Magazine Data Page 631 |
Young England (New Series)Country: UK
Frequency: weekly |
Young England's Illustrated NewspaperCountry: UKTotal Issues: 10
Issues & Index Sources
#becomes Young England PublishersJudd & GlassFrequencymonthly |
Young EnglishmanCountry: UKTotal Issues: 336
Incorporates: Young Briton
Pagecounts: 16pp Frequency: weekly |
Young Englishman (New Series)Country: UKTotal Issues: 59
Ran a long complete story in each issue and was the forerunner of the 'penny novelette'. Issues & Index Sources
#becomes Sons of Old England PublishersErnest Williams / St. George's Publishing OfficeEditorsGeorge EmmmettFormatslarge tabloid (folio)Prices1dPagecounts16ppFrequencyweekly |
The Young Englishman's JournalCountry: UKTotal Issues: 154
Issues & Index Sources
#becomes Sons of Britannia PublishersTemple Publishing Company (Note: Lofts gives W.R. Emmett)EditorsW.L. EmmettPagecounts16ppFrequencyweekly |
The Young EnglishwomanCountry: UK
Initially subtitled "A magazine of fiction, fashion, music, etc." Issues & Index Sources
PublishersS.O. BeetonEditorsS.O. BeetonPagecounts24ppFrequencyweekly |
The Young Englishwoman's JournalCountry: UK
Frequency: weekly |
Younger NewsCountry: UK
Gifford notes "Previously school distribution only."
Formats: tabloid Pagecounts: 12pp Frequency: weekly |
Young Folks' LibraryCountry: USTotal Issues: 24
Formats: 6¾" x 4¾" Prices: 25c Pagecounts: 300 to 500pp Frequency: monthly Mentioned in: Dime Novel Bibliography |
Young Folk's Library of Choice LiteratureCountry: USTotal Issues: 61
Mentioned in: Dime Novel Bibliography |
Young Folks StoriesCountry: UKTotal Issues: 8? (unnumbered)
Pagecounts: 36pp |
Young Folks' TalesCountry: UKTotal Issues: 546+44=590
"It was in September 1906 that James Henderson and Sons began publishing
Young Folks Tales, a series very clearly modelled on Aldine's Tales for
Little People, with which it remained in sharpest rivalry to the end.
The title was derived from Henderson's much earlier earlier Our Young
Folk's Weekly Budget (begun 1871), later known as Young Folks. The
editor was Roland Qiz (Richard M.H. Quittenton), author of the old Tim
Pippin stories, now aged 73 and retired; presumably one of the objects
was to provide some congenial and not too strenuous work for the
veteran. At the outset, indeed, Young Folks Tales differed in certain
important points of editorial policy from both Books for the Bairns and
Tales for Little People, but it was soon found necessary to re-adjust
this policy in ways that brought the series much more into line with
Tales for Little People." (Otto Maurer) Issues & Index Sources
#becomes "yngflkstlsnew" PublishersJames Henderson, Red Lion Square, London E.C.; Amalgamated Press from 508 (Apr 1920)EditorsRoland Quiz (Richard Quittenton); unknown (probably May P. Japp) from #117 (1909); Frank Anderson (2nd series)Prices1d; 1½ d from-Apr-1918.Pagecounts64+pp; 48+pp from 97 (Sep 1908); reduced during war; 32pp from 478 (Jun 1919)Frequency4 per month; 3 per month from 1910; weekly (2nd series) |
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Young Gentleman's and Lady's MagazineCountry: UKTotal Issues: 12
"The first magazine for boys and girls (as distinct from children) though Waite regards it as pretentious." (Mike Ashley) The price alone would disallow any sales outside the gentry. "Written in very old English, it contained stories and articles of an educational flavour." (W.O.G. Lofts)
Editors: Dr. Mavor Formats: large tabloid (duodecimo) Prices: 1/-. Frequency: monthly |
The Young Gentleman's JournalCountry: UK
Story paper.
Frequency: weekly? |
Young Gentleman's Journal and Youth's MiscellanyCountry: UKTotal Issues: 150
Frequency: weekly |
Young Gentleman's Magazine [1777]Country: UKTotal Issues: 6
Full title was "Young Gentleman's Magazine; or, Monthly Repository of
Science, Moral and Entertaining Matter".
Frequency: monthly |