In October 1901, at the end of Queen Victoria’s reign, the first issue of The Woodworker magazine was published, and it continues to this day. From its inception, the publishers issued annual ‘volumes’; bound books containing copies of the magazines issued in the previous year, but without advertisements. Sadly they are no longer issued, the last ones being produced in the 1990s, but they are frequently seen in old bookshops and charity shops. For a couple of quid they provide fascinating reading, with a mixture of articles on joints, furniture design, tools old and new, and general reflections on the subject of woodworking.
I never consciously set out to collect the volumes, I really didn’t, but as a lifelong amateur woodworker I would pick up the occasional one when I…
