Take a Cold Tub, Sir!: The Story of the Boy's Own PaperLutterworth Press, 1982 - 128 pages Few magazines have ever won such affection and regard as the Boy's Own Paper. In its meridian years B.O.P.'s influence reached world-wide, and its name is still a household world. First issued on January 18, 1879, price one penny, it was a modest 16-page publication produced by the Religious Tract Society in the earnest hope of counteracting the lurid penny dreadful of the day. A dedicated team set to work to create a magazine which parents and guardians would approve, schoolmasters and ministers would recommend, and boys themselves would buy, read, enjoy. No easy task - but the result was a triumph. Within five years the readership topped a quarter of a million. It became, and was to remain, a British institution. Two generations of boys had grown up with B.O.P. by the time Jack Cox took over as Editor in 1946. He was to remain until the paper's sad closure twenty years later. Himself a reader as a boy, he treasured his contacts with readers, authors and staff past and present, and writing this splendid history of the paper was a labour of love. Drawing on a wealth of illustrations from the original issues, and with engaging glimpses of boardroom deliberations and office routine in earlier times, Jack Cox tells the paper's own enthralling story. He traces its history from the rattling adventures and bracing advice of the Victorian era to the practical hobbies and technical know-how of the post-War world, showing how it won the trust and love of the readers who remember it still with such warm affection. |
Common terms and phrases
adventure advertisements Andrew Hutchison Answers to Correspondents appeared in B.O.P. Arthur artist B.O.P. readers Baden-Powell became Biggles boat Boy's Own Annual Boy's Own Paper boys British Captain Charles cold tub colour Committee competition contributor copy correspondence column cricket doctor early editorship father favourite feature fiction Field Club followed football G. A. Henty George Girl's Own Paper Gordon Browne Gordon Stables Gunby Hardale Haydon hobby Hutchison illustrations issue of B.O.P. January later letters line decoration London Macaulay magazine Manchester month monthly morning Navy never October outdoor penny plates Pocklington poem published in B.O.P. R. M. Ballantyne Reed's Religious Tract Society reply Royal school stories Scout serialised shillings short story Stables's Street summer Sunday School Talbot Baines Reed told took Verne Verne's Volume W. G. Grace week weekly Wood writer wrote young