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First Issue: | 14th April 1950 | |||||
| Last Issue: | 26th April 1969 | ||||||
| Copyright: | Hulton/Longacre/Odhams/IPC | ||||||
| Genre: | Boys Action and Adventure | ||||||
| Incorporated Titles: | Merry-Go-Round (14/4/1950) Swift (9/3/1961) Boys World (10/10/1964) |
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| Incorporated By: | Lion (3/5/1969) | ||||||
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| Covers | Characters And Stories | First Issue | Memory Lane | Annuals | ||
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14th April 1950 was arguably the start of the silver age of comics, and in particular, with the birth of the Eagle. The Eagle and its characters have been well documented in books and more recently on the Internet. What I would like to do is take you back to a time before the Eagle comic had hit the streets. To a time when its founder, The Reverend Marcus Morris, was appointed as a vicar of St James's, Birkdale, Lancashire. Marcus was born in 1915 and educated at Cheltenham and Brasenose College, Oxford, graduating in 1937. He was ordained at Liverpool Cathedral in 1939 after two years studying theology at Wyecliffe Hall and, in 1940, moved to Great Yarmouth. After taking a number of positions he accepted the post of Vicar at St. James? in Birkdale - a suburb of Southport. With the position came the parish magazine which Marcus renamed The Anvil in 1946, and which gave him an outlet for his journalistic urges. He had long felt that parish magazines, which were the main written method of presenting himself to his followers, were dreary and ineffective. His appointment gave him his first chance to do something about it and he gradually converted the four-page leaflet into The Anvil magazine. Marcus based The Anvil on a publication called Lilliput, the pocket magazine created by the founder of The Picture Post Stefan Lorant. For his own magazine, Marcus managed to get some useful contributions from C.S. Lewis, C.E.M. Joad and Harold Macmillan. |
![]() Frank Hampson (left - and searching for a match to light his pipe) and the founder of the Eagle, Marcus Morris. |
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Unfortunately, Marcus got into serious debt. The spirit was willing but the sales were weak. There was no money to promote the magazine, and though it spread from being a parish magazine to become a town magazine, and finally a national magazine, it still lost money. His patient and loyal parishioners gave generous amount of practical and financial support. They contibuted funds and ran bazaars to raise money, but he sank deeper into debt.... but not into despair. Anvil attracted attention and was described by one critic as a 'Christian magazine alongside the best secular publications'. And apart from the eminent contributors he had a special windfall. He had discovered at the local art school (Southport School of Arts and Crafts) a young artist, Frank Hampson, who became chief illustrator and cartoonist and designed the covers for Anvil
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At one stage, Marcus had been in touch with Hulton Press (publishers of Picture Post and Lilliput at the time) and a young man from that firm suggested that he should go see John Myers, then Publicity Manager for J. Arthur Rank. Myers passed him on to Montague Haydon, director of the children's publications at Amalgamated Press. Haydon's reaction was perhaps predictable. Marcus had a feeling that Haydon thought he was an imposter, even a mild kind of lunatic. Amalgamated Press did not want Eagle. Sir Neville Pearson of Newnes was next. Marcus rang him from his London office, which in those days was a red telephone box. Pearson asked him round and saw him with one of his chief executives. They were very courteous and expressed considerable interest, but in the end they said that Eagle was 'Not an economic proposition'. Marcus had a brief and fruitless meeting with Boardman's, U.S. publishers of books and comics and then, maybe in a fit of desperation, he secured the interest of Mike Wardell, editor of the Sporting Record. Mike wore a black eye patch and was a great Fleet Street character, but in the end, he couldn't help Marcus. |
| Right up to the publication of the first issue on the 14th April 1950, the situation was chaotic. Mainly because the original launch date for Eagle was the summer of 1950, but Hulton's decided to bring the date forward to the spring because they had heard a rumour that a rival company were also going to bring out a new comic. This revised date meant that Frank had to recruit artists in a hurry. These artists, who all worked in an old bakery in Southport, were Harold Johns - an old school and college friend, Eric Eden - who worked on backgrounds along with Joan Porter, and finally Bruce Cornwell who worked on technical scenes and more backgrounds. The two miracles that occurred in the first issue of Eagle were getting the material to the printer in the first place and then actually getting it printed in the second place. The printing of the Eagle is a story in itself, a supreme example of craftsmanship and engineering skill overcoming apparently insuperable difficulties. Eric Bemrose, the printer, faced the problem of printing 1,000,000 copies of Eagle for its first issue. He designed, built and worked a new ten-unit photogravure rotary machine. With flair and improvision he created the plant in twelve weeks from start to finish and trained a team to work it. On publication day there were long queues outside the newsagents. Eagle was a success and a sell-out, almost one million copies. Marcus had tried to start a paper which would be the natural choice of the child, but at the same time, would have the enthusiastic approval of the parent and the teacher. In this, he succeeded. |
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