When the Junior Express weekly began in September 1954, its readers , in addition to enjoying the weekly Jeff Hawke adventure could also
collect Jeff Hawke Space gen cards with each issue of the comic. In the fifties, collecting cards of all kinds was still very popular and although cigarette cards had already had their heyday in the twenties and thirties, cards of the same shape and size continued to be a popular item in packets of tea, toothpowder and numerous other household items. The Jeff Hawke – Space gen series comprised 25 cards in all and showed their young readers what space travel might be like in the not too distant future of Jeff Hawke’s world. Some cards involved imagined spacecraft and technology while others presented astronomical and science facts, somewhat like the “Out into Space” series presented at the same time by Brooke Bond tea. In some upcoming posts we will be presenting images ( both front and back) of all 25 cards from the Jeff Hawke series. Skipper Prossit
Here is an outline of the second Jeff Hawke story from the pages of Junior Express weekly , entitled THE
PLANET OF FIRE. After establishing a peace between the robots and the humans on Rea, Jeff and co are once more whisked away in the Shining ones’ saucer for another mission to bring justice and peace to a far flung part of the galaxy. They are told by the Shining ones that they are to act as their agents and are placed in suspended animation until their new destination is reached. When they are at last awoken by the Shining Ones’ robots they see through the viewing panels, a planet riven by earthquakes and violent volcanic activity. They are told however that it is not intended that they should land there but rather on one of the fire planet’s moons. They are given spacesuits and oxygen by the robots and instructed to explore the caves on the cold, airless moon, where they will encounter the people that they have to help. Jeff, Bill and Dick are set down on the moon whereupon the saucer disappears.
Exploring the cave systems they discover a large vaulted gallery in which rests a gleaming spacecraft. Shortly after this
they are captured by a group of hostile humanoids wearing strange spacesuits. They are taken to the groups’ headquarters which are sealed of from the rest of the cave system and with breathable air inside. Jeff is taken to their leader Zirk who, as I mentioned in a previous post, looks almost identical to the New Martians in Sydney’s MARTIAN INVASION. Zirk soon comes to realise that Jeff and his friends have been sent by the Shining ones to help them. He explains to Jeff that his people come from the planet of Fire, which has become increasingly unstable for the past 200 years, with increasing earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. He plans to build a fleet of spaceship to evacuate his people from the fiery planet to a safer world and he and a group of his engineers have made an expedition to this particular moon in order to mine a special metal , needed for the construction of the spaceship engines. The mining complete, Zirk and his team, together with Jeff and co, head back to the planet of Fire to complete the evacuation fleet. Jeff supervises the completion of the ships though not nearly enough will be ready before the planet becomes uninhabitable. So Jeff devises a plan whereby the few completed ships will ferry Zirk’s people in relays
up to a series of giant space rafts that have been placed in orbit. Jeff and the crew that he has trained take off repeatedly in the teeth of seismic quakes and volcanoes until the whole population has been lifted off the planet’s surface and ferried to one of the stable moons. Just as the last batch are set down in their new home, the planet of fire destroys itself in a cataclysmic explosion. Zirk explains that from this
moon his people can set out to find a new home planet.
We are pleased to announce that the Jeff Hawke club will hold its annual get-together in Bristol from Friday 18th September until Sunday 20th September. If you are a club member you are welcome to come along to meet Sydney and other kindred spirits. If you are not already a member , join now and get to meet the creator of Jeff Hawke in Bristol.
The Jeff Hawke club has had a presence in Bristol in the past few years as we have been regular visitors to the Bristol comic-expo to promote the club. Over those years we have discovered that there are many interesting places to visit and many great restaurants.
You can visit Brunel’s SS Great Britain, the first iron-built ocean-going steamer and its accompanying museum; also there is a full sized replica of the caravel in which John Cabot sailed to Newfoundland in 1497, the first English vessel to visit the new world.
