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	<title>F &#8211; Literary Bonds</title>
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		<title>Friends&#8217; Hall Literary Society MSS Magazine</title>
		<link>https://www.literarybonds.org/periodicals/friends-hall-literary-society-mss-magazine/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Nov 2017 15:09:32 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.literarybonds.org/?post_type=periodicals&#038;p=656</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Overview The society that produced this magazine had its origins in the adult school classes run by Quakers held at Friends&#8217; Hall, located on Barnet Grove in Bethnal Green in the East End of London. Amongst the fairly complete set <a href="https://www.literarybonds.org/periodicals/friends-hall-literary-society-mss-magazine/" class="read-more">Read More ...</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<figure id="attachment_2270" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-2270" style="width: 308px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class=" wp-image-2270" src="https://www.literarybonds.org/files/2017/11/Friends-Hall-Lit.-Soc.-mag-cover-300dpi-225x300.jpg" alt="" width="308" height="411" srcset="https://www.literarybonds.org/files/2017/11/Friends-Hall-Lit.-Soc.-mag-cover-300dpi-225x300.jpg 225w, https://www.literarybonds.org/files/2017/11/Friends-Hall-Lit.-Soc.-mag-cover-300dpi-768x1023.jpg 768w, https://www.literarybonds.org/files/2017/11/Friends-Hall-Lit.-Soc.-mag-cover-300dpi-769x1024.jpg 769w, https://www.literarybonds.org/files/2017/11/Friends-Hall-Lit.-Soc.-mag-cover-300dpi-203x270.jpg 203w" sizes="(max-width: 308px) 100vw, 308px" /><figcaption id="caption-attachment-2270" class="wp-caption-text">Friends&#8217; Hall Literary Society, <em>Friends&#8217; Hall Literary Society MSS Magazine</em>, [cover page], No. 2, 20 December 1907 (Tower Hamlets Local History Library and Archives, S/BGL/2/1). This image was kindly provided and permitted for use on this webpage by Tower Hamlets Local History Library and Archives.</figcaption></figure>
<h2>Overview</h2>
<p>The society that produced this magazine had its origins in the adult school classes run by Quakers held at Friends&#8217; Hall, located on Barnet Grove in Bethnal Green in the East End of London. Amongst the fairly complete set of records for this group is a history of the society by one of its members, its President, Arthur Hadley. From this, we learn that as members of the adult school classes, several of the men formed a discussion group that later became a Shakespearean Reading Circle, then a literary and debating society in 1906. Ladies were allowed as guests at the meetings; it would later become a mixed-gender group. Hadley describes their object or purpose as being the members&#8217; mutual improvement.</p>
<p>The group initially met in the Red Room at Friends&#8217; Hall on Friday nights. Following a dispute with the school&#8217;s superintendent, the society shifted their venue to The Traveller&#8217;s Rest, a &#8216;Coffee Tavern&#8217; that was located on Bethnal Green Road. The group not only changed their meeting place but changed their name as well to the Bethnal Green Literary Society. Shortly after this, they moved their meetings to the Town Hall on Cambridge Road. Along with reading papers, listening to lectures and holding group discussions, the society had a study group, a summer reading programme, and a manuscript library comprised of the members&#8217; original pieces (see below). In addition, in order to raise funds for the group, members wrote and performed original plays. The group founded a manuscript magazine fairly early on when they were still members of the adult school classes at Friends&#8217; Hall.</p>
<p>Twice a year (generally in May and December), members would send their contributions to the magazine&#8217;s Editor, who would select from them the pieces to be read aloud at a society meeting held for the purpose. These were then collected and variously bound (see below). The number of contributions to these issues varies generally between half a dozen and a dozen pieces, and include mostly original prose fiction and poems. In addition, there are also puzzles, some humorous advertisements, letters to the Editor and a correspondence column. Contributors mostly use pen-names and only occasionally their own names or initials. As is fairly typical for the periodicals that were produced in the early twentieth century, the pieces are a mixture of typescript and manuscript within a single issue.</p>
