Table of Contents

Truth: Red, White & Black

Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary

Part 2: Origin and Evolution

Publication History and Creation

Truth: Red, White & Black was a seven-issue limited series published by Marvel Comics under its “Marvel Knights” imprint from January to July 2003. The series was conceived and written by the late Robert Morales with provocative and highly stylized art by Kyle Baker. At the time of its creation, Marvel's editor-in-chief, Joe Quesada, was encouraging creators to pitch bold, “evergreen” stories that could stand the test of time and add significant depth to the universe. Morales, a former editor for Vibe magazine, drew direct and intentional inspiration from the infamous Tuskegee Syphilis Study, a horrific 40-year clinical study conducted by the U.S. Public Health Service on African American men who were told they were receiving free health care but were instead left untreated for syphilis so scientists could study the disease's progression. Morales used this real-world atrocity as the narrative framework to explore the systemic racism inherent in American institutions, even those dedicated to creating its greatest heroes. The series was met with considerable controversy upon its announcement. Some fans and critics expressed outrage, believing the story tarnished the legacy of Captain America by suggesting the U.S. government would commit such an atrocity. There were fears it was a disrespectful retcon that diminished Steve Rogers. However, upon release, the series received widespread critical acclaim for its powerful storytelling, Baker's expressive art, and its willingness to tackle difficult, mature themes of race, patriotism, and the hidden costs of heroism. It has since become a seminal and highly respected work, considered essential reading for understanding the complete history of Captain America and the Super-Soldier program in the Marvel Universe.

In-Universe Story: The Uncovering of a Buried Truth

Unlike traditional origin stories that unfold in chronological order, the narrative of Truth: Red, White & Black is presented as a historical investigation. The in-universe “origin” is the moment Steve Rogers begins to uncover a chapter of his own legacy that was deliberately buried.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

In the modern day, Steve Rogers begins to research the history of Project: Rebirth, seeking to fill in the gaps of his knowledge from the time before he was given the Super-Soldier Serum. His investigation leads him to discover records of a parallel, clandestine program that ran concurrently with Dr. Abraham Erskine's work. This shadow project, spearheaded by Colonel Walker Price and Dr. Koch, was tasked with reverse-engineering Erskine's formula after his assassination. Their methods were brutal and racist. Believing African American men to be more “expendable,” the project rounded up a platoon of 300 Black soldiers from Camp Cathcart, Mississippi. These men were lied to, used as disposable test subjects, and subjected to horrific, often fatal experiments with early, unstable versions of the Super-Soldier Serum. The story is told through flashbacks, interviews with the few survivors, and government records that Steve uncovers. The narrative follows a small group of these soldiers, focusing primarily on Isaiah Bradley. As his comrades die around him from the formula's grotesque side effects, Isaiah emerges as one of the few to survive and develop enhanced abilities. The climax of the historical narrative sees Isaiah, upon learning that his remaining comrades are being sent on a suicide mission, steal a spare Captain America costume and an unpainted triangular shield. He single-handedly infiltrates a Nazi facility at Schwarzebitte to destroy their Super-Soldier program, succeeding where Allied intelligence had failed for months. Instead of a hero's welcome, Isaiah is court-martialed for stealing the costume, convicted, and sentenced to life in prison at Leavenworth in 1943. He spends the next 17 years in solitary confinement, his body and mind ravaged by the unstable serum. He is eventually granted a presidential pardon by Eisenhower and released, sworn to secrecy. Steve Rogers is horrified to learn this truth, realizing that a Black man had not only been a hero in his name but was brutally punished for it. The story culminates with Steve meeting the aged and mentally scarred Isaiah Bradley in the present day, finally acknowledging his predecessor and the terrible injustice done to him.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The adaptation of this story in the MCU, primarily in the Disney+ series The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, forgoes the historical investigation framework for a direct, deeply personal reveal. Here, Isaiah Bradley's story is not a forgotten piece of history to be discovered in a file, but a living, breathing trauma carried by a man who survived it. Bucky Barnes brings Sam Wilson to a quiet home in Baltimore, revealing that he is not the only person to have fought the Winter Soldier. He introduces Sam to an aged Isaiah Bradley. The origin of his powers is similar to the comics: he was one of several African American soldiers experimented on during the Korean War era (a shift from WWII) with variants of the Super-Soldier Serum derived from his own blood samples. Isaiah recounts his story to a shocked Sam. He details a mission in Goyang, South Korea, in 1951, where he was sent to deal with a brainwashed Bucky Barnes. He managed to rip off the Winter Soldier's metal arm but was captured by American forces. For his “insubordination” and the “crime” of being a powered Black man, he was imprisoned for 30 years. During his incarceration, he was subjected to constant experimentation and blood draws, with government and hydra scientists trying to replicate the serum in his veins. His wife, Faith, was told he had died, and he was declared legally dead, erased from history. The key difference in the MCU is the immediacy of the story. Isaiah is not just a historical figure; he is a cautionary tale and a moral compass for Sam Wilson. His bitterness and disillusionment—his belief that a Black man could never, and should never, be Captain America—forces Sam to confront the complicated, often ugly reality behind the shield. The “origin” in the MCU is not the origin of Isaiah's powers, but the origin of Sam's understanding of what the shield truly represents, both good and bad. This adaptation was made to create a direct narrative link between the past and the present, giving Sam's journey a powerful, personal mentor whose experience directly informs the central conflict of the series.

