The British Newspaper Archive is a public archive which retains original and digital copies of newspapers and journals of all kinds, and is not restricted to material originally published in the UK. Originally a part of the British Library the Newspaper Archive and its massive digitisation project is now owned by Find My Past. Number of pages have now reached 105 million pages. And weekly lists announce newly begun new titles, sometimes covering a number of years – perhaps from the eighteenth century – or complete runs up to the modern day.
Of interest to us in St Albans is a well known weekly newspaper produced by the Salvation Army, called War Cry. First printed in a small building in East London's Clerkenwell in 1879, and transferred to Campfield Road, St Albans in 1901 at the Salvation Army Printing Works (renamed Campfield Press in 1906). The newspaper is still in publication today, cost 50p, though no longer located in St Albans.
What was announced this week is the organisation's children's version, which has almost its entire weekly run available digitally. Initially titled the Little Soldier, then adapted to Young Soldier, and finally becoming a colour comic style Kids Alive! Currently, the latter is available online up to 1985. So you can imagine yourself as a child before the start of the 20th century and growing up very very slowly through to modern times.
At inception the weekly junior newspaper in black and white newsprint assumed its young readers to be serious and of high intelligence, and able to understand a number of adult views.
"Not far from Headquarters, in a little back street in Whitechapel, is the wonderful printing machine, which has just been put up. Most of you have never seen a printing machine at all, and very few, indeed, can ever have seen such a wonderful machine as that which is now going to work for The Army. 'What is it?' you want to know. Wheels and wheels, and more wheels again. Big wheels, little wheels, and middle-sized wheels. When it is at work, how they go whizzing round to be sure! Each one seems determined to do its own work, and to help on all the others, as much as it can. Not a bit like some children, who go squabbling and quarrelling with one another."
The Caption of this 1881 drawing read "If they would only let me in". The early meetings were for grown-ups. So here was an early call for meetings to be shared with "Little Soldiers" or exclusively for them.
Self-Denial Week in 1901; many of us know it as Lent. This event raised money for the Army and children were encouraged to give away or sell toys which they had, perhaps, outgrown.
Many early numbers included songs for little soldiers to learn – pint-sized versions of songs which filled meetings and citadels with voices and instrumental sound, some later manufactured in St Albans next to the Campfield Press.
By 1935 real photographs were being used and smiling faces encouraged positivity. The new Young Soldiers were learning to live and eat simply, yet healthily.
The Young Soldier always featured stories, some of them written by the readers themselves, upholding the morals of Young Soldiers of The Army. A header for the week's group of short stories in 1935.
As comic strips began to appear from a number of publishers, The Army followed suit and produced stories of their own, first in monochrome, here in 1979, but later using spot colour, and eventually, as Kids Alive! in full colour.
| Above page sections and pages courtesy BRITISH NEWSPAPER ARCHIVE |
In 1985 we finally see samples of modern childhood pursuits, a few years before the masthead was updated to Kids Alive!
We could immerse ourselves in a century-worth's experience in childhood under the wing of the Salvation Army. All that because every issue has now been digitised and is available online – as long as you have a subscription to the British Newspaper Archive!