I found a few things about it. It was co-created by Marie-Th?r?se Houphou?t-Boigny, who was once the first lady of the Ivory Coast. She felt that Africans needed a hero of their own. I barely remember it myself. Must've been watching Fox back when it was on.
Not quite. The USA Cartoon Express continued for another six years after Cartoon Network launched. Instead of being limited to just Hanna-Barbera shows, they began picking up more non-HB cartoons, most notably The Real Ghostbusters, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (USA was the only place where the rarely-seen European adventures aired), Dinosaucers, and others. They even aired original cartoons like Problem Child, The Itsy Bitsy Spider, and Highlander.
They added USA AXT: Action eXtreme Team, a block with on Sundays in the final years of the USA Cartoon Express. First, it was a block within the block airing on Sundays only in the first year with Street Fighter and Savage Dragon, added Saturday mornings with Mortal Kombat (you know, I wonder if Warner Bros. realizes they own that series now) and Wing Commander a season later, and eventually took over the daily morning run as well as the Sunday block until its end. But they did bring over Mighty Max, Sailor Moon (USA was the series' pre-Toonami home), and Gargoyles in their final months.
OH!
Just remembered. TV Land used to air cartoons as well.
For some weird period in the early 2000s (maybe it was the cusp in 1999), when TV Land was all about classic television and not completely warm gray goo yet, they did a couple of stunts involving classic kids programming. They aired Harlem Globetrotters, Fonz and the Happy Days Gang, Star Trek: The Animated Series, Mighty Mouse and Quackula, and a few of those trippy Sid & Marty Kroft productions. Fun times.