Tex Thomson's series continues, but more than any other series from this era, it will
alter dramatically throughout the duration of it's run. In fact, the
changes it goes through, coupled with Baily's ever-improving art, makes
it one of the more enjoyable series to read. If only it wasn't for
Gargantua T. Potts.
That being said, Gargantua makes his final
appearance in Action Comics 25, spending some time with Tex and Bob
Daley at Tex's camp in Maine, Golden Gates. They encounter a mysterious
amnesiac, being pursued by gangsters. For a few panels it looks like
Gargantua will be the one to save the day, but again he is reduced to
racist comic relief.
In Action 26 Gargantua is gone. We learn
that he has enlisted with the French army as a cook, and that he is of
Senegalese descent (meant to explain why he did such a thing). While I
was glad to see the last of him, this story was cover-dated March of
1940, meaning Gargantua joined the French army just in time for the Nazi
invasion of France.
Issue 26 also introduces Special Prosecutor
Maloney, who swears Tex and Bob in as agents reporting directly to him,
needing their skills to help fight a crime wave. Tex infiltrates the
main gang, discovering that their leader is the supposedly honourable
Vander Wallace. Tex winds up shooting and killing Vander Wallace as he
gives a public address, the audience completely unaware of Wallace's
criminal ties. One would expect this to have some major repercussions,
but Maloney is content to keep Tex and Bob as his staff.

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Issue 26
also introduces Miss X, a woman with knowledge of the mob, who sometimes
seems to be working with them, but who will constantly act to protect
or aid Tex. She will return in issues 27, 29 and 30. It seems fairly
clear that she is meant to be the daughter of Maloney, who is introduced
in Action 27 as Janice, though called Peggy in 29 and 30. As Miss X,
she sometimes has a hat on, and always a pair of sunglasses, but that's
it for disguise. Tex mentions to Bob in issue 30 that he believes he
knows who she is, and if she is in fact Maloney's daughter, Tex
certainly should be able to recognize her. But as her plot thread gets
simply abandoned, there is never a big reveal of her identity. Neither
Miss X nor Janice/Peggy Maloney appear again after issue 30. Perhaps
they went to join Gargantua in France.

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Issues 27 and 28 also
feature the return of the Gorrah, still seeking vengeance on Tex for his
earlier defeats. The Gorrah manages to get Tex under a hypnotic spell
in issue 27, sending him out to kill. Miss X shoots Tex to prevent him
from becoming a murderer, and though it's just a glancing wound, the
shock breaks Tex out of the spell.
In issue 33 the series changes
name to Mr. America. Tex resigns from Maloney's staff when he is given a
special assignment by the war relief commission, to accompany a ship
across the Atlantic, and prevent a plot to blow it up. He fails at
that, the ship gets sunk and Tex is believed dead. Later, a black
haired man wearing a red cape, white shirt and blue trousers, a domino
mask and carrying a whip tracks down those behind the explosion and
brings them to justice. He calls himself Mr. America, but Bob almost
immediately recognizes him as Tex.
Tex decides to maintain the Mr.
America identity, for some reason feeling that it's important that the
world believe Tex Thomson to have died when the ship sunk. In the first
few months, we will see blond haired Tex hanging with Bob, before going
into action as the black haired Mr. America. It's difficult to tell if
he is meant to be wearing a wig or dyeing his hair, but as he simply
stops ever appearing as a blond within a year, it becomes safe to assume
it's a dye job.
As Mr. America he uses what he calls a "yankee
doodle feather" to announce his presence. This is a feather coloured
red, white and blue. Tex will drop one of these in among the bad guys
before he starts fighting them, and although it always has the effect of
scaring the bad guys, one cannot help but think Tex would fare better
with the element of surprise, particularly as they often have guns, and
he just has a whip.
Tex's main prey as Mr. America are spies and
fifth columnists, and the series becomes far more military-oriented. The
Gorrah makes one last appearance, in issue 38, working with Nazi
agents, though he betrays them in the end, preferring to pursue his goal
of vengeance over their plot against the army. At first Gorrah
believes Tex to have died, and is out to kill Bob, but he learns the
truth, and the identity of Mr. America, just before perishing in the
explosion intended for a educator's convention.
I should also
point out that Tex's last name is consistently spelled Thomson in this
era, though in later times it will always be spelled Thompson. So in
case you are thinking that I just made a spelling error in the title, I
didn't, it was an active choice, and a difficult one.
In
Action 42, sad at being left behind so often, Bob Daley decides to take
on a masked identity of his own. He puts on long red underwear and a
lampshade on his head, and armed with a broom and a squirt gun of ink,
takes to the streets as Fat Man. Tex has no idea of Fat Man's identity
at first, he has been busy in his secret cabin/laboratory in the woods
making his cape function as a flying carpet. This issue also introduces
the Queen Bee, the first of many DC villains to use this name.

