Showing posts with label The Cynicus Publishing Company Ltd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Cynicus Publishing Company Ltd. Show all posts

Sunday, 16 November 2025

The Last Car from Manchester ……. the story with a sad ending

I like this picture postcard, but have never thought about writing its story.

I suppose that is because it is one of those general picture postcards, which will have been over printed with the names of towns and cities across the country.

So, as such its connection to Manchester is pretty slim, and it just kept getting passed over.

But yesterday I persevered, that said, with no comment on the back, no address and above all no postmark there seemed little to go on.

There was however the name of the company who marketed it, but I didn’t hold out much hope, given that there were countless companies which flourished and vanished during the decades either side of the last century.

But I was wrong, because The Cynicus Publishing Company Ltd of Tayport in Fife, wasn’t any old postcard company it was established by Martin Anderson, who according to one source was “better known by his pseudonym Cynicus, was a Scottish artist, political illustrator and publisher”.*

His early working life involved producing illustrations for a variety of publications, before setting up in his own business in London in 1891, and from there setting up a postcard company publishing his own designs in 1902.

After a promising start his business like many suffered from a fall in the popularity of such picture postcard and the company went into liquidation with his stocks of prints and original work were sold for a fraction of their real worth.

A further attempt at a similar business also met with failure when the market for seaside picture postcards declined with the outbreak of the Great War.

Mr. Martin produced a series of anti war posters and cards, which got him into trouble with the authorities. 

“In 1924 his Edinburgh shop was destroyed by fire, everything inside it was lost, and he did not have the funds to repair and restock it. He retired to his castle-like mansion in Balmullo to live in increasing poverty. A final edition of The Satires of Cynicus was published in 1926.”*

He died in 1932, and was buried in an unmarked grave, without a tombstone, and the final indignity was that his home was extensively vandalised after his death.

So a sad story for what was a very happy looking picture postcard.

Mr. Martin produced a series of anti war posters and cards, which got him into trouble with the authorities. 

* Cynicus, Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynicus

Thursday, 22 May 2025

The Last Car from Woolwich ..... Manchester .... Rouken Glen and pretty much everywhere ……. the story with a sad ending

Now this delightful picture postcard was posted by Tricia recently and it is an exact copy of one I have, only the names have been changed to advance the profits of the postcard company.


And to add to the story she addded another from Rouken Glen in Glasgow.

Not that there was anything odd about this. 

All the companies had a batch of general picture postcards which will have been over printed with the names of towns and cities across the country.

So, as such its connection to Woolwich or Manchester is only part of the story and instead the real story is the The Cynicus Publishing Company Ltd of Tayport in Fife, who published our cards. 

It was established by Martin Anderson, who according to one source was “better known by his pseudonym Cynicus, was a Scottish artist, political illustrator and publisher”.*


His early working life involved producing illustrations for a variety of publications, before setting up in his own business in London in 1891, and from there setting up a postcard company publishing his own designs in 1902.

After a promising start his business like many suffered from a fall in the popularity of such picture postcard and the company went into liquidation with his stocks of prints and original work were sold for a fraction of their real worth.


A further attempt at a similar business also met with failure when the market for seaside picture postcards declined with the outbreak of the Great War.

Mr. Martin produced a series of anti war posters and cards, which got him into trouble with the authorities. 

“In 1924 his Edinburgh shop was destroyed by fire, everything inside it was lost, and he did not have the funds to repair and restock it. He retired to his castle-like mansion in Balmullo to live in increasing poverty. A final edition of The Satires of Cynicus was published in 1926.”*

He died in 1932, and was buried in an unmarked grave, without a tombstone, and the final indignity was that his home was extensively vandalised after his death.

So a sad story for what was a very happy looking picture postcard.


Mr. Martin produced a series of anti war posters and cards, which got him into trouble with the authorities. 


Location, Woolwich, Manchester and pretty much everywhere, circa 1902

Pictures; The last car from Woolwich, courtesy of Tricia Leslie, and The last car from Manchester from the collection of David Harrop, circa 1902

* Cynicus, Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynicus


Monday, 18 March 2024

“a true representation of the present state of Manchester” …… September 1907

This representation of Manchester I like.

And I guess it is the one countless people have had of our city stretching back to the time when the first smoky factory chimneys rose from the ground and helped coin that description of Manchester as the “shock city of the Industrial Revolution”.*

Certainly it chimed with an H. R., who wrote "I hereby present to you Sept 14. 07 with a true representation of the present state of M/C, as it is presented to our eyes, by night.  

Isn’t it really Beautiful?  Doesn’t it look a healthy place to live in?”

He/she was writing to a Mrs. McKeilty in Ballynahinch which my Wikipedia tells me is "is small town. On Census day (27 March 2011) there were 5,703 people living in Ballynahinch (2,326 households), accounting for 0.31% of the Northern Ireland total and representing an increase of 6.3% on the Census 2001 figure of 5,363."**

Which I rather think would make it smaller than Gorton where H.R. was living in 1907 at 28 Jackson Street.

Reading the rest of the message I think he/she was from Ballynahinch and so the contrast with Manchester must have been very striking.

The card was published by the The Cynicus Publishing Company of Fife and  was established by Martin Anderson, who according to one source was “better known by his pseudonym Cynicus, was a Scottish artist, political illustrator and publisher”.***

His early working life involved producing illustrations for a variety of publications, before setting up in his own business in London in 1891, and from there setting up a postcard company publishing his own designs in 1902.

After a promising start his business like many suffered from a fall in the popularity of such picture postcard and the company went into liquidation with his stocks of prints and original work were sold for a fraction of their real worth.

A further attempt at a similar business also met with failure when the market for seaside picture postcards declined with the outbreak of the Great War.

Mr. Martin produced a series of anti-war posters and cards, which got him into trouble with the authorities. 

“In 1924 his Edinburgh shop was destroyed by fire, everything inside it was lost, and he did not have the funds to repair and restock it. 

He retired to his castle-like mansion in Balmullo to live in increasing poverty. A final edition of The Satires of Cynicus was published in 1926.”***

He died in 1932, and was buried in an unmarked grave, without a tombstone, and the final indignity was that his home was extensively vandalised after his death.

Leaving me just to say I am a great fan of his work which I have written about on the blog.****

Location; Manchester in 1907

Picture; Lovely Manchester, 19907, from the collection of David Harrop

*Briggs Asa, Victorian Cities, 1968

** Ballynahinch, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballynahinch,_County_Down

*** Cynicus, Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynicus

****The Last Car from Woolwich ..... Manchester .... Rouken Glen and pretty much everywhere ……. the story with a sad ending, https://chorltonhistory.blogspot.com/2021/07/the-last-car-from-woolwich-manchester.html