Buster Brown

Created in 1902 by Richard F. Outcault, Buster Brown could best be described as the Edwardian Dennis the Menace with his outrageous antics alongside his pit bull pal Tige and his sweetheart Mary Jane. The comic strip began in the New York Herald on May 4, 1902. Outcault left for William Randolph Hearst's employ in January 1906, and after a court battle, Outcault continued his strip, now nameless, in Hearst papers, while the Herald continued their own version of Buster Brown with other artists. The latter lasted until January 1911, and Outcault's version until May 13, 1923.

Buster and Mary Jane would later be known as children's shoe mascots, with Mary Jane entering generic use to describe a particular style of dress shoes worn by girls and women regardless of brand. Outcault sold the rights to Buster's name and likeness to the Brown Shoe Company, with the latter using the character extensively in marketing their line of children's footwear.


 * Art Evolution: Earlier renditions of Buster and Tige bore a more or less realistic aesthetic, at times leaning more towards Uncanny Valley territory. By the late 1950s, promotional comic books featuring Buster and Tige's adventures has the two drawn in a more streamlined style typical of the era, and Buster no longer wears bar shoes (which were later named after his sweetheart). The issue "Buster Brown Goes To Mars" has Buster drawn in an even more stylized manner, his proportions leaning more towards a toddler than an eight-to-ten year old. In the 1980s the Brown Shoe Company updated their logo to keep up with the times, with Buster and Tige bearing a more contemporary outfit.
 * Character Title
 * Deliberately Cute Child: Buster, occasionally using his effeminate looks to comedic effect.
 * Recycled IN SPACE!: In keeping with the Space Age craze during the 1950s, at least two adventures putting Buster and Tige in a space flight were published and given away for free as premiums in shoe stores–Buster Brown Goes to Mars and Buster Brown in "Out of This World!".
 * Named After Somebody Famous: Buster was likely named after Buster Keaton, then a young Vaudeville actor.
 * Wholesome Crossdresser: Buster as part of his antics where he would borrow clothes from a girl in jest.
 * Wolverine Publicity: The Buster Brown Comics books given away as premiums by shoe stores had Buster and Tige on the covers, but most of the stories did not involve the two at all, though at least some of the stories had the pair as the main protagonists perhaps to further market the brand.