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The
following issue takes the series to its goofiest point. Maloney makes
his final appearance as giant monsters attack Centre City (the only time
the city is identified). Tex flies around on his cape and Fat Man hits
people with brooms. Tex talks all manner of crap about Fat Man to Bob,
only later discovering the two are the same man. The giants are
revealed as robots (which is hardly less dangerous), and Tex takes out
the bad guys after Bob is knocked unconscious, but leaves them so Fat
Man will get the credit.
Action 44 has Bob learn that Tex knows
his identity, and it is also the final appearance of the flying cape.
Tex uses it to escape from German agents who have been sabotaging
factories, making it fly while it is still around his neck. Although he
does get away, I think it likely caused some major neck strain,
probably why he retired it.
From issues 46 -49 Tex deals with the
machinations of the Queen Bee. This Queen Bee has no powers, she is a
heartless criminal mastermind, content to work with Nazi spies as they
attempt to terrorize the public with giant robots, rob a Red Cross
benefit, or attack the navy. In Action 49 we meet her scientist father,
and learn that it was a failed experiment with a machine that would
eliminate worry that caused her to lose all sense of right and wrong.
The Queen Bee gets captured, and her father manages to de-program her,
ending her criminal career.
Issue 52 features Tex chasing down a
Nazi who escaped from a Canadian prison camp and entered the US, but the
billing is Mr. America and Fat Man as The Americommandos. Bob only
appears in a non-speaking cameo in this story.
In issue 53, the
credits read The Americommando and Fat Man, as they head to Hollywood to
deal with sabotage on the set of a war film, and discover the producer
is working with the Nazis. Tex is called the Americommando, but there
is no apparent reason for the change of name.
With issue 54, the
series truly does become Americommando. Tex is secretly brought to FDR
himself, and ordered to undergo extensive training to become the
Americommando, proficient with all weaponry, able to pilot planes and
tanks, and multilingual. Bob is requested to stay behind and fight
crime as Fat Man, and this is his final appearance, unless one considers
The Golden Age miniseries from the mid-90s as canonical.
Tex
travels to England, and is given the assignment to go undercover as
Captain Otto Riker of the Gestapo, and sent behind enemy lines.
Tex
only manages to succeed in the Riker disguise for issue 55, with 56
Hitler himself brings in the Japanese Dr. Ito, also called the Little
One, to determine who the Americommando is, and Ito has little problem
figuring out Riker is a fraud. This prompts Tex to take on the identity
of a French painter in issue 57, but he calls himself Jean Valjean,
which Ito recognizes as the main character from Les Miserables, so that
disguise fails as well.
One thing that makes it easier to figure
out Tex's identity is that he no longer wears the mask with the rest of
his Mr. America costume. In fact, that is about the only difference
between Mr. America and the Americommando. Despite all his weapons
training, he still tends to rely on his fists and whip.
Ito
pursues the Americommando in France again in issue 58, but then Tex
starts travelling a bit more, heading to Italy, Greece and the
Netherlands, uncovering Nazi plans, communicating defenses, and working
with the undergrounds of the different countries.
**image14***
Dr Ito returns in issue 62, as Tex blows up an oil storage facility in Romania.
Action
63 sees Tex's greatest challenge, to steal plans that Hitler carries on
himself at all times. He succeeds by turning Hitler's propaganda
against him accepting a challenge to fight a Nazi champion in the ring.
Actual German heavyweight champion Max Schmelling appears in the story,
although he is not the one to fight Tex. This is sort of sad, part of
the anti-Schmelling view the media played up during the war. In fact,
though he was drafted into the service, Schmelling was not a Nazi, and
even risked his life to save two jewish children. At any rate, Tex
triumphs in the ring, and not only escapes the Nazis after the match,
but punches Hitler in the face while stealing the plans.
Tex gets a
new sidekick in issue 63 as well, a Greek prisoner of war, Poppy, who
is his assistant during the match, provided by the Nazis. Poppy joins
Tex on his next mission, in Russia, but is not seen after that. I
expect he returned home and worked with the resistance until war`s end.
Tex
heads east with issue 66, heading to Burma for a bit of an awkward
story that contrasts how much better the Burmese were under British
subjugation than under Japanese subjugation. 67 has a delightful tale
as Tex races the Japanese to find Shanghai Rose, with her knowledge of
Japanese troops movements. It`s Tex who determines that Shanghai Rose
is a parrot.
Tex is in China for the next couple of stories, and
then breaks into a prisoner of war camp in Tokyo itself in issue 71.
Another attempt is made at having him impersonate a German officer, this
time Captain Brand, at the German embassy in Tokyo, in issue 72. This
starts well, but Dr. Ito is brought to Tokyo in issue 73. Ito
recognizes Tex almost immediately, though Tex avoids capture by
pre-setting a leaflet drop that he uses as an alibi. Still, in issue 74
Ito gets proof that Brand is really the Americommando, as Tex was
stupid enough to enter Brands room while still in his hero costume.
The
series really does go out with a bang in Action 74. Tex and Ito are
both aboard a Japanese bombed heading for the California coast. Tex
has been revealed as Brand, but escapes his captors and takes over the
control of the plane. Ito shoots Tex, but not before Tex manages to
open the bomb bay doors, sending the bombs and Ito plunging down into
the Pacific Ocean.
The series ends with the wounded Tex seeing the
coast of the US come into view.
Although this is the final
appearance of Tex Thompson in this era,he appears as a member of the
All-Star Squadron in a couple of stories set during 1942.
Tex is
shown in the Justice Society Returns miniseries to be back behind enemy
lines as a German officer before the end of the war, which is backed up
by the events in The Golden Age mini previously mentioned. Although
Golden Age is technically an Elseworlds, James Robinson considered it
canonical during his run on Starman, and I tend to follow the train of
thought that it is as well, meaning Tex makes his final appearance in
it`s pages, captured and killed by the Ultra-Humanite.
There is one further Mr. America story, in Secret Origins in the late 80s.
Tex Thomson: Action Comics 21 - 32 (Feb 40 - Jan 41)
Mr. America: Action Comics 33 - 53 (Feb 41 - Oct 42)
Americommando: Action Comics 54 - 74 (Nov 42 - July 44)