The Public Reading Society founded in the 1850s was the vehicle of Charles John Plumptre, a barrister who turned to the teaching of
elocution. Charles Sulley, editor of the
Ipswich Express, was credited with starting the penny reading movement in
Suffolk during the 1850s. A short history was given in the 1865 standard reading collection edited by
Joseph Edwards Carpenter. 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
The Times from the
Crimean War, 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
the Potteries and Staffordshire by 1857–8. 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
popular education. 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==