London Labour and the London Poor, Volume 1
Mayhew, Henry
1861
Of the Sale of Waste Newspapers at Billingsgate.
THIS trade is so far peculiar that it is confined to , as in that market alone the demand supplies a livelihood to the man who carries it on. His principal sale is of newspapers to the street-fishmongers, as a large surface of paper is required for the purposes of a fish-stall. The "waste" trade—for "waste" and not "waste-paper" is the word always applied—is not carried on with such facility as might be expected, for I was assured that "waste" is so scarce that only a very insufficient supply of paper can at present be obtained. "I hope things will change soon, sir," said collector, gravely to me, "or I shall hardly be able to keep myself and my family on my waste." | |
This difficulty, however, does not affect such a street-seller as the man at , who buys of the collectors—"collecting," however, a portion himself at the neighbouring coffeeshops, public-houses, &c.; for the wants of a regular customer must, by some means or other, be supplied. | |
The paper-seller carries his paper round, offering it to his customers, or to those he wishes to make purchasers; some fishmongers, however, obtain their "waste" -hand from the collectors, or buy it at a news-agent's. | |
The retail price varies from to the pound, but is only given for "very clean and prime, and perhaps uncut," newspapers; for when a newsvendor has, as it is called, "over-stocked" himself, he sells the uncut papers at last to the collector, or the "waste" consumer. This happens, I was told, times as often with the "weeklys" as the "dailys;" for, said my informant, "suppose it's a wet Sunday morning—and all newsvendors as does pray, prays for wet Sundays, because then people stays at home and buys a paper, or some number, to read and pass away the time. Well, sir, suppose it's a soaker in the morning, the newsman buys a good lot, an extra , or extra nines, or the like of that, and then may be, after all, it comes out a fine day, and so he's over-stocked; in which case there's some for the waste." | |
When they consider it a favourable opportunity, the workers carry waste to offer to the salesmen; but the chief trade is in the hands of the regular frequenter of the market. | |
From the best information I could cbtain, it appears that from to weight of "waste"—about -fourths being newspapers, of which some are foreign—is supplied to market and its visitants. numbers of the , with their supplements, paper-buyer told me, "when cleverly damped, and they're never particularly dry," will weigh about a pound. The average price is not less than a pound, or from that to A single paper is At per pound, and a day, upwards of is spent yearly in waste paper at , in the street or open-air purchase alone. | |