appearances include five key collector issues, a testament to how deeply he's woven into the fabric of the Marvel Universe. He keeps remarkable company throughout his history, sharing pages with Steve Rogers, Sam Wilson, the Falcon, Bucky, and Nomad — a constellation of characters that places him squarely at the heart of the Captain America mythos. If you're tracing the rich, complex legacy that surrounds Marvel's star-spangled corner of comics, Jack Monroe is absolutely essential reading.
Real name. Jack Monroe
Powers. Enhanced strength, speed, stamina, and durability from an imperfect variant of the Super-Soldier Serum; trained hand-to-hand combatant.

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Covers through the years — 1983–2022
★ 1983
1987
★ 1992
1993
1996
2000
2001
2006
★ 2009
2011
2014
2017
2021
2022