Part 3: A Chronicle of Heroism and Betrayal

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The storyline of Truth: Red, White & Black is a meticulously detailed chronicle of exploitation, resilience, and suppressed heroism.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU condenses this timeline and presents it as a recounted history, focusing on the emotional and psychological impact rather than the step-by-step process.

Part 4: Key Characters & Factions

Protagonists

Antagonists

Affiliations

Part 5: Thematic Analysis & Legacy

The Tuskegee Syphilis Study Parallel

The most critical thematic element of Truth: Red, White & Black is its direct and intentional parallel to the Tuskegee Syphilis Study (1932-1972). This real-world atrocity, where hundreds of impoverished African American men with syphilis were deliberately left untreated to be studied by doctors, is the foundational blueprint for the comic's narrative.

Deconstruction of the Captain America Mythos

Prior to this series, the story of Captain America was a relatively straightforward tale of a good man given great power who fought for American ideals. Truth complicates this narrative immensely. It argues that the gleaming symbol of the shield casts a long, dark shadow. The story forces readers to ask difficult questions:

By introducing Isaiah, the series establishes that the mantle of Captain America was carried by a Black man long before Sam Wilson, and that man was punished, not praised, for his heroism. This historical precedent adds immense weight to Sam Wilson's own journey and his initial reluctance to take up the shield in both comics and the MCU.

Impact on the Marvel Universe

Initially controversial, Truth: Red, White & Black is now considered a cornerstone of modern Marvel lore.

See Also

Notes and Trivia

1) 2) 3) 4) 5)

1)
Truth: Red, White & Black was originally pitched by Robert Morales under the title Captain America: The Truth. Marvel's legal department advised against it, concerned that using Captain America's name in the title for a story he barely appeared in could be misleading.
2)
Kyle Baker's art style for the series was a deliberate choice to evoke the feeling of a historical document or a memory. Its exaggerated, almost cartoonish quality in moments of extreme violence or emotion serves to highlight the surreal horror of the events, rather than presenting them in a photorealistic manner.
3)
The triangular shield Isaiah Bradley uses is a direct callback to Captain America's original shield from his first appearance in Captain America Comics #1 (1941), before it was replaced with the iconic circular discus.
4)
The real-world Tuskegee Syphilis Study lasted for 40 years. It only ended in 1972 after being exposed by a whistleblower, leading to a major public outcry and the establishment of the National Research Act and federal laws requiring Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) for the protection of human subjects in studies.
5)
While the MCU shifts Isaiah's timeline to the Korean War, it maintains the core themes of the comic. The change was likely made to avoid contradicting the established MCU timeline of Steve Rogers being the only successful WWII-era Super-Soldier and to create a direct link to the Winter Soldier's own hidden history.