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Beeton's Boy's Own Magazine, published in the UK from 1855 to 1890, was the first and most influential boys' magazine. [3]With the growth of education in the later part of the 19th century (universal education started in England in 1871), demand was growing for reading material aimed at the juvenile market.
The Beat (magazine) The Boys' Herald; Boys of England; Boys' World; British boys' magazines; British girls' comics; C. The Captain (magazine) The Children's Newspaper ...
British boys' magazines; British Society of Magazine Editors; List of 18th-century British periodicals; List of 19th-century British periodicals; List of early-20th-century British children's magazines and annuals; List of magazines published in Scotland; List of newspapers in the United Kingdom
Beeton's Boy's Own Magazine, published in the UK from 1855 to 1890, was the first and most influential boys' magazine. [1]Boys' Own or Boy's Own or Boys Own, is the title of a varying series of similarly titled magazines, story papers, and newsletters published at various times and by various publishers, in the United Kingdom and the United States, from the mid-19th century to the mid-20th ...
Numerous magazines and annuals for children were published in Britain from the mid-19th century onward. Many of the magazines produced their own annuals, which sometimes shared the name of the magazine exactly, as Little Folks, or slightly modified, as The Boy's Own Paper and The Girl's Own Paper (first-listed below).
Boys of England was a British boys' periodical issued weekly from 1866 to 1899, and has been called "the leading boys' periodical of the nineteenth century". [1] The magazine was based in London. [2] Boys of England was edited by the publisher and former Chartist Edwin John Brett.
The Modern Boy (later Modern Boy) was a British boys' magazine published between 1928 and 1939 by the Amalgamated Press.It ran to some 610 issues. [1] It was first launched on 11 February 1928 [2] and cost 2d (two old pence, when there were 240 pence to the pound: see pound sterling), the magazine ran to 523 weekly issues until 12 February 1938.
The Magnet was a British weekly boys' story paper published by Amalgamated Press.It ran from 1908 to 1940, publishing a total of 1,683 issues. Each issue contained a long school story about the boys of Greyfriars School, a fictional public school located somewhere in Kent, and were written under the pen-name of "Frank Richards."