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Street & Smith's New York Weekly
Public domain · digitally restored by comicbooks.com
Penny Dreadfuls

Street & Smith's New York Weekly

· May 27, 1878

A woodcut shows a merchant vessel listing sharply in dark waters, its rigging tangled and crew scrambling across tilted decks. The masthead announces this as a "Journal of Useful Knowledge, Romance, and Amusement"—a formula that typically meant serialized melodrama for working-class readers. Such weekly papers, priced at mere pennies, delivered sensational fiction in installments: shipwrecks, murders, daring escapes, and tales of crime and seduction. Publishers like Street & Smith mass-produced these narratives to satisfy an urban appetite for excitement and moral instruction. The penny dreadful's lurid imagery and episodic storytelling established the template that modern comic books would inherit: sequential visual narrative designed for rapid consumption and reliable audience hunger for the next installment.

About this artifact

Date
May 27, 1878
Rights
Public domain — free to view, share, and reuse.
Restoration
Digitally restored and hosted by comicbooks.com.

Part of our mission to preserve and restore the public-domain heritage of the medium.