William Ritt

writer
Comic Book

Brick Bradford


Ritt and Gray introduced The Time Top as a short-lived separate topper strip on April 20/21, 1935, and it first appeared in Brick’s Sunday strip on Oct 17, 1937; thereafter, it frequently took the comic strip adventurer into the future (and occasionally the past).

Brick’s strips were reprinted as early as 1934 with two hardcover issues of Saalfield Comics (#1059 and #1309). He was reprinted in King Comics starting with the first April 1936 issue, and he headlined one 1938 hardcover Big Little Book (#1468, combining text with line illustrations). Some Ace Comics had reprints (1947-49), and he appeared in four issues of his own comic book: #5 (Jul 1948) to #8 (Jul 1949) that were possibly strip reprints. In the 60s, new Brick backup features appeared in some issues of The Phantom, Mandrake the Magician (at least #5, #6 and #10) and Flash Gordon (at least #14, #16, #17). They probably all used the top, but I don’t know for sure. All that was just in the U.S.: He was vastly more popular in Australia and New Zealand.
Into the past . . . into the future . . . read on for another exciting adventure in time with Brick Bradford
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  • Science Fiction
  • Definite Time Travel
Serial Film

Brick Bradford


In fifteen episodes, Brick travels to the moon to protect a rocket interceptor while his pals take the time top to the 18th century to find a critical hidden formula. —Michael Main
Maybe tomorrow you’ll be visiting your great, great grandmother. 
With the moon and a winged spaceship behind him, Kane Richmond (as Brick
                Bradford) holds an atomic ray gun with Linda Johnson at his side.
  • Science Fiction
  • Definite Time Travel