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.
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

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.
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Covers through the years β 1948β1986
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1948
1951
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1954
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1959
1962
1986