Our recommended hotel is the Double tree – Hilton, which is centrally situated and convenient for all the venues that we want to visit. We also have some excellent restaurants lined up for the weekend – all previously tried and tested by our
discerning club sectretary.
Programme
Friday evening – Dinner at the Mud dock restaurant
Saturday AM Visit to SS Great Britain
PM Visit to the Mshed ( a museum of Bristol’s artistic, cultural and technological history)
Members are advised to make their own hotel bookings.
It is early 1968 at the Cape Kennedy launch site. Three astronauts: Shaw, Stokes and Jordan sit atop the mighty Saturn V rocket awaiting final checks from mission control before they are blasted into the Florida sky on what will be mans’ first successful lunar landing on the flat lava plain called the sea of Serenity. – well , not quite.
“Seven steps to Serenity”, a project devised by Sydney Jordan, was conceived as an animated film to be broadcast on TV which would show to the viewing public exactly how NASA proposed to land a man on the Moon in the following year. Sydney suggested the idea to Mike Wooller ,a producer and director for Granada television, responsible for such ground breaking series as “Searchlight” and “ World in action” . Wooller was enthusiastic and Sydney began a series of paintings which would serve as the backdrop to the animations. He produced a “ship’s eye” view of the Lunar landing area ( thought then to be Mare Serenitatis) so that the final animation could show how the LEM (Lunar lander) would be seen from the command module as it made its descent to the Lunar surface. For the astronauts themselves he painted detailed studies of the spacesuits from various angles and super-imposed photographs of three real faces upon them for a more realistic effect. The first of his volunteer “crew” for these photoshoots was his good friend George Stokes, illustrator and writer of the beautifully drawn Wes Slade strip in the Sunday express. The second was actor Richard Shaw , who had appeared as the character Sladden in the TV series “Quatermass and the pit” in 1958 and was to make three appearances in Doctor Who over the coming years. Shaw’s rugged and determined features made him ideal as an astronaut with “The right stuff”. And of course the third crewman was Sydney himself. Sydney completed some very detailed studies for the project showing the different stages of the mission’s progress, but unfortunately the powers that be at Grenada TV began to wax cold after a few months and like many real NASA launches in the 1960’s this animation was cancelled at the last minute. Not much artwork survives now from “Seven steps to Serenity” but the three Astronaut studies included in this post show the meticulous detail with which it was undertaken , and will give us just a little flavour of what might have been. Skipper Prossit
Greetings Primitives, This week we feature part 5 of Jeff Hawke – Star venturer, in which our courageous “Hero” begins his investigation of the wrecked Skandor ship and is assailed by a blast of telepathically transmitted terror.
Greetings Primitives , I will be taking command here for the next week or so while that pirate Prossit is away on some nefarious business of her own. I have been instructed to tell you that a new Jeff Hawke car sticker is now available from the club secretary ( email address at the bottom of the page) I have consulted the bureaucrats on Earth in charge of the Road fund licence and they have kindly agreed to abolish the tax disc so that Earthlings can display the Jeff Hawke Club badge in its place. To have influence is everything!
Below is a brief synopsis of the first Jeff Hawke story “Space Rider” which appeared in Junior Express Weekly from 4th Sept 1954.
The story starts in familiar fashion when Jeff, in his Gloster meteor is sent to intercept a flying saucer, exactly the same saucer as that in Sydney’s strip. The saucer belongs to the shining ones who, again, as in the original, have a team of robots serving as their crew. Here the two stories start to diverge. Jeff discovers that there were two accidental stowaways aboard his Meteor , his friend Capt. Bill Judd and
Judd’s nephew Dick Regan. All three are enlisted into the service of the Shining Ones to act as their agents on troubled planets throughout the galaxy. They are equipped with spacesuits and sent on their first mission to the distant planet Rea. Here they are met by a robot called Groka ( different from the Shining ones’ robots and of a very interesting design). Groka has been awaiting their arrival. He explains that his people, a race of robots called the Ruks, were rescued by the Shining ones and given refuge on Rea. However the other inhabitants of Rea, a group of humans called the Sators have become very belligerent and are waging war on Groka’s robots for no obvious reason. Jeff and co are needed as they can infiltrate the Sators and discover their plans. After speedily capturing a Sator plane , Jeff and his companions arrive at the robot HQ.
