The Leisure Hour
File:Leisure Hour 1032 front.jpg
The cover of issue 1032, with an illustration accompanying a story about a shipwreck.
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Frequency | Weekly |
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Publisher | Religious Tract Society |
First issue | January 1, 1852 |
Country | United Kingdom |
Based in | London |
Language | English |
OCLC number | 362165421 |
The Leisure Hour was a British general-interest periodical of the Victorian era published weekly from 1852 to 1905.[1][2] It was the most successful of several popular magazines published by the Religious Tract Society, which produced Christian literature for a wide audience.[1] Each issue mixed multiple genres of fiction and factual stories, historical and topical.[1]
The magazine's title referred to campaigns that had decreased work hours, giving workers extra leisure time.[3] Until 1876, it carried the subtitle A Family Journal of Instruction and Recreation;[4] after that, the subtitle changed to An illustrated magazine for home reading.[5]
Each issue cost one penny and contained 16 pages.[6] The layout typically included approximately six long articles, formatted in two columns per page, and five or six illustrations. The articles were a mix of biographies, poetry, essays, and fiction. Each issue usually started with a piece of serialised fiction.[6]
The creation of the magazine was partly a response to non-religious popular magazines that the Religious Tract Society saw as delivering a "pernicious" morality to the working classes.[1] The ethos of the magazine was guided by Sabbatarianism: the campaign to keep Sunday as a day of rest.[4] It aimed to treat its diverse subjects "in the light of Christian truth".[4] Despite this, The Leisure Hour carried far fewer statements of Christian doctrine than the Society's other publications,[6] and had a greater emphasis on fiction than popular magazines of the time.[7]
Two days before the magazine's launch in 1852, a warehouse fire destroyed the first batch of The Leisure Hour, so replacement copies had to be printed.[3]
The magazine was edited by William Haig Miller until 1858,[5] James Macaulay from 1858 to 1895,[8] and William Stevens from 1895 to 1900.[5] Harold Copping was one of its illustrators.[9] Authors were initially only credited by initials rather than by name, giving the writing a collective rather than individual authority, though naming of authors became more common from the 1870s.[1] In its jubilee issue, published in 1902, the magazine identified 111 authors who had contributed.[1]
Contents
Notable contributors
- Isabella Bird
- John William Dawson
- Edwin Dunkin
- John Keast Lord
- Joseph Butterworth Owen
- Jules Verne
- Elizabeth Hely Walshe
Gallery of illustrations
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John Keble, 1867
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Mary Somerville Leisure Hour.jpg
Mary Somerville, 1871
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Charles Dickens, 1904
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A-Vision-of-the-future-q85-1447x1326.jpg
“A Vision of the Future. An aërial motor-car”, 1905
References
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Further reading
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External links
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 Worldcat entry for The leisure hour
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 "Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. via Open Research Exeter http://hdl.handle.net/10036/31895
- ↑ Brian E. Maidment "Magazines of Popular Progress & the Artisans" Victorian Periodicals Review, Vol. 17, No. 3 (Fall, 1984), pp. 83-94. Johns Hopkins University Press on behalf of the Research Society for Victorian Periodicals. https://www.jstor.org/stable/20082117 Accessed: 13 November 2015
- ↑
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