
In fact, the Batman comics of the 1940s show that Dick Grayson's youth provided a practical benefit for the Dynamic Duo. Which brings me to...
Reason for Robin, #7: Under age and undercover!

Those jobs were undercover work that let Dick spy on gangsters without attracting attention or appearing to be a threat. In his very first adventure with Batman, bringing to justice the small-town crime boss who killed his parents, Dick worked as a newsboy and, if I recall it right, a bowling alley pin-setter.

(I should acknowledge that in Batman, #22, Dick took a job delivering telegraphs because he'd spent all his allowance on war bonds. Simpler times.)

Not surprisingly, the comic-book industry attracted young workers, both because of their interest in the product and because they came cheap. In 1939, the year when Bob Kane invented Batman, the DC Comics/Independent News staff included Irwin Donenfeld, the thirteen-year-old son of owner Harry Donenfeld, working after school. That fall Kane hired incoming college freshman Jerry Robinson as his assistant, and they soon co-created Robin.

- Bill Gaines worked at his father's Educational Comics as a teenager after school.
- Johnny Craig took a job as artist Harry Lampert's assistant soon after seeing his first comic books at age thirteen in 1939; within a short time he was working at All-American and EC.
- Stan Lee started work at Timely Comics in 1940 at age seventeen.
- Will Eisner, Jack Kirby, and Carmine Infantino were all urban newsboys as children.
- Kirby left high school to work at the Max Fleischer animation studio.
- Gil Kane started work on comics about age sixteen, assisting other artists, including Kirby.

COMING UP: Robin's very special disguises, and why he hated them.
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