Category:The Model Railway Handbook
1910 advert for the third edition of the Model Railway Handbook, featuring Henry Greenly and W.J. Bassett-Lowke. From "Model Railways and Locomotives" magazine. [image info]
The Model Railway Handbook, 12th edition (1942). By this time the book is no longer "The Sixpenny Handbook", and costs five shillings. [image info]
Cover of the Model Railway Handbook, executed as a miniature enamelled tinplate advertising poster, as a trackside accessory for gauge 0 model railways (Bassett-Lowke Ltd.) [image info]
W.J. Bassett-Lowke's The Model Railway Handbook (sometimes referred to as The Sixpenny Handbook) first appeared in 1906, and went through a large number of editions.
Initially, the book was revised almost yearly (with the third edition of 92 pages being advertised in December 1909), but as it matured, updates became less frequent.
W.J. Bassett-Lowke and his friends produced significant numbers of articles for the limited number of model railway publications that were available at the time, and it probably seemed obvious, given the success of Henry and WJ's foray into "homebrew" publishing with their catalogues, to produce a proper book that would act as a repository for their work and a general reference work for the subject, allow them editorial freedom, and promote their own brand rather than someone else's. Naturally, the book featured a certain amount of imagery and references to B-L products, projects and people.
Authorship
As this was W.J.'s project (and as the book was also helping to publicise the Bassett-Lowke brandname), W.J.'s name appeared on the cover, although early advertising shows Greenly's picture and signature as well as W.J.'s.
WJ's attitude to crediting other people's work seems to have been similar to Walt Disney's, in that he seems to have taken the position that the important thing, publicity-wise, was to promote the brand rather than the individual authors. Like "Disney's" cartoons, the handbook showcased a single name, although it wasn't made entirely clear that W.J. wasn't the sole author of "his" book, by a long shot. Other writers who are reckoned to have contributed articles (sometimes individually recognisable), are Henry Greenly, George Winteringham and Cecil J. Allen, with cover art by Allen ("CJA"), Kenneth H. Cullen, and Ernest Twining, successively.
As with Disney, W.J.'s attitude that personal "creator" credits were petty and unnecessary probably raised a few eyebrows due to his habit of making sure that his own name was prominently featured almost everywhere, and this is supposed to have occasionally been the cause of some resentment and friction between WJ and his friends.
Media in category ‘The Model Railway Handbook’
The following 8 files are in this category, out of 8 total.
- Model Railway Handbook advert (MRaL 1910-01).jpg 1,032 × 1,600; 288 KB
- Model Railway Handbook, enamelled tinplate miniature poster.jpg 602 × 800; 352 KB
- Model Railways Handbook (MRaL 1909-12).jpg 993 × 1,457; 214 KB
- Model Railways Handbook advert, Third Edition (MRaL 1909-12).jpg 1,024 × 547; 146 KB
- The Model Railway Handbook, 12th edition (MRH12ed 1942).jpg 1,083 × 1,600; 380 KB
- The Model Railway Handbook, 15th edition (MRH15ed 1950).jpg 808 × 1,200; 227 KB
- The Model Railway Handbook, 7th edition (BL-B 1924).jpg 1,024 × 344; 80 KB
- WJ Bassett-Lowke at Normanby Park (MRH 12ed).jpg 1,600 × 1,245; 437 KB