The Magnet
Encyclopedia
The Magnet was a United Kingdom
United Kingdom
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandIn the United Kingdom and Dependencies, other languages have been officially recognised as legitimate autochthonous languages under the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages...

 weekly boys' story paper
Story paper
*This article is about British Story papers. For the U.S. version, see Dime novel.A story paper is a periodical publication similar to a literary magazine, but featuring illustrations and text stories, and aimed towards children and teenagers...

 published by Amalgamated Press. It ran from 1908 to 1940, publishing a total of 1683 issues. Each issue contained a long school story
School story
The school story is a fiction genre centering on older pre-adolescent and adolescent school life, at its most popular in the first half of the twentieth century. While examples do exist in other countries, it is most commonly set in English boarding schools and mostly written in girls and boys sub...

 about the boys of Greyfriars School
Greyfriars School
Greyfriars School is a fictional English public school used as a setting in the long running series of stories by the writer Charles Hamilton, who wrote under the pen-name Frank Richards. Although the stories are focused on the Remove , whose most famous pupil was Billy Bunter, other characters...

, a fictional public school located somewhere in Kent, and were written under the pen-name of Frank Richards. The vast majority of the stories were written by author Charles Hamilton
Charles Hamilton (writer)
Charles Harold St. John Hamilton , was an English writer, specializing in writing long-running series of stories for weekly magazines about recurrent casts of characters, his most frequent and famous genre being boys' public school stories, though he also dealt with other genres...

, although substitute writers were sometimes used. The most famous Greyfriars character was Billy Bunter
Billy Bunter
William George Bunter , is a fictional character created by Charles Hamilton using the pen name Frank Richards...

, of the Remove. Most issues of The Magnet also included a shorter serial story (a variety of detective, scouting, and adventure yarns were featured), and many issues also included a newspaper ostensibly produced by the characters themselves and called the Greyfriars Herald - these parts of the paper were not written by Charles Hamilton.

History

The stories began before the First World War, in 1908, and continued through the privations of that war and the Great Depression of the 1930s which followed. The Magnet was aimed primarily at working class boys who would never go to a Public School themselves, hence part of the appeal of the stories was to portray the unattainable, which was not merely the Public School education itself, but also, in part, an affluent and well-fed lifestyle.

Red Magnet – 1908–1915

So called because of the colour of its cover in this period, it was created by an Amalgamated Press staff editor named Percy Griffiths, building on the success of the earlier boys' paper, The Gem
The Gem
The Gem was a story paper published in Great Britain by Amalgamated Press in the early 20th century, predominately featuring the activities of boys at the fictional school "St. Jim's". These stories were all written using the pen-name of Martin Clifford, the majority by Charles Hamilton who was...

. These early years saw the creation of nearly all of the characters who would populate Greyfriars for the remainder of its history.

Blue and White era – 1915–1922

The cover changed to blue and white, as a result of the unavailability of red dye due to the war. This era saw a profusion of stories written by authors other than Hamilton, one of whom was the editor J N Pentelow, the only substitute writer whose work was given preference over that of Hamilton. Wartime paper shortages reduced the length of each weekly issue.

Blue and Orange era – 1922–1937

Blue and Orange covers were introduced, and a growing proportion of stories were written by Hamilton, as he came to see the Magnet as the main focus of his attention. The idea of a series of several linked stories appearing in consecutive issues started to dominate and become the key ingredient of this period, allowing increased complexity of plotting and stimulating finer writing. Most of the best remembered stories appeared in this period, including the Courtfield Cracksman, Methuselah, Lancaster, and Brander rebellion series, as well as several ambitious travel series to far away places such as India, China, South Seas, Egypt and East Africa, which its readers would never see, and in truth most of which Hamilton himself never saw, either, being hugely in demand as an author.

Some Hamilton enthusiasts and scholars have suggested that the central years of this era represent a "Golden Age" of the Magnet, a sustained period which saw a consistently high standard in the quality of stories and series, occurring from the late 1920s to the early 1930s. Charles Hamilton himself agreed that his best work for The Magnet took place around this time.

Salmon Pink era – 1937–1940

The use of long serials continued, albeit often recycling the plots of earlier years. The covers changed to salmon pink for the last four years. A decline in circulation, coupled with paper shortages, meant that the Magnet could not survive the Second World War. The final issue was the opening story in a new series; at least four other issues are known to have been already completed, but these were never published, and are now presumed lost.

