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Peter Porkchops

Peter Porkchops

121 appearances Β· Golden Age Β· 1948–1987 Β· 5 key issues
Who is Peter Porkchops?

Peter Porkchops debuted as a non-powered funny-animal character in DC's Golden Age anthology comics. His Earth-C counterpart later fell into a vat of molten iron, emerging with a body of living metal as the superhumanly strong and durable Pig-Iron, joining Captain Carrot's Amazing Zoo Crew.

Few funny-animal stars can claim a Golden Age pedigree as charming as Peter Porkchops, who first trotted onto the scene in 1948's Real Fact Comics #13, brought to life by the creative team of Jack Schiff, Mort Weisinger, and Howard Sherman. This lovable DC porker headlined his own long-running series and kept delightful company with the likes of Wolfie, Mervin Mouse, and Goofy Goose across nearly four decades of all-ages adventures β€” a remarkable 1948-to-1987 run that speaks to his enduring appeal. With 121 catalog appearances spread across Peter Porkchops, Flippity & Flop, and even Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew!, he's a character who grew alongside DC's funny-animal tradition from its Golden Age roots right into the Bronze Age. Five of those appearances carry key-issue status, making him a genuinely rewarding corner of DC history for collectors who love discovering that the House of Superman always had a little more whimsy up its sleeve β€” yes, even Peter shares pages with the Man of Steel himself.

Identity

Real name. Peter Porkchops

Powers. As Pig-Iron (Earth-C revival): superhuman strength and durability via a body transformed into living iron. The original Golden Age Peter Porkchops was a non-powered funny-animal character.

Affiliations. Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew (Earth-C), as Pig-Iron

β˜… First appearance
Real Fact Comics #13
Mar 1948

Trivia

  • Roy Thomas transformed Peter into an unexpected continuity bridge by reviving the long-dormant comedy character as the superhero Pig-Iron in the 1980s Zoo Crew, repurposing him as a sharp piece of DC's multiverse satire.siskoid.blogspot.com
  • Otto Feuer has drawn more of Peter Porkchops's comics than any other artist in our catalog β€” 43 issues.

Top series

Covers through the years β€” 1948–1986

Real Fact Comics #13 β˜… 1948
Real Fact Comics #13
World's Finest Comics #53 1951
World's Finest Comics #53
Peter Porkchops #33 β˜… 1954
Peter Porkchops #33
House of Secrets #23 β˜… 1959
House of Secrets #23
Aquaman #1 1962
Aquaman #1
All-Star Squadron #53 1986
All-Star Squadron #53

Appearances

Real Fact Comics (1946)
#13
Leave It to Binky (1948)
Secret Hearts (1949)
#1
Miss Beverly Hills of Hollywood (1949)
#4
Animal Antics (1946)
#22
Funny Stuff (1944)
#49
Detective Comics (1937)
Movietown's Animal Antics (1950)
#28
World's Finest Comics (1941)
#53
Batman (1940)
#66
The Phantom Stranger (1952)
#6
Flippity & Flop (1951)
Real Screen Comics (1945)
Peter Panda (1953)
Mystery in Space (1951)
#21
The Raccoon Kids (1954)
Hopalong Cassidy (1954)
House of Mystery (1951)
A Date with Judy (1947)
Jackie Gleason and the Honeymooners (1956)
#2
Our Fighting Forces (1954)
Strange Adventures (1950)
Challengers of the Unknown (1958)
The Three Mouseketeers (1956)
#15
The Brave and the Bold (1955)
The Adventures of Jerry Lewis (1957)
#44
The Adventures of Bob Hope (1950)
#50
All-American Men of War (1952)
#56
G.I. Combat (1957)
#59
Gang Busters (1947)
#63
Star Spangled War Stories (1952)
#68
Our Army at War (1952)
#69
All Star Western (1951)
Blackhawk (1957)
Sgt. Bilko's Pvt. Doberman (1958)
#8
House of Secrets (1956)
Aquaman (1962)
#1
Superman's Girl Friend, Lois Lane (1958)
#30
Tomahawk (1950)
#78
Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew! (1982)
The Best of DC (1979)
All-Star Squadron (1981)
#53
The Oz-Wonderland Wars (1986)
#3
Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe (1985)