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VICTORIAN FICTION COLLECTION

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Victorian Business & Industry:
The Newspaper & Publishing Industries

Home > Business, Industry & Manufacturing > Major Industries > The Newspaper & Publishing Industries

Smith's Express Newspaper Office (Leisure Hour, 1860)

"Our Own Correspondent" (Leisure Hour, 1868)
A look at how news is gathered for magazines and newspapers.

Newspapers and Editors (Harper's Monthly, 1873A)
A history of newspaper publishing in Britain.

Journalistic London (Harper's Monthly, 1882A)

Editor's Easy Chair: Publishing (Harper's Monthly, 1887B)
A look at strained relations between British authors and publishers.

Great American Industries: A Printed Book, by R.R. Bowker (Harper's Monthly, 1887B)

What's the News? by Eugene M. Camp (Century Magazine, 1890B)
Some statistics about the major US newspapers of the day.

Country Newspapers, by E.W. Howe (Century Magazine, 1891B)
Country newspapers, says this author, rarely pay, are often unsatisfactory to their audience, but are almost impossible to kill.

The Press as a News-Gatherer, by William Henry Smith, Manager of the Associated Press (Century Magazine, 1891B)
Complaints about the press are nothing new...

The Press and Public Men, by H.V. Boynton (Century Magazine, 1891B)

A Description of the Offices of the Strand Magazine (The Strand, 1892B)

The "Times," by Edmund Vincent (English Illustrated Magazine, 1892A)

The Fourth Estate in London, by Alfred W. Robbins (Cassell's Family Magazine, 1895)
London's newspaper industry.

The Romance of Our News Supply, by William G. FitzGerald (The Strand, 1895B)

The American Literary Centre (Ladies Home Journal, 1896)
The publishing industry in New York and Boston.

Our Network of News: The Press Association and Reuters, by T. Artemus Jones (Windsor Magazine, 1896B)

The Press in the Provinces, by Alfred F. Robbins (Cassell's Family Magazine, 1896)

London's Halfpenny Papers, by Fred A.McKenzie (Windsor, 1897A)

A Peep into "Punch," Parts 1-6 by J. Holt Schooling (Strand, 1889A)
Founded in 1841, Punch was the original and quintessential magazine of social and political caricature and satire. This lengthy series (continued below) looks at the magazine's 113 issues between 1841 and 1897; this section covers 1841-1874.

A Peep into "Punch," Parts 7-12 by J. Holt Schooling (Strand, 1889B)
The continuation of the "Punch" series, covering the years 1875-1897, and Punch's Almanacks from 1842-1899.

War-Pictures in "Punch," 1841-1899, by J. Holt Schooling (The Strand, 1900A)

A Glance at "Vanity Fair," by J. Holt Schooling (Strand, 1901B)
Vanity Fair was the first of the "modern weekly society journals," launched in 1868.

• See Printing, Lithography & Book-Binding for articles on the technical aspects of printing and publishing.
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