Relatively little is known of ''The Lady's Realm''s publishing history, as many records of its publisher,
Hutchinson, were destroyed during the
London Blitz. The first issue was published in November 1896. Its first editor was
William Henry Wilkins, a mildly successful novelist who oversaw the publication's editing from 1896 to 1902. Though inexperienced, Wilkins was acquainted with society, being a friend of such figures as the explorer
Richard Francis Burton and his wife
Isabel Burton. After Wilkins' death in 1905, ''The Lady's Realm'' wrote of how "the general public are little aware how much of [the magazine's] early success" was due to him, and that "not a few [contributors who] have since made their names in the world of letters have to thank him for placing their foot on the first rung of the ladder". Wilkins' successor as editor is unknown, though Margaret Versteeg and colleagues, who produced an index of the fiction published in ''The Lady's Realm'', detect no changes in editorial judgement in the magazine's tenure after 1902. While the publication mainly featured female writers and feminine topics, all of its editors, most likely, were men. When it debuted, there were more than twenty-nine publications catering to women. Upon the publication of its first issue in 1896,
Review of Reviews called it "one of the most popular of the magazines that have been started this year". The illustrated magazine was produced monthly and cost
sixpence (cheap enough for middle-class readers). A typical issue contained 120 pages on quality glossy paper. It sold reasonably well in the United Kingdom, the United States, and Canada. The magazine was available in women's
reading rooms in public libraries, locations that were well distributed across the United Kingdom. The magazine was produced by the English printers
Hazell, Watson and Viney. One of its owners, Walter Hazell, was a social reformer and supporter of
women's suffrage. A successful firm, Hazell, Watson and Viney also produced the ''
Woman's Signal and the Woman's Gazette, which featured female political and economic topics. The success of The Lady's Realm'' allowed it to remain published for eighteen years, from 1896 to 1915, much longer than many other contemporary women's periodicals. Thirty-six volumes were produced, from November 1896 to October 1914 (a final volume may have been released in 1915). It is not known why it ended, though Versteeg and her colleagues speculate that World War I may have been a cause, as was the case for other contemporary publications like
Young Woman (1891–1914) and ''
The Girl's Realm'' (1892–1915). ==Content==