Many years ago, in the pre-Internet days, I conceived the notion of becoming The Charlton Expert. I amassed a huge collection (most at 5 cents a copy) figuring that while everyone else was studying Marvel and DC I'd create the definitive Charlton index. I finally gave up. Sure, there were scattered gems like Severin, Williamson, and the Spanish artists, But to read most Charltons was to be pounded by wave after wave of mind-numbing stories and dreary art.
The collection is long gone (I probably made 75 bucks off it.) But as I read Sherlock Holmes all the ennui of bygone days came flooding back. It's not that the book is absolutely wretched; it's just so BORING! Since I'm the last to comment most of my points have already been made. So once over lightly.
The art on all the Holmes stories resembles Bill Molno, but it's not quite bad enough. Could it be Ray Osrin? Vince Alascia definitely inked two of them, maybe all three. Dull as ditchwater. Generic characters, generic backgrounds, generic layouts. Mazzucchelli is exactly right. Holmes is wearing his cloak and hat so kids will know he's Sherlock Holmes. II think it was a wise decision. Neither the plots nor the settings suggest the Holmes universe. Without the costume Holmes would be just another generic detective.
We've read the stories a hundred times before. The one unusual bit appears is in "Love Thy Neighbor," when Holmes suggests, very vaguely, that the Petunias were fertilized by Marston's decomposing body.
Now to the only halfway-decent feature, Dr. Neff. This came from the inventory of stuff Charlton bought from defunct publishers, in this case Street & Smith. I've never seen the original comics, so I don't know if these are reprints or unpublished material. Other Dr. Neff stories--including this one--appeared in Charlton's Racket Squad comic. Note the name of Inspector O'Malley clumsily lettered into the splash page and the final panel. It turns out Bill Neff was a stage magician. He performed midnight "spook shows" at movie theaters between 1945 and 1952. I found some biographical material on magic history sites, including an amusing memoir by one of Neff's assistants, who stood in the balcony with a fishing rod flying fake skeletons over the audience's heads. Unfortunately Neff succumbed to alcohol and drug addiction and died in 1967.
All that remains is the Mystery of the Missing Watson. Most kids would have known Holmes through the movies, and they would have expected to see Watson. Here's my suggestion. As others have pointed out, American copyright law was different from English law. Technically the Holmes stories were out of copyright here while they were still protected in the UK. But even while Holmes was in copyright, people would occasionally put out Holmes-related material either assuming he was PD or not caring. From what I've seen it wasn't until the 1960s that the Doyle Estate realized they had a cash cow on their hands and started prosecuting violators.
But why would Charlton bother putting out a Holmes comic in the first place? Because the previous year a Sherlock Holmes TV series was put into syndication. Charlton wanted to ride its coattails and make a few bucks. Still they may have had reservations. Maybe they were afraid the TV people would come after them. Charlton set their comic in modern times (the TV show took place in the 1890s) and dumped Watson, figuring that if they had to, they could argue that their comic was nothing like the show. There seem only to have been three issues; I suspect Charlton dropped the title for slow sales long before any copyright hounds came baying on their trail.
It's a theory, anyway.