Here they are trained to fly spacecraft and to use ray guns and then sent in a swift plane across the border to begin their spying mission.
After a series of adventures where Jeff and co manage to insinuate themselves into the Sator army, they arrive at the enemy HQ and discover that the Sators have been constructing a robot army of their own , identical to the Ruks and built for the purpose of infiltrating and destroying them from within. While investigating the fake robots, they are discovered by a Sator officer who recognises that they are spies but who also reveals that he is part of a clique of officers whose plan is to rid themselves of their warlike dictator , who , confusingly, is also called Sator. No sooner have these discoveries been made when they learn that the dictator’s invasion of the Ruks territory has
began.
After a brief attack on the Sator forces in a small spacecraft, in which he displays his superb flying skills , Jeff leads the Sator rebels on a bombing run in which they drop huge quantities of red paint on the fake Ruks, thereby making it easy for Groka and his people to identify the fakes. Although now deprived of the element of surprise the Sator dictator decides to continue his attack and in a foolhardy move leads his army of men and paint-splattered robots through a narrow valley toward Ruk territory. Jeff locates the command vehicle which controls the Sator robots and destroys it from the air. The fake robots are thus put out of action and
the demoralized troops of Sator’s army begin to give in. After escaping the battle in a swift pursuit ship the dictator returns to his citadel where the last of his loyal troops are still holding out. Before long Jeff ,Groka and the others arrive to prise him out. The dictator escapes in a waiting plane and his deserted supporters surrender to a man. After some further adventures in which Jeff ,Groka and Dick track the dictator to a swamp in which his plane has crashed, and encounter a “swamp-beast” a
kind of fanged aquatic ape, the injured dictator is finally captured and taken back to Groka’s headquarters. Their mission over the three companions are taken up once more into the Shining ones’ saucer for another mission.
Herewith, part 4 of the unpublished story which we are delighted to present for the first time ever on this blog. In this strip Kolvorok puts on his distinctive spacesuit, the one familiar to JH readers from OVERLAND , to go and investigate the wrecked alien ship. We see more of his crew in this strip – notably larger than the tiny engineers that manned the same craft in SANCTUARY
Although tangential to the main body of Jeff Hawke stories, an alternative incarnation of Sydney Jordan’s space hero appeared in the pages of Junior Express weekly, a juvenile publication which started in February 1954, only seven months after Hawke’s first appearance in the Daily Express. The publishers considered that Jeff Hawke would also appeal to younger readers in stories that were tailored to their tastes. Although not drawn or written by Sydney and with a different cast of supporting characters ( including a young schoolboy with whom readers could identify), the comic book Hawke nonetheless retained some of the elements from the adult strip. Hawke’s encounter with a flying saucer and the Shining Ones in Sydney’s first story SPACERIDER , are repeated in the comic book, but in the latter , not only Jeff but his two companions, Capt. Bill Judd and Judd’s nephew Dick are taken aboard the alien craft. Again, the robots who serve the Shining Ones are present and drawn exactly as Sydney had drawn them in the newspaper strip. Their purpose is also the same, namely to set missions for Jeff and his companions to carry out, with the usual aim of righting wrongs throughout the galaxy, though the stories themselves are different and contain different villains and story-arcs. Having said that, the “Underground men” from the second story, PLANET OF FIRE look identical to Ultar and the “new” Martians in Sydney’s Martian invasion who must have been their inspiration.Later posts will look at the four individual JH stories which appeared in Junior Express weekly and present brief synopses Skipper Prossit
The Star venturer story continues this week with Kolvorok, showing a distinctly uncharacteristic bravery in going out to investigate the wrecked ship – in contrast to his usual cowardly disposition. Even his crew members suspect his motives though!