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Penny reading
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The penny reading was a form of popular public entertainment that arose in the in the middle of the 19th century, consisting of readings and other performances, for which the admission charged was one .


Impact
Under the heading of "rational recreation", the penny reading proved to be accessible and was taken up by audiences. It built on the tradition of the and "singing saloon". Writing in the mid-1860s, Thomas Wright as itinerant social observer found penny readings "exceedingly popular all over the country".
(2026). 9780719060274, Manchester University Press. .

Australian historian documented the criticism by and of this passive consumption of literature through , fitting as it did into Victorian culture and in particular poetry recitation.

(2010). 9780521516310, Cambridge University Press. .
Penny readings, however, appealed for a period in both urban and country settings. They were significant as a way forward for the Mechanics' Institutes set up in the early Victorian period, where they became a staple activity, along with and study for scientific qualifications.
(2013). 9781135031220, Routledge. .
(2013). 9781135031220, Routledge. .
In the fictionalised of , the penny reading, although outmoded elsewhere, was "still going strong" in the 1890s.
(2026). 9781567923636, David R. Godine Publisher. .


Origins
The Public Reading Society founded in the 1850s was the vehicle of Charles John Plumptre, a barrister who turned to the teaching of . Charles Sulley, editor of the , was credited with starting the penny reading movement in during the 1850s. A short history was given in the 1865 standard reading collection edited by Joseph Edwards Carpenter.
(1977). 9780713001587, Psychology Press. .
The Rev. James Fleming of Bath was also credited as the "father of the penny-reading movement", for his numerous public readings.

Another view places the origin in 1854 in the Midlands. Dispatches for from the , by William Howard Russell, were read in public in Hanley by Samuel Taylor, a manual worker who was a Mechanics' Institute secretary and later involved in the Staffordshire Sentinel newspaper. From the market square, Taylor moved to the town hall, and in 1856 to a fuller programme of patriotic readings, with music and the national anthem; from free admittance to a penny charge to cut down great demand. The Times made much of the events, which were widely copied in and Staffordshire by 1857–8.

(2008). 9780300148350, Yale University Press.
At the Birmingham and Midland Institute, William Mattieu Williams started to give "penny lectures" in 1856, and C. J. Woodward later claimed that these led to "penny classes" and penny readings, in the cause of .

In 1871, a book review in the Literary World lamented the trend:

As conducted by their originators, Penny Readings were unquestionably useful and attractive without being frivolous: as conducted by some of those gentlemen's imitators, they have run riot and become farcical, and have lost almost every philanthropic or praiseworthy element they at first possessed.


Content
An 1887 handbook for suggests a programme of around 15 items, "instrumental pieces, songs, glees, recitation, and readings", recommending variety. It notes that "Comic songs should, as a rule, be avoided".


Legacy
Funds raised from Penny Readings were frequently the source of donations to the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI). Funds raised in Norfolk and Suffolk were organised and collected by E. B. Adams, surgeon of , , and funded the first RNLI lifeboat at Wells-next-the-Sea Lifeboat Station. The lifeboat was initially reported to have been named Penny Readings and Eliza Adams, but all subsequent references record the name as Eliza Adams.

While penny readings, at their height in the 1860s, had lost their popularity before 1900, a tradition of poetry recitation continued in niches such as family events and temperance meetings. found it "ghastly" and associated, negatively, with the .

(1983). 9780879722333, Popular Press. .

The , founded in 1909 as the Poetry Recital Society, began with a parallel mission to the "penny reading movement": event organisation to promote performance of the spoken word. In terms of its content and patrons, on the other hand, it was more discriminating, and lacked the same broad base of appeal.

(2026). 9780299169244, Univ of Wisconsin Press. .


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