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Street & Smith's New York Weekly, Vol. 36, No. 42
Public domain · digitally restored by comicbooks.com
Penny Dreadfuls

Street & Smith's New York Weekly, Vol. 36, No. 42

· August 29, 1881

A man clings to a rope above churning water as he escapes a burning vessel, his body straining against the flames and smoke. This cover exemplifies the penny weekly—cheap serialized fiction that saturated working-class Victorian newsstands. Priced for laborers and servants, these publications offered weekly installments of melodrama, crime, and Gothic horror, competing fiercely through lurid imagery and cliffhanger narratives. Street & Smith's New York Weekly reached hundreds of thousands of readers hungry for sensation and escape. These serials established the visual vocabulary of action, peril, and moral urgency that would later define comic books, proving that sequential visual storytelling and mass-market adventure narratives preceded the twentieth-century comic form.

About this artifact

Date
August 29, 1881
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.