Post closure

After 1940, new Greyfriars stories by Hamilton continued to appear in book form, published initially by Charles Skilton and later by Cassells, in a series which continued until Hamilton's death in 1961 (although some of the novels appeared posthumously even later); and in a television series, also written by Hamilton, which ran from 1951–61 on the BBC
BBC
The British Broadcasting Corporation is a British public service broadcaster. Its headquarters is at Broadcasting House in the City of Westminster, London. It is the largest broadcaster in the world, with about 23,000 staff...

.

Some stories which had originally seen publication in The Magnet, appeared during the mid-1960s, and as late as 1972, from Armada Books and from Paul Hamlyn. Furthermore, most of the 1,683 issues of The Magnet were reprinted in hardback form by publisher W Howard Baker, under his Howard Baker and Greyfriars Book Club imprints, between 1969 and 1990.

Editors

  • Percy Griffiths – 1908–1911. Nicknamed 'Pushful Percy' owing to his dynamic character. He left Amalgamated Press suddenly in 1911 and nothing is known of his subsequent history.
  • Herbert Allen Hinton – 1911–1916. A military man who left to take up a wartime commission.
  • John Nix Pentelow 1916–1919 – A cricket authority and writer who took over when many of the editorial staff were occupied with the war. He contributed many stories himself on the pretext of a shortage in supply from Charles Hamilton and other writers. His writing is remembered for one story when an established character, Courtney of the Sixth Form, was killed off.
  • Charles Maurice Down – 1919–1940. A former public schoolboy, who conceived the idea of the very popular Holiday Annual. Probably the editor with whom Charles Hamilton got along the best. The author in fact stated that many attributes of Mr Down could be discerned in the schoolboy character Arthur Augustus D'arcy, found in the other companion paper—the Gem story-paper. "Gussy" the character in question had a kind-heart, and was known for his sartorial elegance and many positive traits.

Illustrators

A large part of the appeal of The Magnet lay in the illustrations, which reinforced the olde worlde charm of the school (a picture being worth a thousand words), of which there would typically be five per issue as well as the cover.
  • Hutton Mitchell – 1908. Produced the original drawings of Billy Bunter. His characters tended to be more prominent with the background detail kept to a minimum. He had a clear-cut style.
  • Arthur H Clarke – 1908–1911. The second Magnet artist. Some consider his depiction of the school masters a bit grim-looking and Victorian in appearance, and there was generally much of a sameness about his characters. However his work was well up to standard. Arthur Clarke died suddenly in 1911, though it is unlikely that he did so while actually illustrating a Greyfriars scene as has been claimed in some reference works.
  • C.H. Chapman – 1911–1940. First gave Bunter check trousers. In the beginning he was told to emulate the style of Arthur H. Clarke, but then came into his own during the early 1920s. Carried on illustrating Greyfriars stories after the Magnet closed.
  • Leonard Shields – 1926–1940. From his inception in the India series of 1926, and through-out the remainder of the Magnet (sharing some drawings with CH Chapman), illustrated some very fine drawings including very many covers.

See also

  • Greyfriars School
    Greyfriars School
    Greyfriars School is a fictional English public school used as a setting in the long running series of stories by the writer Charles Hamilton, who wrote under the pen-name Frank Richards. Although the stories are focused on the Remove , whose most famous pupil was Billy Bunter, other characters...

  • The Gem
    The Gem
    The Gem was a story paper published in Great Britain by Amalgamated Press in the early 20th century, predominately featuring the activities of boys at the fictional school "St. Jim's". These stories were all written using the pen-name of Martin Clifford, the majority by Charles Hamilton who was...

  • Charles Hamilton
    Charles Hamilton (writer)
    Charles Harold St. John Hamilton , was an English writer, specializing in writing long-running series of stories for weekly magazines about recurrent casts of characters, his most frequent and famous genre being boys' public school stories, though he also dealt with other genres...

  • Billy Bunter
    Billy Bunter
    William George Bunter , is a fictional character created by Charles Hamilton using the pen name Frank Richards...

  • Bessie Bunter
    Bessie Bunter
    Elizabeth Gertrude Bunter, better known as Bessie Bunter, is a fictional character created by Charles Hamilton, who also created her more famous brother Billy Bunter.-History:...

  • Tom Merry
    Tom Merry
    Tom Merry, a fictional schoolboy, was the principal character in the St Jim's stories which appeared in the boy’s weekly paper, The Gem, from 1907 to 1939...


External links

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