Amalgamated Press
Predecessor | Harmsworth Brothers Ltd |
---|---|
Founded | 1901 |
Founder | (1937–1959) IPC (1959) |
The Amalgamated Press (AP) was a British newspaper and magazine publishing company founded by journalist and entrepreneur
History
Harmsworth Brothers Ltd
In 1888 Alfred Harmsworth and his younger brother
Also in 1890, Harmsworth began publishing periodicals to challenge and compete with the
Beginning in 1894, the Harmsworth brothers dove into the newspaper business, first acquiring The Evening News and the Edinburgh Daily Record. Harmsworth founded the Daily Mail in 1896, which was a success, having the world record for daily circulation until Harmsworth's death.
Harmsworth founded the woman's magazine Home Chat (1895–1959) to compete with C. Arthur Pearson's Home Notes.
In 1896, Harmsworth Brothers Ltd was incorporated as a limited company.[3] By this time, combined weekly sales of the company's publications exceeded one million copies, more than any other magazine publisher in the world.[3]
Formation and expansion of Amalgamated Press
In 1901, Harmsworth gathered his many publishing ventures together under the banner of Amalgamated Press.[3]
In 1902, the company opened offices in Manchester, also setting up a system of codes and telegraphs that streamlined the layout and printing process.[3]
Expanding his newspaper empire, Harmsworth initiated the Daily Mirror during 1903, and rescued the financially desperate The Observer and The Times during 1905 and 1908, respectively.[5] During 1908, he also acquired The Sunday Times.
The quality of the AP story papers began to improve throughout the early 20th century. They also proliferated, with AP launching new boys' papers like
Recognizing the popularity of the story papers with girls, AP editor Reg Eves launched a girl's line, the most notable being School Friend (1919–1929), Schoolgirls' Own (1921–1936), and The Schoolgirl (1922–1923; 1929–1940).
AP's My Magazine was published from 1908 to 1933 with different names; it had articles on science, technology, geography, and current events.
From 1912 Amalgamated Press was based at Fleetway House in
Amalgamated Press acquired the assets of James Henderson & Sons Ltd in 1920.[7]
AP story papers faced tougher competition in the 1930s with the rise of DC Thomson's line, including The Hotspur (launched in 1933).[8]
Harmsworth's death; Allied Newspapers; William Berry
Alfred Harmsworth died in 1922, and in 1926 Amalgamated Press was bought by
.The Berry brothers dissolved their partnership in 1937, with William Berry (Lord Camrose) retaining Amalgamated Press.[3]
Editor Leonard Matthews (1914–1997), who joined AP in 1939, was a leading figure in the company's comics titles for 20 years, eventually becoming Manager Editor.
The onset of
Seymour Berry, 2nd Viscount Camrose, the eldest son of William Berry, was Vice Chairman of Amalgamated Press from 1942 until the company's sale in 1959.
In May 1949, AP acquired the publisher
Another round of mergers and cancellations of long-running AP comics titles occurred in the years 1952–1957, including Illustrated Chips and Comic Cuts (both launched in 1890), Jingles (launched in 1934), Tip Top (launched in 1934), Playbox (launched in 1925), The Rainbow (launched in 1914), and Tiny Tots (launched in 1920).
Acquisition by the Mirror Group/IPC
In 1959, Amalgamated Press was bought by the
- Confessions Library (1959 series)
- Cowboy Picture Library (1950 series; originally known as Cowboy Comics)
- Famous Romance Library (1956 series)
- Film Fun (1920 series)
- Girls' Crystal (1935 series)
- Knockout(1939 series)
- Lion (1952 series)
- Marilyn (1955 series)
- Playhour (1954 series)
- Radio Fun (1938 series)
- Roxy (1958 series)
- School Friend (1950 series)
- Super Detective Library (1953 series)
- Thriller Comics (1951 series)
- Tiger(1954 series)
- Top Spot (1958 series)
- TV Fun (1953 series)
- Valentine (1957 series)
With the transition to Fleetway, the AP titles in 1960. Similarly, TV Fun was renamed TV Fan, continued for a short time, and then was merged into Valentine.
