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Black Rider (BR) Vol 1 103

Appearing in "A luta pela colonização"

Featured Characters:

Supporting Characters:

  • Bob
  • Mr. Mack
  • Judge Willy
  • Reverend Curtys
  • Land comissioner (death)
  • Chief Brown-Cloud

Antagonists:

  • Mack's gang
    • Agent Mack
    • Sam
    • Bill

Other Characters:

  • Mrs. Dalle
  • Bart

Races and Species:

Locations:

  • Rio Verde

Synopsis for "A luta pela colonização"

In the town of Rio Verde, the Black Rider was helping Judge Willy in the solution of some cases when a boy named Bob arrived, telling the judge that the comissioner was arriving to town. Judge Willy suspended the session to talk with other town leaders. The Judge hoped that the arrival of the commissioner would open lands near Rio Verde for settling bringing progress for the town. The Black Rider hoped that the fights in the town ended. Judge Willy asked the Rider to wait for the stagecoach of the comissioner.

Later, some masked outlaws attacked the stagecoach of the comissioner, who defended with his gun. The Black Rider heard the attack and went to help the comissioner. As the outlaws shooted him and they saw the Rider arriving, they decided to flee. The Rider stopped the persecution because they crossed the frontier to other state and Judge Willy didn't have jurisdiction.

Meanwhile the outlaws (Bill and Sam) meet their boss the indian agent Mack, who was extorting the native chief Brown-Cloud (Nuvem-Parda) to sell him skins or his tribe would lose their land, taking adventage of Brown-Cloud ignorance of his rights. Mack planned to not tell the natives that the american government would give them 100 acres per individual in the new land open for colonization. He was also happy by the killing of the land comissioner, frustrating the opening of the territory.

Reverend Curtys and Judge Willy talked with the Black Rider about misfortune. The Rider had the idea to check the comissioner's paper, discovering that for the opneing of the territory, it was needed 1,500 signatories. Reverend Curtys was of the idea of print announcements with his own printer to attract the people. The new announcements worried Bill and Sam, who began to take them down.

Appearing in "A vingança de Lobo Uivante"

Reprint of the 3rd story from
Wyatt Earp #29
(originally printed as The Vengeance of Howling Wolf!)

Featured Characters:

Supporting Characters:

  • Grizzly Grant

Antagonists:

  • Clem Dade

Other Characters:


Locations:


Items:


Vehicles:


Synopsis for "A vingança de Lobo Uivante"

Reprint of the 3rd story from
Wyatt Earp #29
(originally printed as The Vengeance of Howling Wolf!)
  • Synopsis not yet written

Appearing in "O duelo fatal!"

Reprint of the 3rd story from
Ringo Kid #16
(originally printed as Dead Man's Duel!)

Featured Characters:

Supporting Characters:

Antagonists:

  • Hank Sawyer

Other Characters:

  • Cabe Tilden
  • Cabe Tilden's twin brother
  • Doc Barlow

Locations:


Items:


Vehicles:


Synopsis for "O duelo fatal!"

Reprint of the 3rd story from
Ringo Kid #16
(originally printed as Dead Man's Duel!)
The Ringo Kid has agreed to face Cabe Tilden to duel it out in an enclosed area after he and Hank Sawyer swindled Jim Connor's ranch. They agree to clamp a kerchief between each others teeth, promising only to draw and shoot once they both drop it. When they do, the Ringo Kid easily outdraws Tilden and shoots his guns out of his hands, unwilling to kill him. The Kid instead tells Tilson to square things by signing the deed to the ranch back to Connor to do so. Tilson agrees to do so, thanking the Ringo Kid for sparing his life. However after the Kid leaves the pen, those gathered to see the outcome find Tilden dead inside with the kerchief in his mouth, leaving them to believe that the Ringo Kid cheated and killed Tilson in cold blood.

Soon the Ringo Kid is arrested by the sheriff who has a warrant signed by Hank Sawyer and others who accuse the Kid of killing Cabe. Ringo finds himself locked in the jail and wondering if he really did kill Tilden. However later in the night his horse Arab comes to the window of his cell and he gets his faithful horse to get a rope to tie to the bars to allow him to pull them off the window. Free, the Ringo Kid goes back to the pen and finds that one of the boards have been pulled off the side of one of the walls, and fresh tracks around it. The Kid then pays a visit to Doc Barlow's office and asks to see the body. To his surprise the dead man bares a striking resemblance to Cabe Tilden, but is a different man.

Suddenly Hank Sawyer comes bursting in with his guns out. He tells the Ringo Kid that the dead man is really Cabe Tilden's twin brother and is holding Cabe somewhere. The Kid easily shoots the guns out of Hank's hands and rounds Sawyer up, clearing his name.

Appearing in "Boa lição!"

Reprint of the 1st story from
Rawhide Kid #3
(originally printed as Six-Gun Lesson)

Featured Characters:

Supporting Characters:

Antagonists:

  • Horse Rustlers
  • Nogood Norris

Other Characters:

Locations:


Items:


Vehicles:


Synopsis for "Boa lição!"

Reprint of the 1st story from
Rawhide Kid #3
(originally printed as Six-Gun Lesson)
The Rawhide Kid is riding when he is attacked by a gang of horse rustlers who seek to steal his horse Apache. The Kid fights them off and they find him too much of a match and flee the scene. Feeling that his ward Randy Clayton might in be danger, the Rawhide Kid pays a visit to the school to learn that none of the boys had arrived in class, troubling the Kid.

However Randy and his classmates are not in the type of trouble the Rawhide Kid expects. Instead of the danger of physical violence from the rustlers they are at risk of having their minds polluted by a local named Nogood Norris who boasts about his many accomplishments, his Texas background, and encourages the children to drop out of school, telling them that they don't need an education to have adventures. All the children buy into Nogood's sales pitch, but Randy sees through his clear lack of education and boasting manner.

When the Rawhide Kid happens upon the children as Nogood is once again telling the children that they don't need schooling. The Kid then challenges Norris to see who is the better man, if the Rawhide Kid wins the children go back to school, if he loses then the children will follow Nogood's advice. The two first start by wrestling, which the Kid wins by using Nogood's inertia against him. The Kid then also bests Nogood with a lasso as well as with his guns. Broken and defeated Nogood collapses to the ground in tears, realizing the errors of his ways and confesses that the children need a good education and vows to get one himself. Suddenly, the horse rustlers return to get revenge against the Rawhide Kid, but the Kid and Nogood easily out gun them and force them to surrender. In the aftermath of the battle the children rush back to school excited to get an education in the hopes of being a hero just like the Rawhide Kid.

With the children gone, Nogood asks the Rawhide Kid if he actually went to school, and the Kid admits that he has never seen the inside of a school house and has Nogood promise not to tell the children that.

Notes

  • Cavaleiro Negro was a reprint title of the brasilian publisher RGE, who had the license to reprint Black Rider from Marvel. * In this brasilian version, Matthew Masters was renamed Heron Robledo,but all his backstory was left the same.
  • Only the stories featuring Marvel characters are listed in the database. This comic also reprinted western stories from other publishers like Charlton (Kid Montana) and Quality (Bob Allen).

See Also

References

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