Legion of Super-Heroes

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Superboy No. 147 art by Curt Swan

An organization of teenaged crimefighters and adventurers—representing Earth and more than a score of far-flung planets and consisting, all in all, of several dozen active members, honorary members, and reservists—each of whom possesses some unique super-power distinct from those possessed by every other member of the group. The Legion makes its headquarters in the city of Metropolis in the thirtieth century A.D., where it is primarily active.


Among the Legion's many members are Cosmic Boy, Saturn Girl, Lightning Lad,Triplicate Girl, Phantom Girl, Chameleon Boy, Colossal Boy, Invisible Kid, Brainiac 5, Ultra Boy, Star Boy, Shrinking Violet, Sun Boy, Bouncing Boy, Mon-El, Matter-Eater Lad, and Element Lad. When Superman was a teenager (see Superboy), he journeyed into the future and joined the Legion. Supergirl is also a member of the Legion (because Superboy meets Supergirl "before" his memory of encountering her as Superman, she must place a hypnotic suggestion to erase his memory whenever they meet in the 30th century). Jimmy Olsen is an honorary member of the Legion under the name Elastic Lad. The Legion's "animal branch" is known as the Legion of Super-Pets. The Legionnaires are fully aware that Clark Kent is secretly Superman. From the time the Legion meets Superboy onward, the post of Legion Leader is held by Cosmic Boy, Saturn Girl, Brainiac 5, Invisible Kid, and Ultra Boy, during parts of this interval, Superboy, Saturn Girl, and Mon-El serve as Deputy Leaders.

Adv No. 342 "The Legionnaire Who Killed!"Art by Swan & Klein


Since Superboy/Superman has the power to travel in time, it is possible for him to journey to the thirtieth century A.D. to visit the Legion either during the period when they are teen-agers or during the period when they are adults. By the same token, since the Legionnaires are able to time-travel also, it is possible for them to return to the twentieth century to visit Superman either as teen-agers or as adults. For this reason, the Legionnaires appear in the chronicles sometimes as teen-agers and sometimes as adults. And as adults, the Legionnaires often have different names from the ones they employed as teen-agers. The adult Cosmic Boy is called Cosmic Man; the adult Lightning Lad is called Lightning Man; the adult Saturn Girl is called Saturn Woman; and so on (See Adult Legion of Super-Heroes).

In August 1961, three adult Legionnaires, Cosmic Man, Lightning Man, and Saturn Woman, join forces with Superman in his battle with Lex Luthor and the the Legion of Super-Villains (S No. 147: “The Legion of Super-Villains!”). (See Legion of Super-Villains for more information on this encounter)

By April 1962, six teen-aged Legionnaires— Brainiac 5, Chameleon Boy, Cosmic Boy, Lightning Lad, Saturn Girl, and Sun Boy—have created ingeniously lifelike robots of Clark Kent, Jimmy Olsen, Lois Lane, and Perry White as part of an elaborate hoax they intend to play on Superman and Supergirl to commemorate the anniversary of Supergirl’s arrival on Earth. Knowing that Superman will fly the robots to his Fortress of Solitude for a detailed examination once he has ascertained that they are robots and not real people, the Legionnaires have concealed the components of their anniversary gift inside the robots’ bodies and programmed the Clark Kent robot to assemble the gif, as well as to let the six Legionnaires into the locked Fortress, while Superman and Supergirl are fast asleep. Indeed, late that night, when an alarm goes off signaling the presence of intruders in the Fortress, Superman and Supergirl race to the entrance to discover the six Legionnaires standing proudly alongside their gift: colorful sculpted busts of themselves, Superman, and Supergirl (S No. 152/1: “The Robot Master!”).

In August 1962, two adult Legionnaire, Cosmic Man and Lightning Man, pose as Hercules and Samson, “two of the mightiest men of all time,” as part of an elaborate ruse, devised by Superman, for uncovering the hiding place of Duke Marple’s stolen loot and bringing the “notorious gang-leader” to justice (S No. 155/2: “The Downfall of Superman!”).

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