The Nelson Lee Library

The Nelson Lee Library was a story paper of the first third of the 20th century, published by Amalgamated Press. It featured the adventures of private detective Nelson Lee and his boy assistant Nipper.

The Nelson Lee Library
Cover The Nelson Lee Library #1 from 1915
CategoriesStory paper
FrequencyWeekly
First issue1915; 109 years ago (1915)
Final issue1933 (1933)
CompanyAmalgamated Press
CountryUnited Kingdom
Based inLondon
LanguageEnglish

Overview

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Nelson Lee was created by John William Staniforth, writing under the name Maxwell Scott, in 1894. Lee made his debut in A Dead Man’s Secret in The Halfpenny Marvel #46. The detective was an immediate sensation and continued to feature in many of the Amalgamated Press papers over the next twenty years.[1] In 1915 the Amalgamated Press acquired the exclusive right to use the name Nelson Lee from Staniforth for £50. That same year it launched The Nelson Lee Library, a weekly paper devoted to stories about Nelson Lee and Nipper. Despite wartime restrictions, the paper achieved a circulation of 70,000 within its first three months.[2]

The first issue of The Nelson Lee Library was published on 12 June 1915, entitled The Mystery of Limehouse Reach and written by Sexton Blake writer A. C. Murray. Many other popular Blake writers would pen Lee tales including William Murray Graydon, William J. Bayfield, George Hamilton Teed, Norman Goddard, and Edwy Searles Brooks.

Series 1 ran from 12 June 1915 until 24 April 1926, a total of 568 issues.

Series 2 ran from 1 May 1926 until 18 January 1930, a total of 194 issues.

Series 3 ran from 25 January 1930 until 18 February 1933, a total of 161 issues.

Series 4 ran from 25 February 1933 until 12 August 1933. The Nelson Lee Library then merged with The Gem.

A few issues of note

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Maxwell Scott wrote just four adventures for the paper that bore his greatest creation's name, A Miscarriage of Justice (1915), The Convict's Dilemma (1915), In Borrowed Plumes (1915), and When Rogues Fall Out (1916).

The Spendthrift was George Hamilton Teed's first Nelson Lee tale. It was followed by Twenty Fathoms Deep Edwy Searles Brooks debut Lee tale.

Teed following on the wild success of his Sexton Blake creation Yvonne Cartier, gave Nelson Lee his first female foe: The Black Wolf, a cross-dressing martial arts aristocrat. She would match wits with Lee and Nipper in various locations around the world.[3]

Not to be outdone, Brooks introduced Eileen Dare the female detective in Nelson Lee's Lady Assistant (1916).[4] She appeared with Lee in 14 adventures.

Brooks was instrumental in launching the second phase of Lee's career. In "Nipper at St. Frank's," (Nelson Lee Library #112, 28 July 1917,) Lee and Nipper while fleeing from a Chinese Triad hide out at St. Frank's, a "venerable public school" in the Bellton area of Sussex. When the case at last was solved, Lee joined the faculty as headmaster and Nipper enrolled as a student. The two remained there for the next sixteen years solving mysteries and having advanetures around the world, often with friends and Nipper's classmates.[5]

John James Brearley Garbutt introduced Nighthawk, a superhero that began appearing as a backup feature in The Nelson Lee Library (New Series) No. 11, April 5, 1930 in a self-titled story. The hero was rich scientist Thurston Kyle who built an armored, winged flying suit to fight crime. He is considered one of the earliest examples of a flying armored superhero.[6][7]

Howard Baker Collections

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New Collections

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Further reading

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References

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  1. ^ Andrew, Lucy (2017). The Boy Detective in Early British Children's Literature, Chapter 4. Springer.
  2. ^ Wood, John P. (August 1949). "Leaves from the Diary of Maxwell Scott, Part 6". Collectors Digest Vol3 #32. p. 213.
  3. ^ Wood, Jack (1954). "A Dead Man's Secret: Nelson Lee in Fact and Fiction". Collectors Digest Christmas Annual #008. p. 39-40.
  4. ^ Caldicott, Mark (February 1992). "Nelson Lee Column: Into His Stride". Collectors Digest Vol46 #542. p. 6.
  5. ^ Andrew, Lucy (2017). The Boy Detective in Early British Children's Literature, Chapter 4. Springer.
  6. ^ Murray, Chris (2017). The British Superhero. University Press of Mississippi. p. 41. ISBN 9781496807403. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  7. ^ Grand, Alex (2023). Understanding Superhero Comic Books: A History of Key Elements, Creators, Events and Controversies. McFarland, Incorporated, Publishers. p. 65. ISBN 9781476690391. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
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