
Hawk
Hawk Hawkins
First Appearance
Tomahawk #131 (1970)
Powers & Abilities
Also Known As
Hawk Hawkins, Son of Tomahawk
About Hawk
Hawk Hawkins is a DC Comics frontier hero who made his debut in Tomahawk #131 (1970), entering the long-running Western anthology series as the son of the legendary Tomahawk. Born into a legacy of frontier survival and combat, Hawk carries forward the rugged spirit of his father while carving out his own identity as a skilled warrior of the American wilderness. His introduction marked a bold creative shift for the title, injecting new blood into one of DC's most enduring Western properties during a period when the genre was evolving to meet changing reader tastes.
As the Son of Tomahawk, Hawk is defined by his exceptional physical abilities and a mastery of frontier combat that feels both inherited and hard-earned. He is a weapon master equally comfortable with a rifle, a blade, or his bare hands, and his tracking skills make him a formidable presence in the untamed landscapes of early America. His origin as a figure tied to divine or eternal forces adds a mythic dimension to an otherwise grounded frontier character, suggesting that his prowess goes beyond mere training and into something almost legendary.
Tomahawk #131 represents the closing chapter of a comic book era — the title would wrap up just a few issues later, making Hawk's appearances rare by default. His first appearance arrives at a historically significant moment for DC's Western line, giving collectors a character who exists at the very edge of a publishing era. Issues featuring Hawk are among the final entries in one of DC's longest-running Western titles, which adds genuine scarcity and historical weight to the run.
For collectors, Hawk Hawkins and the late issues of Tomahawk represent an underappreciated corner of the DC Bronze Age. Western comics from this period are increasingly recognized as collectible artifacts of a transitional moment in comics history, and first appearances in short-lived runs like this one tend to appreciate as collectors dig deeper into publisher back catalogs. Picking up Tomahawk #131 means owning not just a first appearance but a piece of DC's Western legacy at its twilight hour.