Blackie Gaxton
A name from the earliest days of Marvel's Silver Age, Blackie Gaxton made his mark in the pages of The Amazing Spider-Man #11 back in 1964 — a debut issue brought to life by the legendary trio of Stan Lee, Steve Ditko, and Jack Kirby. He's a piece of foundational Spider-Man lore, sharing those classic early pages with Peter Parker, Spider-Man himself, Betty Brant, and the notorious Otto Octavius. Rare in the catalog but enduring in reprints and retrospectives like the Amazing Spider-Man Omnibus and Untold Tales of Spider-Man, Gaxton is exactly the kind of street-level figure that gives the Silver Age its gritty, grounded texture — a reminder that even in a world of super-powered spectacle, compelling human drama was always at the heart of what made Marvel great.
