Name/TitleThe School Friend No. 65 Vol. 2
About this objectThe School Friend No. 65 (New Series) Vol. 2, weeks ending May 29th and June 5th, 1926. The cover features a young woman standing beside a door marked Detention Room, with the strapline 'Dare she release her chum? A dramatic incident from the magnificent long complete story of the girls of Cliff House School, by Hilda Richards, in this issue.' Priced 2d and published every Thursday.
MakerAmalgamated Press Ltd
Maker RolePublisher and Printer
Date Made1926
Period1920s
Place MadeEngland, London
Place NotesThe Fleetway House, Farringdon Street, London, E.C.4
Medium and MaterialsOrganic, paper
MeasurementsH: 244 x W: 177 mm
Subject and Association KeywordsGirls' magazines & comics
Subject and Association Descriptionhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_Friend:
School Friend was the name of two different weekly publications marketed toward girls, both of which were pioneering in their respective categories. The first School Friend, published from 1919 to 1929, was the first story paper marketed exclusively to girls. The second School Friend, published from 1950 to 1965, is considered the first British girls' comic. Although both published by Amalgamated Press, and both marketed toward girls, the content of the two publications was not directly related.
School Friend the story paper focused on the Cliff House School for Girls, a fictional school first introduced ten years earlier in the boys' story paper The Magnet.[1] With the success of Amalgamated Press (AP)'s boys' story papers like The Magnet and The Gem, the publisher was seeking to expand into new markets. AP editor Reg Eves, impressed by the letters he received from female readers of The Magnet, launched School Friend in 1919, becoming its first editor.
The School Friend was published in two series, from 17 May 1919 to 28 February 1925, for a total of 303 issues; and 7 March 1925 to 27 July 1929 for a total of 229 issues. (The series resumed the next week in the new publication The Schoolgirl.) Regular characters in the Cliff House stories included Billy Bunter's sister, Bessie Bunter, and Majorie Hazeldene, both having been introduced in The Magnet; and new characters Barbara "Babs" Redfern, Clara Trevlyn, Mabs Lynn, Phyllis Howell, Pand Philippa Derwent.
Despite the female audience, Eves primarily used male writers, such as Charles Hamilton, whom he was familiar with from the boys' papers. Hamilton created and introduced most of School Friend's main characters; he wrote issues 1–4, 9, and 11, before he was pulled back to write full time at The Magnet. Later writers for School Friend were R.S. Kirkham, Horace Phillips, and L. E. Ransome (who wrote most Cliff House stories in the second half of the 1920s). Following the same practice as used in The Magnet, all stories in School Friend were written under the pen name "Hilda Richards" — she being the supposed sister of The Magnet's "Frank Richards."
Cliff House lost its cover feature status in the publication's second series, 1925 to 1929; School Friend's 1929 cancellation led to the relaunched girls' story paper, The Schoolgirl, which again featured Cliff House stories. The Schoolgirl continued until 18 May 1940, when paper rationing during the Second World War resulted in its merger with the fellow girls' story paper Girls' Crystal (which had debuted in 1935).
Named CollectionGlasgow Women's Library
Object TypeMagazine
Object numberGWL-2017-64-1
Copyright LicenceAll rights reserved