In 1961, the Mirror Group also acquired
Of the comics titles IPC acquired from Amalgamated Press, only five survived into the 1970s:
Newspapers
- Daily Mail (founded 1896; acquired by Harold Harmsworth in 1922)
- Daily Mirror (founded 1903; sold to Harold Harmsworth in 1913)
- The Evening News (acquired in 1894)
- Edinburgh Daily Record (founded 1894)
- The Observer (acquired in 1903; sold in 1911)
- The Sunday Times (acquired in 1908; sold in 1915)
- The Times (acquired in 1908; sold in 1922)
Books
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- The Boy's Book of Everyday Science (1937), edited by Charles Ray
- The Concise Household Encyclopedia (1932–1939) edited by J A Hammerton.
- Everybody's Enquire Within, edited by Charles Ray, published in 55 weekly instalments from 1937 to 1938.
- The Great War: The Standard History of the All-Europe Conflict (1914-1919), edited by Wilson and Hammerton
- Harmsworth's Universal Encyclopaedia (1921/1922)
- "Wonders" — all edited by Clarence Winchester, and published by Amalgamated Press as weekly instalments, with a book binding service available to keep as two volumes for each series.[16][17]
- The World of Wonder: 10,000 Things Every Child Should Know (1933), edited by Charles Ray. Published in two volumes: Vol. One, pages 1 to 732; Vol. Two, pages 733 to 1460. An illustrated compendium of mainly science and technology, with some historical subjects.
Periodicals
- Cassell & Co., where it originated in 1897; merged into Storyteller
- The Children's Encyclopædia (1908–1964)
- The Children's Newspaper (1919–1965)
- Everybody's Weekly (1950–1959) — acquired from Everybody's Publications Ltd., where it originated in 1913; merged into Odhams' John Bull
- The Green Magazine (1922–1923)[22]
- The Harmsworth Red Magazine (1908–1939)
- The Harmsworth Self-Educator (1905–1907)
- Home Chat (1895–1959)
- London Magazine (1898–1933)
- The Modern Boy (1928–1939)
- My Magazine (1908–1933)
- Picture Show (1919–1960)
- Cassell & Co., where it originated in 1907
- Woman & Home (from 1926)
- Woman's Weekly (from 1911)
- Edmund Hodgson Yatesin 1905
- The Yellow Magazine (1921–1926)[22]
Story papers
- The Boys' Friend (1895–1927)
- The Boys' Herald (1903–1913)
- The Boy's Realm (1902–1916; 1919–1929)[23]
- The Champion (1922–1955)
- Cassell & Co., where it originated in 1892
- The Gem (1907–1939)
- Halfpenny Marvel (1893–1922)
- The Magnet (1908–1940)
- Pluck (1894–1916; 1922–1924)
- School Friend (1919–1929)
- The Schoolgirl (1922–1923; 1929–1940)
- Schoolgirls' Own (1921–1936)
- The Thriller (1929–1937)
- The Triumph (1924–1940)
- The Union Jack (1894–1933)
Notable comics titles
Title | Starting year | Ending year | Issues | Merged with | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bo-Peep and Little Boy Blue | 1929 | 1934 | 245 | Chicks' Own | |
Bubbles | 1921 | 1941 | 1,024 | Chicks' Own | |
Butterfly | 1904 | 1940 | 1,862 | Tip Top | Title is Butterfly and Firefly for 446 issues from 1917 to 1925 |
Chicks' Own | 1920 | 1957 | 1,605 | Also published 33 annuals from 1924 to 1957 | |
The Comet |
1949 | 1959 | 510 | Tiger |
Launched by J. B. Allen in 1946; acquired by AP in 1949 |
Comic Cuts | 1890 | 1953 | 3,006 | Knockout |
|
Comic Home Journal | 1895 | 1904 | 488 | ||
