The Strand Magazine was founded by
George Newnes in 1890, and its first edition was dated January 1891. The magazine's original offices were located on Burleigh Street, off the
Strand, London. The first editor was
Herbert Greenhough Smith, who remained the editor until 1930. The magazine published factual articles in addition to fictional short stories and series. It was targeted at a mass market readership. The initial price of an issue was sixpence, about half the typical rate for comparable titles at the time. Initial sales were around 300,000, and circulation soon rose to half a million. The magazine also published a United States edition from February 1891 through February 1916. In its early years, the contents of the US edition were identical with those of the UK edition, though usually with a one-month time lag. As the years went on there were some differences in the contents of the two editions, reflecting fiction for which
The Strand did not hold the US rights (such as
The Return of Sherlock Holmes, which was commissioned by ''
Collier's'' magazine) and non-fiction that would not interest most US readers (such as articles about personalities in the
House of Commons). The circulation of the US edition was minimal in the early 1890s but was reported at 150,000 by 1898. The US edition was discontinued in 1916 due to logistical difficulties arising from
World War I. The American edition was edited by
J. Walter Smith. The magazine format changed to the smaller
digest size in October 1941.
The Strand Magazine ceased publication in March 1950, forced out of the market by declining circulation and rising costs. Its last editor was
Macdonald Hastings, distinguished
war correspondent and later TV reporter and contributor to the
Eagle boys' comic. In 1961, the magazine was briefly revived as
The New Strand under the editorship of
Noni Jabavu. It was normally bound as six-monthly volumes, from January to June and July to December, but from the mid-1930s this varied, and the final volumes in the late 1940s ran from October to March and April to September, the final volume CXVIII (118) running from October 1949 to March 1950. The magazine was revived in 1998 in the US (see below). ==Fiction==