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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

· April 15, 1869

This penny weekly's cover depicts a dramatic scene: a figure rides wildly astride a grotesque creature—part beast, part human—through turbulent waters, while onlookers gesture in alarm from the rocks below. The illustration exemplifies the sensational woodcut aesthetic that defined Victorian serial fiction for working-class readers.

Penny dreadfuls and penny bloods like this weekly serialized lurid tales of crime, supernatural horror, and melodrama in affordable installments, reaching audiences excluded from respectable literature. Street & Smith, a major publisher, mass-produced such periodicals alongside serialized novels, establishing narrative conventions—cliffhangers, graphic violence, moral chaos—that directly anticipated the comic book format. These cheap serials provided modern entertainment for industrial workers, their visual-verbal storytelling prefiguring how twentieth-century comics would similarly blend image and text to grip popular audiences.

About this artifact

Date
April 15, 1869
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.