This was going to be a relatively short post, just to 'make a point'.
Fergus Hume's "Mystery of a Hansom Cab" was a massively successful murder-mystery novel, both in Australia and the UK.
In doing some research on the story recently, I noticed a persistent statement: that Mystery of a Hansom Cab inspired Conan Doyle's creation of the Sherlock Holmes stories. Here are some examples of where that is stated:
- "apparently was part of the inspiration for Conan Doyle to begin writing his Sherlock Holmes stories"
The first mentions of Fergus Hume's book in Australia newspapers.
'Mystery of a Hansom Cab' is believed to have been written towards the end of 1885 or early 1886. The first mentions of the book are unsurprisingly in Melbourne papers, the first on 21 Oct 1886, followed by two in November.
The book is not mentioned in any newspapers in Dec 1886. In 1887 the story received only fifty mentions in newspapers (many advertisements of the book being for sale), and was published in a serialized form that year in a regional NSW paper called the 'Macleay Argus'.
All in all then, the book didn't exactly take off, and the limited early print run may account for this. In fact the next article covering the
And so to the UK, where the book must have been released The first mentions of the book are unsurprisingly in Melbourne papers, the first on 28 Nov 1887, followed by two in November.
"THE MYSTERY OF A HANSOM CAB" - This is a sensational novel, a startling and realistic study of Melbourne social life. It is printed by The Hansom Cab Publishing Company, Ludgate-hill, London, and the price is 1s.
From just 20 mentions in the last two months of 1887, to over 3,000 in 1888 ! The popularity of the book was remarkable in England.
'Study in Scarlet' first saw the light of day in Beeton's Christmas Annual released around November 1887. In other words, both books appeared on the scene in England around the same time. While Hansom Cub was published a year earlier in Australia, there were few copies published initially.
One can imagine that Doyle may have been disappointed to have his brilliant new detective novel outsold by a colonial mystery novel. Perhaps this partially accounts for Doyle's dismissal of the 'Hansom Cab' story. He wrote to his mother on 1 March 1888, when Hansom Cab was being sold by the thousands:
"What a swindle 'The Mystery of a Hansom Cab' is. One of the weakest tales I have read, and sold by puffing."
The public didn't agree with Doyle, nor did the reviews. Hume wrote a wonderful novel, but Doyle created an enduring character. And Doyle stuck with his character, and created a phenomenon that lasted four decades. Hume's story was sensational, but did not create a character who could be serialized - multiple parties worked to get to the bottom of the scandal and murderer in Hansom Cab - it was not a story built around a detective. In fact Hume never did create a recurring character across over 100 novels.
Doyle and Hume had one more thing in common for their late 1887 mystery stories. Both sold their rights, and missed out on massive royalties in the years ahead !
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There is a very slight but delightful connection in the above articles. The English 'Sporting Life' article in late 1887 mentions that an advertising campaign was undertaken to sell 'Hansom Cab': "the "posting" and “sandwiching’’ our streets of coloured character portraits of the principal personages in the story —admirably designed by Mr. Matt Stretch...."
A set of those advertising posters exist - held by XXXX, and they are magnificent.
The name of the illustrator Matt Stretch might ring a bell - his name appears on the cover of the 1887 Beeton's Christmas Annual: