The character who would become the Winter Soldier first appeared as James “Bucky” Barnes in Captain America Comics #1
in March 1941, created by the legendary duo of writer Joe Simon and artist Jack Kirby. Bucky was conceived as the archetypal kid sidekick, a popular trope in the Golden Age of Comics, designed to appeal to young readers and serve as a Watson-like figure to Captain America's Sherlock Holmes. For years, he was considered permanently deceased after a fateful mission in 1945, a death so definitive it became informally known as the “Bucky Clause” among comic creators—a rule that some characters should remain dead to preserve the impact of their sacrifice.
This rule was shattered in 2005. In a move that is now regarded as one of the most successful and well-executed retcons in comic book history, writer Ed Brubaker and artist Steve Epting resurrected the character in Captain America
(Vol. 5) #1. Reimagined with a dark, espionage-thriller tone, Bucky was reintroduced not as a hero, but as the enigmatic Soviet assassin known as the Winter Soldier. This reinvention provided a deeply personal and tragic antagonist for Steve Rogers, layering decades of untold history into the Marvel Universe and transforming a once-simple sidekick into a complex, modern anti-hero. The Winter Soldier's critical and commercial success cemented his place as a fan-favorite character, proving that no one in comics is ever truly gone for good.
The origin of the Winter Soldier is a tale of two distinct timelines, each shaping the character's motivations and relationships in profoundly different ways.
James Buchanan Barnes was an orphaned teenager and military brat who grew up on Army bases. In 1941, he discovered his hero, Captain America, was secretly Private Steve Rogers. Instead of exposing him, the plucky and capable Bucky became his costumed partner. Trained by Captain America himself, Bucky became a highly effective operative, often undertaking covert missions—the “dirty work” of assassination and wetwork—that the symbolic Captain America could not. This early history was later retconned to explain how