<p>Unlike most periodicals produced by mutual improvement and literary societies, the magazine that this group produced lacks uniformity: it does not show the same consistency between issues or even within a single issue. The covers, when present, and the binding of each issue differ. Further, the size of paper used by the different contributors is quite dissimilar. These factors are a reflection of the oral medium, or the &#8216;magazine nights&#8217;, for which the contributions were produced and the decision taken to simply collect and use the submissions in the issues as they were. Further, the less polished appearance of the society&#8217;s magazine belies the importance that the group attached to their original literary pieces: in 1909, they voted to start a library to preserve these issues and other papers that were given at the meetings. The members of this literary group would go on to become prominent writers and novelists (e.g. Beatrice Kean Seymour), local politicians (e.g. Edmund Dutton), scholars in various fields (e.g. Horace Shipp), and eminent members of their respective communities.</p>
<p><strong>Name of Club, Society or Group That Produced the Magazine</strong></p>
<p>Friends’ Hall Literary Society; later became the Bethnal Green Literary Society (London)</p>
<p><strong>Date of Existence </strong></p>
<p>9 Feb. 1906-1916</p>
<p><strong>Date of Magazine </strong></p>
<p>No. 2, December 1907; No. 3, May 1908; No. 4, Christmas 1908; No. 5, May 1909, No. 6, Christmas 1909; No. 7, May 1910; No. 8, December 1910; No. 9, June 1911; (loose contributions for the manuscript magazine dating from December 1911 to June 1912)</p>
<p><strong>Number of Issues</strong></p>
<p>8 extant, along with some loose contributions not attributed to any issue</p>
<p><strong>Manuscript/Published Magazine </strong></p>
<p>Typescript and manuscript</p>
<p><strong>Contents and Contributions</strong></p>
<p>Advertisements (humorous); Circulation Lists; Correspondence columns;  Dialogue (fiction); Editorials; Essays; Fiction/Narratives; Jokes; Poems (original); Postcard; Puzzles; Readers&#8217; Criticisms; Tables of Contents; Title pages</p>
<p><strong>Repository </strong></p>
<p>Tower Hamlets Local History Library and Archives</p>
<p><strong>Reference</strong></p>
<p>S/BGL (S/BGL/2/1; S/BGL/2/2; S/BGL/2/6)</p>
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		<title>The Foundry Boy</title>
		<link>https://www.literarybonds.org/periodicals/the-foundry-boy/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Nov 2017 14:55:43 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Overview A summary of the history of the Glasgow Foundry Boys’ Religious Society, Wellington Palace Branch is available on our sister website, Glasgow&#8217;s Literary Bonds (see &#8216;Additional Notes&#8217; below). This magazine is printed in double columns and laid out in newspaper format. It <a href="https://www.literarybonds.org/periodicals/the-foundry-boy/" class="read-more">Read More ...</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<figure id="attachment_1606" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-1606" style="width: 308px" class="wp-caption alignright"><img decoding="async" class=" wp-image-1606" src="https://www.literarybonds.org/files/2017/11/The-Foundry-Boy-235x300.jpg" alt="" width="308" height="393" srcset="https://www.literarybonds.org/files/2017/11/The-Foundry-Boy-235x300.jpg 235w, https://www.literarybonds.org/files/2017/11/The-Foundry-Boy-768x979.jpg 768w, https://www.literarybonds.org/files/2017/11/The-Foundry-Boy-803x1024.jpg 803w, https://www.literarybonds.org/files/2017/11/The-Foundry-Boy-212x270.jpg 212w" sizes="(max-width: 308px) 100vw, 308px" /><figcaption id="caption-attachment-1606" class="wp-caption-text"><em>The Foundry Boy, The Monthly Magazine of the Wellington Palace Branch</em>, No. 1, January 1886, [p. 1] (©CSG CIC Glasgow Museums and Libraries Collection: The Mitchell Library, Special Collections, Mitchell (GC) 206 98783)Overview</figcaption></figure>
<h2>Overview</h2>