Crackers | 1929 | 1941 | 615 | Jingles | |
Famous Romance Library | 1956 | 1961 | 171 | ||
Film Fun | 1920 | 1962 | 2,222 | Buster | Published 23 annuals from 1938 to 1961 |
Funny Wonder 1st series | 1893 | 1899 | 325 | Leads right into Funny Wonder 2nd series | |
Funny Wonder 2nd series | 1899 | 1901 | 109 | Numbering continues with Wonder series 2
| |
Funny Wonder 3rd series | 1914 | 1942 | 1,404 | Wonder series 4 |
Numbering continues from Halfpenny Wonder (1914 series); numbering continues with Wonder series 4; also published 5 annuals from 1937 to 1942 |
Girls' Crystal | 1953 | 1963 | 524 | School Friend | Numbering continues from Girls' Crystal story paper (launched in 1935); published 39 annuals from 1939 to 1978 |
Illustrated Chips initial run | 1890 | 1890 | 6 | ||
Illustrated Chips main series | 1890 | 1952 | 2,997 | Film Fun | |
Jack and Jill | 1954 | 1985 | 1,640 (c.) | ||
Jester and Wonder |
1902 | 1912 | 506 | Jester |
Numbering continues from Wonder series 2 |
Jester |
1912 | 1940 | 1,312 | Funny Wonder | Title is Jolly Jester from 1920 to 1924 |
Jingles | 1934 | 1954 | 741 | TV Fun | |
The Joker | 1927 | 1940 | 655 | Illustrated Chips | |
Kinema Comic | 1920 | 1932 | 651 | Film Fun | |
Knockout |
1939 | 1963 | 1,240 | Valiant | Published 16 "Fun Books" from 1941 to 1955, and 6 annuals from 1956 to 1961 |
Larks | 1927 | 1940 | 656 | Comic Cuts | |
Lion | 1952 | 1974 | 1,156 | Valiant | Published 767 issues with IPC |
Marilyn | 1955 | 1965 | 549 | Valentine | |
Merry and Bright the Favorite Comic | 1910 | 1935 | 1,265 | Butterfly | Titled simply Merry and Bright for 337 issues from 1910 to 31 March 1917 |
My Favourite | 1928 | 1934 | 351 | Sparkler | |
Playbox 1st series | 1898 | 1898 | 2 | ||
Playbox 2nd series | 1905 | 1913 | 105 | Published 48 annuals from 1909 to 1956 | |
Playbox 3rd series | 1925 | 1955 | 1,279 | Jack and Jill | |
Playhour | 1954 | 1987 | 1,700 (c.) | Originally titled Playhour Pictures | |
Playtime | 1919 | 1929 | 550 | ||
Puck | 1904 | 1940 | 1,867 | Sunbeam | |
Radio Fun | 1938 | 1960 | 1,029 | Buster | Published 21 annuals from 1940 to 1960 |
The Rainbow | 1914 | 1956 | 1,898 | Tiny Tots | Published 10 annuals from 1927 onward |
Roxy | 1958 | 1963 | 288 | Valentine | |
School Friend | 1950 | 1965 | 762 | June | |
Sun |
1949 | 1959 | 517 | Lion | Launched by J. B. Allen in 1947; acquired by AP in 1949; was called Sun Comic for 122 issues from 1949 to March 22, 1952 |
Sunbeam | 1922 | 1940 | 920 | Tiny Tots | |
Thriller Comics | 1951 | 1963 | 450 | ||
Tiger |
1954 | 1985 | 1,571 (c.) | Eagle | Published c. 1,310 issues with IPC |
Tiger Tim's Weekly |
1919 | 1940 | 1,087 | Rainbow | Originally called Tiger Tim's Tales for 28 issues (1919–1920) |
Tiny Tots | 1927 | 1959 | 1,334 | Playhour | |
Tip Top | 1934 | 1954 | 727 | TV Fun | |
TV Fun | 1953 | 1960 | 333 | Valentine | Becomes TV Fan from 19 September 1959 to 30 January 1960; published 4 annuals from 1957 to 1960 |
Valentine | 1957 | 1974 | 919 | Mirabelle | |
Wonder 1st series |
1892 | 1893 | 27 | Restarted as Funny Wonder (1892–1899) | |
Wonder 2nd series |
1901 | 1902 | 49 | Jester and Wonder |
Called Wonder and Jester for 2 issues, 10 May 1902 to 17 May 1902; numbering continues in Jester and Wonder |
