We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
The Angels' Voice
Regular price
$85.00
Regular price
$85.00
Sale price
$85.00
Unit price
/
per
Sold out
Re-stocking soon
Edition of young men's magazines from just before the First World War, presenting a vivid and touching picture of life at the time.The Angels' Voice was the title given to a magazine which circulat...
Read More
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
Ships within 2 business days
-
21 June 2016

Edition of young men's magazines from just before the First World War, presenting a vivid and touching picture of life at the time.
The Angels' Voice was the title given to a magazine which circulated among a group of some 40 or so young men in Brixton between 1910 and 1913, all members of the Young Men's Bible Class of Trinity Congregational Church there. In its pages they teased each other, their sisters and girlfriends in poetry, drawings and witty, innocent articles. We see them playing football, going on country rambles, roller-skating, cycling, smoking (a lot), arguing about politics and women's rights, taking day trips to France and holidays in the Channel Islands, Belgium and Italy, and even working in Switzerland, India and the Canary Islands.
This magazine offers an unique insight into life in London in general, and the lives and attitudes of lower middle-class young men in one suburb in particular, on the eve of the outbreak of the First World War, during which many of them were to serve and several of them were to die; its pages depict the world lost in the trenches of France and Flanders.
The magazines are presented here with an introduction and full notes, with an appendix providing biographical information on many of those connected with them.
ALAN ARGENT grew up in south London. He is minister of Trinity Congregational Church, Brixton, and Research Fellow at Dr Williams's Library, London. He has written a biography of Elsie Chamberlain, and a history of Congregationalism in the twentieth century.
The Angels' Voice was the title given to a magazine which circulated among a group of some 40 or so young men in Brixton between 1910 and 1913, all members of the Young Men's Bible Class of Trinity Congregational Church there. In its pages they teased each other, their sisters and girlfriends in poetry, drawings and witty, innocent articles. We see them playing football, going on country rambles, roller-skating, cycling, smoking (a lot), arguing about politics and women's rights, taking day trips to France and holidays in the Channel Islands, Belgium and Italy, and even working in Switzerland, India and the Canary Islands.
This magazine offers an unique insight into life in London in general, and the lives and attitudes of lower middle-class young men in one suburb in particular, on the eve of the outbreak of the First World War, during which many of them were to serve and several of them were to die; its pages depict the world lost in the trenches of France and Flanders.
The magazines are presented here with an introduction and full notes, with an appendix providing biographical information on many of those connected with them.
ALAN ARGENT grew up in south London. He is minister of Trinity Congregational Church, Brixton, and Research Fellow at Dr Williams's Library, London. He has written a biography of Elsie Chamberlain, and a history of Congregationalism in the twentieth century.
Price: $85.00
Pages: 341
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: London Record Society
Series: London Record Society
Publication Date:
21 June 2016
Trim Size: 9.61 X 5.91 in
ISBN: 9780900952579
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / General, European history, HISTORY / Modern / 20th Century / General, RELIGION / Institutions & Organizations, General and world history
A compelling picture of the engagement of a group of young men with Chapel life in one South London suburb.
Introduction
Number 1, November 1910
Number 2, December 1910
Number 3, January 1911
Number 5, March 1911
Number 6, April 1911
Number 7, November 1911
Number 8, July 1912
Number 9, December 1912
Number 10, July 1913
Number 11, August 1913
Number 12, September 1913
Number 13, October 1913
Number 15, December 1913
Appendix: List of names
Bibliography
Number 1, November 1910
Number 2, December 1910
Number 3, January 1911
Number 5, March 1911
Number 6, April 1911
Number 7, November 1911
Number 8, July 1912
Number 9, December 1912
Number 10, July 1913
Number 11, August 1913
Number 12, September 1913
Number 13, October 1913
Number 15, December 1913
Appendix: List of names
Bibliography