Aaron P. "Pat" Boyette was born on July 27, 1923, and died on January 14, 2000. Before finding his footing in comic books, he built a career in broadcasting as a personality and news producer — an unconventional background that nonetheless informed the storytelling instincts he would later bring to the page. He eventually made his way to Charlton Comics, where he spent roughly two decades contributing as artist, writer, inker, colorist, and letterer across a remarkably broad range of titles.
The Peacemaker #1 (1967)
Boyette is perhaps best remembered for co-creating the Peacemaker, a character who would outlast Charlton itself and eventually find new life at DC Comics. His work touched on war, horror, adventure, and licensed properties, with strong credits on titles such as *Ghostly Tales*, *Fightin' Army*, *Fightin' Marines*, and *Korg: 70,000 B.C.*, alongside extensive contributions to *The Phantom* and its French-language counterpart *Le Fantôme*. That versatility — spanning genres and production roles simultaneously — distinguished him within Charlton's famously lean operation. He occasionally worked under the pen names Sam Swell, Bruce Lovelace, and Alexander Barnes. With over 220 credited issues across his career, Boyette left a quietly substantial body of work that holds a dependable place in mid-century American comics history.