Wonder 3rd series |
1913 | 1914 | 64 | Halfpenny Wonder | Numbering continued from Penny Wonder; numbering continued in Halfpenny Wonder (which becomes Funny Wonder 3rd series) |
Wonder 4th series |
1942 | 1953 | 317 | Numbering continues from Funny Wonder series 3 |
Notes
- ^ Editorials in early issues of papers such as the Union Jack or The Boys' Friend make frequent references to "the blood and thunders", but as time went on the mentions disappeared. Letters sent in by parents or teachers were frequently printed, praising the papers for putting the "trash" out of business.
References
- ^ a b c AP/Fleetway: A Potted History, Kerschner & Taylor, archived from the original on 24 January 2018, retrieved 8 January 2012
- Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Amalgamated Press," Grace's Guide to British Industrial History. Retrieved Apr. 19, 2021.
- ^ Knuth, Rebecca (2012). Children's Literature and British Identity: Imagining a People and a Nation. Scarecrow Press. p. 65.
- ^ "Alfred Charles William Harmsworth, Viscount Northcliffe | British publisher". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
- ^ W. O. G. Lofts, "Fleetway House is no more," C.D. #375 (March 1978). Archived at the Friardale website.
- ^ "James Henderson and Sons", Graces Guide. Retrieved 22 November 2020
- ISBN 0-7190-1879-X, p. 289.
- ^ Herbert Allingham biography, golden-duck.co.uk website; accessed 2013-09-16.
- ^ Clark, Alan. Dictionary of British Comic Artists, Writers and Editors (The British Library, 1998), pp. 2-3.
- ^ "Fleetway – A History". Archived from the original on 18 August 2010. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
- ^ Press Office – IPC History, IPC Media, archived from the original on 13 August 2010, retrieved 28 June 2010
- ^ Bunge, Nicole. "REBELLION ACQUIRES FLEETWAY AND IPC YOUTH GROUP ARCHIVES". ICv2. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
- ^ Johnston, Rich. "Rebellion Buys Fleetway Archive – Roy Of The Rovers, Oink, Tammy, Battle, Whizzer And Chips And More". Bleeding Cool. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
- ^ Birmingham Mail article Archived 20 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Clarke, John (2016). "Other Part Works Edited by Clarence Winchester". Railway Wonders of the World. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
- ^ "Resources for Winchester, Clarence (1892-)". Trove. National Library of Australia. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
- ^ Railway Wonders of the World tribute website. Retrieved Apr. 15, 2021.
- ^ Shipping Wonders of the World tribute website. Retrieved Apr. 15, 2021.
- ^ Wonders of World Engineering tribute website. Retrieved Apr. 15, 2021.
- ^ Wonders of World Aviation tribute website. Retrieved Apr. 15, 2021.
- ^ a b "Yellow Magazine, The," The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (APRIL 10, 2015).
- ^ "The Boys' Realm," Comic Book+. Retrieved Apr. 15, 2021.
External links
- Complete List of Harmsworth/Fleetway/IPC comic titles Archived 14 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine
- Amalgamated Press at the Grand Comics Database
- Documents and clippings about Amalgamated Press in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW