London Labour and the London Poor, Volume 1
Mayhew, Henry
1861
Of the Sale of Newspapers, Books, &C., at the Railway Stations.
ALTHOUGH the sale of newspapers at the railway termini, &c., cannot strictly be classed as a street-sale, it is so far an open-air traffic as to require some brief notice, and it has now become a trade of no small importance. | |
The privilege of selling to railway-passengers, within the precincts of the terminus, is disposed of by tender. At present the newsvendor on the North-Western Line, I am informed, pays to the company, for the right of sale at the Eustonsquare terminus, and the provincial stations, as large a sum as per annum. The amount usually given is of course in proportion to the number of stations, and the traffic of the railway. | |
The purchaser of this exclusive privilege sends his own servants to sell the newspapers and books, which he supplies to them in the quantity required. The men thus engaged are paid from to a week, and the boys receive from to weekly, but rarely | |
All the morning and evening papers are sold at the Station, but of the weekly press, those are sent for sale which in the manager's judgment are likely to sell, or which his agent informs him are "asked for." It is the same with the weekly unstamped publications. The reason seems obvious; if there be more than can be sold, a dead loss is incurred, for the surplusage, as regards newspapers, is only saleable as waste paper. | |
The books sold at railways are nearly all of the class best known as "light reading," or what some account light reading. The price does not often exceed ; and among the books offered for sale in these places are novels in volume, published at —sometimes in volumes, at each; "monthly parts" of works issued in weekly numbers; shilling books of poetry; but rarely political or controversial pamphlets. man, who understood this trade, told me that "a few of the pamphlets about the Pope and Cardinal Wiseman sold at ; but in a month or weeks, people began to say, 'A shilling for that! I'm sick of the thing.'" | |
The large sum given for the privilege of an exclusive sale, shows that the number of books and papers sold at railway stations must be very considerable. But it must be borne in mind, that the price, and consequently the profit on the daily newspapers, sold at the railways, is greater than elsewhere. None are charged less than , the regular price at a news-agent's shop being , so that as the cost price is | |
292 | the profit is double. Nor is it unusual for a passenger by an early train, who grows impatient for his paper, to cry out, "A shilling for the " This, however, is only the case, I am told, with those who start very early in the morning; for the daily papers are obtained for the railway stations from among the earliest impressions, and can be had at the accustomed price as early as o'clock, although, if there be exciting news and a great demand, a larger amount may be given. |