Street cries were once a popular subject of songs and literature in Britain, continental Europe and elsewhere. Each month from 2018 onwards I'll be scanning and transcribing publications to build this collection.
+ British Isles pre-19th century
− British Isles 1800–49
The New Cries of London 1800
The New Cries of London, with Characteristic Engravings 1803
The Cries of London, as They are Daily Exhibited in the Streets 1804
The Itinerant Traders of London in their Ordinary Costume 1804
London Cries for Children c. 1806
London Cries for Children 1810
Portraits of Curious Characters in London 1814
Etchings of Remarkable Beggars 1815
The Merry London Cries c. 1815
The Moving Market: or, Cries of London 1815
The Cries of London, Shewing How to Get a Penny for a Rainy Day c. 1820
The Moving Market; or, Cries of London c. 1820
The Cries of London, for the Instruction and Amusement of Good Children c. 1820
Costume of the Lower Orders of London 1820
Rowlandson's Characteristic Sketches of the Lower Orders 1820
Sam Syntax's Description of the Cries of London 1821
Costume of the Lower Orders of the Metropolis 1822
The Cries of London, Drawn from Life 1823
London Melodies; Or, Cries of the Seasons c. 1825
The Every-Day Book and Table Book 1827
The Cries of London, Coloured c. 1830
The Cries in the Streets of London c. 1830
The Cries of Banbury and London c. 1837
The Cries of London: Exhibiting Several of the Itinerant Traders 1839
Knight's London: Street Noises 1841