Wild West Weekly

Wild West Weekly was a dime novel later turned pulp magazine.[1]

On October 24, 1902 Frank Tousey released his first issue of the 5-cent dime novel Wild West Weekly called "The Prince in the Saddle". Written by Frank, though said to be written by "An Old Scout", it created a story centered around the character Young Wild West, a "bright, handsome boy of eighteen with a wealth of waving chestnut hair hanging down his back".[2] West is an expert horse rider among other things.[3]

The dime novel series ran from 1902 to 1928. [4] In 1927, the novel was acquired by Street & Smith and continued to run as a pulp magazine from 1931 to 1943.[5] In 1943 the magazine went through a name change, removing the word weekly from its title and was discontinued by the company later that year. Wild West ran for a total of 822 issues before ceasing publication.

The magazine was featured in an exhibition about Native American portrayals by the University of California Bancroft Library.[6]

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References

  1. "Wild West Weekly (Western)". Comic Book Plus.
  2. Young Wild West: the prince of the saddle. Frank Tousey.
  3. "Young Wild West: the prince of the saddle". digital.lib.usf.edu.
  4. "Wild West Weekly". University of South Florida Libraries Digital Collections.
  5. "Wild West Weekly archives". onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu.
  6. "Mass Market Appeal (16 of 19)". bancroft.berkeley.edu.
  7. "Young Wild West's Weird West Weekly, a 1915 dime novel. | jessnevins.com".


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