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Street and Smith Publications Inc.

Street and Smith Publications Inc. was one of the top pulp magazine publishers. It began publishing dime novels in the 1800s, then began shifting to pulps in 1915. In 1949, it shuttered its last four pulp magazines -- ShadowThe The Shadow, DocSavage Doc Savage, DetectiveStoryMagazine Detective Story Magazine and WesternStoryMagazine Western Story Magazine -- with the summer issues as it bowed out of the pulp business to focus on its slick magazines.

Background

Street and Smith was founded in 1855 when Francis S. Street and Francis S. Smith purchased The New York Weekly Dispatch from Amos Williamson. ...

Post-pulp changes

In 1959, S.I. Newhouse’s Advance Publications, publisher of the Staten Island Advance newspaper, ought the Conde Nast magazine group from the Daily Mirror Group. Later that year, Advance bought Street and Smith Publications (and its pulp legacy). (In 1980, Advance entered the book publishing business by purchasing Random House from RCA. Two years later, Random bought Fawcett Books, which had been owned by pulp publisher FawcettPulps Fawcett. But in 1998, Advance sold off its book publishing business to Bertelsmann.) Advance shuttered Mademoiselle in 2001, after 66 years of publication.

Conde Nast (Advance) donated the editorial records of Street and Smith to Syracuse University Library.

Selected publications

DimeNovels Dime novels

PulpMagazines Pulp magazines

SlickMagazines Slick magazines



Categories
PulpPublishers

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