Strip Title |
Artist |
First Appearance |
Last Appearance |
Notes |
The Astro-nuts |
Alan Rogers |
36 |
78[1] |
|
Big-Head Branny - The Strong-Arm Janny |
Barrie Appleby |
1 |
24 |
About a surly and vindictive janitor |
Billy The Kid |
Gordon Bell |
1 |
87 |
A strip borrowing heavily from "Dennis the Menace and Gnasher", featuring a tearaway with black bushy hair and a mischievous spotted dog called Pongo. Appeared in The Beezer after the merger. |
Castaways on Planet Doom |
Terry Patrick |
1 |
35 |
An adventure story |
Curly's Commandos |
Barrie Appleby |
1 |
47 |
About a small gang of children organised along army lines. |
Dunder Ed, The Wonder Blunder Boy |
Phil Milar |
1 |
87 |
Not in 18, 38, 39, 40, 43 to 48, 55, 56, 64, 69, 70, 73 and 82.[2] |
Fiends Beans |
Gordon Bell |
25 |
87 |
|
Ghastly Geezer's Gallery |
Ken Harrison and readers of Cracker. |
1 |
87 |
Not in 7, 17, 33, and 42.[3] A readers feature where readers sent in pictures of monsters referred to as Ghastly Geezers. |
The Head-Hunters of Skookum Skool |
Ken Harrison |
1 |
55 |
Had previously appeared in Buzz under the name "Skookum Skool". Not in 33 & 49. |
Hector the Collector |
John Aldrich |
1 |
55 |
Not in 49.[4] |
Iron Hand |
Paddy Brennan |
1 |
87 |
An adventure story about a secret agent with a metal hand, it later moved to The Beezer after the merger. |
Jimmy Jest, His Shadow's a Pest |
Ken Harrison |
38 |
87 |
About a boy whose shadow would get him into trouble. |
Joe Soap |
John Dallas |
1 |
87 |
A strip involving a boy and magical soap bubbles. Appeared in The Beezer after the merger. |
Little 'Orror |
David Easington |
16 |
87 |
Appeared in The Beezer after the merger. |
Mad Ads |
Ken Harrison |
1 |
36 |
They had a Mad Ads competition on the back page. Readers would send in an ad for a mad contraption and if it was printed, they would get 1 pound. A similar thing appeared in The Dandy in the 2010s. |
The Nutters |
John Geering |
1 |
87 |
Not in 49. Squabbles between a signalman called Percy Potters plus a family of three squirrels (called Pa, Ma and Junior). |
PC McGraw |
Ken Harrison |
70 |
87 |
About a policeman who turns into a monkey/gorilla when wet. |
Rip Van Tinkle |
Barrie Appleby |
41 |
87 |
|
Sammy |
Ken Harrison |
1 |
87 |
The 'Face' of Cracker, he appeared in a number of features (not comic strips) which were "Jest a minute", "Sammy's Special Report" and "Sammy's Wacky Weekly". "Jest a minute" continued after the merger with The Beezer. |
ScrapJack the wacky wizard |
Unknown |
79 |
87 |
|
Scrapper |
Tom Lavery |
1 |
85 |
About a kid who liked to get into fights. Appeared in The Beezer after the merger. |
Simple Spyman |
Bill Ritchie |
1 |
87 |
A spy with a very long beard, dark glasses, and dark-brimmed hat |
Slojak |
Barry Appleby |
25 |
87 |
Involves a young bald boy detective. |
The Snookums |
Ken Harrison |
1 |
24 |
A misbehaved class whose strip consisted of large 'action' panels containing with numerous gags. |
Spookie Cookie |
Tom Williams |
1 |
24 |
A ghost cook in a haunted manor |
Spookum Skool |
Ken Harrison |
1 |
23 |
Yet another strip derivative of "The Bash Street Kids", but set in a haunted castle where the children are ghosts. |
Wonder Wellies |
Andrew Christine |
25 |
87 |
Not in 36, 53, 59, 68, and 77.[5] A similarly named and themed strip appeared in Buster.[6] |
Young Foo - The Kung Fu Kid |
Brian Platt |
1 |
87 |
A Chinese schoolboy martial artist, complete with bare feet as part of his school uniform. Each week he would feud with Bully Basher. Appeared in The Beezer after the merger. |