This is a timeline of events that occurred during the 1940s.

After the 1930s

  • The superhero comic book genre fades away in world populated by living crime fighters, largely forgotten except among older readers who recall the fictional adventures of Superman and other heroes in the 1930s. In their place, pirate comics grow increasingly popular, including such titles as Pirate and X-Ships.

1940

January

3rd

  • Byron Lewis records a diary entry expressing doubts about the Minutemen, which he has come to regard as an unimportant publicity stunt, and describes Hooded Justice as personifying the worst kind of hatred—the kind that needs to hide behind a mask and describes his fear of the Comedian, since his indiscretions are borne of high intelligence.[2]

March

21st

After March 21, 1940

May 26 to June 4, 1940

  • During World War II’s Battle of Dunkirk, more than 330,000 Allied soldiers are evacuated after a Nazi advance on the French city is delayed.
  • Hans von Krupp, a top official under Adolf Hitler, falls out of favor with the Nazi Party for failing to act on intelligence that could have prevented the Allied Forces’ escape.

After June 4, 1940

  • Hans von Krupp flees for his life and ends up in the United States. Though marked for death by the Third Reich, he remains fanatically loyal to Adolf Hitler. Allying with fifth columnists in America, he takes on the role of a master saboteur known as Captain Axis, hoping to redeem himself in the eyes of the Führer.[2]

June 1940 to 1945

  • As Captain Axis, Hans von Krupp becomes a famous saboteur, threatening factories, military installations, propagandistic war films, and USO events.[2]

Mid-1940

September

  • Larry Schexnayder discovers Nelson Gardner's secret relationship with Hooded Justice. Though Larry has no issue with this, he decides the public would not react well to the news. He writes a note to Sally Jupiter and suggests that she, when in the presence of photographer, snuggle up to the strongman so the press will infer romance.[2]

18th

Before October 2, 1940

October

2nd

After October 2, 1940

Between October 1940 and 1941

In or After 1940

  • Hollis Mason's parents both die, leaving him regretful that he never let them know they did right by him.

1941

  • The pact between Germany and the Soviet Union was terminated when Germany launched Operation Barbarossa and invaded the Soviet Union.
  • The Comedian is stabbed, causing him to start wearing a more protective suit of leather armor.[6]
  • During an interview, Hooded Justice describes Moloch as a "ringmaster".

May

24th

December

7th

1942

  • Captain Metropolis puts his crime fighting career on hold to serve in the Marines during World War II.
  • The Comedian joins the war effort to make himself a hero and is sent to the South Pacific, beginning a long career as a government agent and super soldier.[6]
  • The Manhattan Project, a research and development venture during World War II, is formed and begins producing the United States' first nuclear weapons. The project is overseen by Major General Leslie Groves of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, with physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer designing the bombs.
  • The members of Minutemen remaining in the United States foil numerous sabotage attempts by the Screaming Skull and Captain Axis.

January

  • While performing covert duties in Manila, Philippines, he sustains a knife wound from an angry civilian, puncturing his right kidney. Dr. Edward Ross tends to his injury.[2]

6th

  • Major G. Holland reactivates Nelson Gardner's military service, ordering him to report to North Carolina's Fort Bragg.[2]

March

9th

November

  • Pulp fiction magazine Black Mask publishes an issue containing short stories by Robert Reeves, Dale Clark, and Norbert Davis.

1943

January

23rd

July

26th

August

1st

  • A race riot takes place in Harlem, New York City after a white police officer, James Collins, shot and wounded Robert Bandy, an African-American soldier.[5]

October

12th

November

  • While performing covert duties in Bougainville, Papua New Guinea, Eddie Blake sustains a punctured eardrum due to a Japanese mortar burst, causing a permanent ten percent hearing loss. Dr. Edward Ross tends to Blake's injuries.[2]

1945

  • Jon Osterman learns how to repair watches from his father.
  • While performing covert duties in Tokyo, Japan, Eddie Blake contracts syphilis. Dr. Edward Ross tends to Blake's injuries.[2]
  • The Minutemen engage in a battle with Captain Axis on an Allied submarine near the Arctic Circle. Hooded Justice tosses the super-villain into the ocean, and he never surfaces.[2]
  • Adrian Veidt enters public school where he proves to be exceptionally bright, scoring perfectly on early test papers. When his teachers accuse him of cheating, his father, Friedrich Werner Veidt, tells his son to maintain a low profile so no one will realize how smart he is or consider him abnormal.

June

5th

  • Eddie Blake is court martialed for killing seven Japanese POWs. To keep his identity a secret, his trial is conducted by the Joint Chiefs of Staff.[2]

August

2nd

6th

7th

  • New York Times headline: "Atomic Bomb Dropped on Hiroshima".[15]
  • In Brooklyn, Jon Osterman studies clock cogs. His father, learns of the Hiroshima bombing and throws his old pocket watch out of a window and pushes his son towards becoming a nuclear physicist rather than a watchmaker.[15]

9th

  • The second atomic bomb, code-named "Fat-Man", is dropped on Nagasaki.[5]

September

2nd

December

1946

July

26th

October

1st

November

12th

1947

April

21st

  • James Newell Osterberg Jr., better known as Iggy Pop, is born.[5]

June

1948

February

3rd

May

15th

  • Nelson Gardner racially insults a black cab driver for parking in front of a puddle outside Minutemen headquarters. Angered by Gardner's racist comments, Byron Lewis punches him in the face, and police are called in to break up the fight. Throughout the melee, Hooded Justice stands nearby, laughing.[2]

16th

  • The Harlem Teetotaler publishes an article about the fight between Mothman and Captain Metropolis regarding the racial slurs that Metropolis said. The New York Gazette covers the incident as well. Despite at least twenty-five people having overheard the conversation, the mainstream press fails to report Gardner's racial slurs.[2]

1949

March

  • With most villains in prison or moved to less glamorous activities, the Minutemen disband.[4][6]

September

23rd

December

1st

References