This magazine employed talented photographers and journalists to illustrate news and events on glossy paper.
Date and name of publication are at the border of the page
Page dimensions approximately
14 inches x 9 1/4 inches
(355mm x 235mm)
Please message with any questions regarding this item
Prints from this issue are particularly scarce and seldom available to purchase.
The King and The Navy and Army illustrated magazines amalgamated in 1903. This was not successful and sales were very poor, possibly due to the publishers aiming at the widest possible readership with a strange mix of news, fashion, theatre, travel, the British Empire and military articles & pictures on glossy paper. Its strapline at the time was: A weekly illustrated journal for society, the salon and the services. Though short lived, it excelled in each of these areas. It quickly faded away from the news stands. The Navy and Army came back on its own in a smaller format in 1914 for World War 1 and focussed on just military matters.
ROS xviii