Uncle Sam
Uncle Sam is the personification of the United States government and American national identity, depicted as a tall, white-bearded man in patriotic dress. Rooted in 19th-century political cartooning, he served as an editorial symbol representing the American nation, its policies, and its people.
Few comic characters carry the weight of American history quite like Uncle Sam, whose illustrated presence stretches all the way back to 1877 β a Platinum Age icon who predates the very concept of the superhero by generations. With 665 catalog appearances across landmark publications like Judge, The Saturday Evening Post, and Successful Farming, this figure has graced more pages over more decades than almost any character you could name, sharing those storied pages with figures as towering as Theodore Roosevelt himself. Five of those appearances are recognized as key issues, a testament to how often Uncle Sam found himself at the center of culturally significant moments in print. Spanning roughly 145 years of publishing history, he is nothing less than a living chronicle of American visual storytelling β an essential presence for any collector serious about the deepest roots of the comics tradition.
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Trivia
- Herbert Johnson has written more of Uncle Sam's comics than any other writer in our catalog β 75 issues.
Top series



Covers through the years β 1942β2013
1942
β
1977
1991
2003
2013