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The Illustrated Police News?!

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  • The Illustrated Police News?!

    Hello you all!

    Since The Illustrated Police News pops in here and there, I thought, that maybe someone can present the history of that paper on these boards!

    Anyone having material enough?!

    All the best
    Jukka
    "When I know all about everything, I am old. And it's a very, very long way to go!"

  • #2
    The Illustrated Police News , Law Courts and Weekly Record was founded in 1864. It was the first, and most long-lasting, Saturday penny newspaper that combined two hugely popular Victorian genres: the police newspaper and the illustrated journal.

    Its founder, George Purkess, was a London publisher who already specialised in the publication of cheap "true stories" of crime, accidents and domestic disaster. The subject matter of his newspaper was very similar. It collated sensational or unusual stories, often drawn from the London Police Courts, but also reports of mishap from elsewhere in Britain and the world. While repeatedly emphasising the "true" nature of the stories, it was their entertainment and curiosity value that was crucial to the success of the News .

    The News 's front page consisted largely of artists' impressions of these events combined with attention-grabbing headlines, which were reported in full inside the newspaper. The Illustrated London News pioneered the mass publication of engravings from 1842, and spawned many cheaper, popular publications. The Illustrated Police News took advantage of the abolition of the newspaper taxes during 1855-61 to offer an original, entertaining four-page newspaper catering to the popular demand for vivid portrayals of melodrama.

    As the News expanded in the 1890s, reaching twelve magazine-sized pages by 1897, the topics covered also diversified. Previously news unrelated to disaster had filled no more than a single column, but new popular items were now published. These included more explicit sexual material, such as 'original saucy songs', jingoistic reports from the Boer War, book reviews, extensive advertising and sporting news, with as much as a whole page devoted to boxing in almost every issue.



    Publication History: Variant Titles
    The Illustrated Police News , Law Courts and Weekly Record (20 February 1864-3 March 1938)

    Sporting Record (9 March 1938-22 September 1979)

    The New Greyhound and Sporting Record (6 October-3 November 1979)

    The Greyhound & Sporting Record (10 November 1979-2 August 1980)

    (Description from British Library Newspaper Collection)
    Last edited by Chris Scott; 02-18-2010, 12:11 PM.

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    • #3
      Would it be safe to assume that the Whitechapel murders increased its popularity?

      Mike
      The Ripper's Haunts/JtR Suspect Dr. Francis Tumblety (Sunbury Press)
      http://www.michaelLhawley.com

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