<p>A summary of the history of the Glasgow Foundry Boys’ Religious Society, Wellington Palace Branch is available on our sister website, <em>Glasgow&#8217;s Literary Bonds</em> (see &#8216;Additional Notes&#8217; below).</p>
<p>This magazine is printed in double columns and laid out in newspaper format. It is written in the same hand throughout. It was produced by a large Christian workers’ association and articles have a strong focus on Christian self-improvement, education, temperance and morality for the young (see below). The magazine is anomalous as although it is a society magazine, it was part of a much larger enterprise and is not clearly part of a collective or shared initiative. A cost of one half-penny is listed and the magazine includes paid advertisements, suggesting that it was in part a commercial enterprise.</p>
<p>There were only twelve (lithographed?) issues of this monthly magazine ever produced, and these are bound together in one hardcover volume. The, apparently, enthusiastic members of the Wellington Branch of the Foundry Boys&#8217; Religious Society started the periodical as they felt &#8216;the want of some proper medium for the expression by the Workers of the numberless suggestions and hints that spring up within them and clamour for utterance&#8217;, suggestions which were not being brought properly to attention at the Council meetings held by the larger parent organisation (&#8216;Introductory&#8217;, <em>The Foundry Boy</em>, No. 1, January 1886, p. 1).</p>
<p>The magazine was non-sectarian, being aimed more broadly at Christian readers, and it reported on the various aspects of the branch&#8217;s work, along with the meetings, activities and events held in local branches across Glasgow, which, presumably, did not have their own magazines. Each issue is eight pages and cost one halfpenny, but by July 1886, this was increased to one penny. Contributions are almost entirely anonymous but a few are signed with the author&#8217;s name (usually a minister) or a pen-name.</p>
<p>Copies were available either by post or at the Christian Institute and at various local booksellers. (For more information about the Christian Institute, see &#8216;<span style="color: #0000ff">Christian Institute</span>&#8216; on <span style="color: #0000ff"><a style="color: #0000ff" href="https://www.theglasgowstory.com/"><em>The Glasgow Story</em></a></span> website.) In addition, issues could be had at selected booksellers in Paisley, Greenock, Kilmarnock, Rothesay, Coatbridge, Edinburgh and Dundee (&#8216;The Foundry Boy&#8217;, &#8216;To Subscribers&#8217;, <em>The Foundry Boy</em>, No. 7, July 1886, p. 3). Presumably, the subscriptions did not cover the costs of production, as advertisements can be found amongst the articles and particularly on the last two pages of each issue.</p>
<p>The final issue of the magazine appeared in December 1886, when the Editor/s announced its discontinuation for reasons that are left ambiguous.</p>
<p><strong>Name of Club, Society or Group That Produced the Magazine</strong></p>
<p>Glasgow Foundry Boys’ Religious Society, Wellington Palace Branch</p>
<p><strong>Date of Existence </strong></p>
<p>1867-1914?</p>
<p><strong>Date of Magazine </strong></p>
<p>Jan. 1886-Dec. 1886</p>
<p><strong>Number of Issues</strong></p>
<p>12</p>
<p><strong>Manuscript/Published Magazine </strong></p>
<p>Print (lithograph?)</p>
<p><strong>Contents and Contributions</strong></p>
<p>Address; Advertisements; Art/Illustrations (original); Articles (non-fiction); Attendance records (totals); Bible lessons; Branch statistics; Correspondence columns; Directories; Editorials; Essays; Hymn; Letters to Editor; Miscellaneous (announcements); News (local branches of society); Poems (original); Reports; Serial articles/stories; Sketches</p>
<p><strong>Repository </strong></p>
<p>Mitchell Library Special Collections</p>
<p><strong>Reference</strong></p>
<p>Mitchell (GC) 206 98783</p>
<p><strong>Additional Information</strong></p>
<p>See also entry for <span style="color: #3366ff"><a style="color: #3366ff" href="http://www.glasgowsliterarybonds.org/societies/glasgow-foundry-boys-religious-society-wellington-palace-branch/">Glasgow Foundry Boys’ Religious Society, Wellington Palace Branch</a></span> on our sister website, <span style="color: #3366ff"><em><a style="color: #3366ff" href="http://www.glasgowsliterarybonds.org/">Glasgow’s Literary Bonds</a></em></span>.</p>
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