The Pall Mall Gazette
Evening newspaper launched in London in 1865, which introduced investigative journalism into British journalism, along with other innovations.
Evening newspaper launched in London in 1865, which introduced investigative journalism into British journalism, along with other innovations.
Style of puppetry created in the 1960s and used extensively in the action-adventure puppet series of Gerry and Sylvia Anderson.
Once a London street famous for its low-end publishers and hack writers, Grub Street has become a pejorative term for impoverished writers and works of low literary value.
Children’s’ television show about a cowboy with magic guns, the third puppet television show produced by Gerry Anderson for Granada Television, and the first to use an early version of Anderson’s Supermarionation puppetry.
Magazine founded by Lydia Becker and Jessie Boucherett in 1870, focusing on news of events affecting women’s lives.
British comic strip about the life and times of a fictional footballer named Roy Race, who played for Melchester Rovers.
British weekly story paper aimed at girls, published from 1921 until 1936.
Local newspaper based in Manchester, England, published from 1845 until 1894 to promote the idea of Manchester Liberalism.
Weekly newspaper published in Manchester, England, from 1828 to 1922, known for its free-trade radicalism.
British children’s magazine intended to appeal to both boys and girls. It began as Sunny Stories for Little Folk in 1926, edited and written by Enid Blyton, although she was only credited as the editor.