Everybody's Magazine
Cover of the November 1914 edition, in which George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion began its serialization. | |
Year founded | 1899 |
---|---|
Final issue | March 1929 |
Country | United States |
Based in | New York City |
Everybody's Magazine was an American magazine published from 1899 to 1929.[1] The magazine was headquartered in New York City.[2]
History and profile
The magazine was founded by Philadelphia merchant John Wanamaker in 1899, though he had little role in its actual operations.[3]
Initially, the magazine published a combination of non-fiction articles and new fiction stories. By 1926, the magazine had become a pulp fiction magazine and in 1929 it merged with Romance magazine.
In 1903, it had a circulation of 150,000, and Wanamaker sold the magazine for $75,000 to a group headed by Erman Jesse Ridgeway. A series of muckraking articles called "Frenzied Finance" in 1904 boosted circulation to well over 500,000, and it stayed above the half million mark for many years. During America's involvement in World War I, circulation declined below 300,000. By the late 1920s, it had declined to about 50,000.[3]
Beginning in 1915, the magazine began referring to itself simply as Everybody's.
Writers who appeared in Everybody's Magazine included Jack London, Talbot Mundy, Victor Rousseau, O. Henry, A. A. Milne (Milne's novel The Red House Mystery was serialised in the magazine)[4] Hugh Pendexter, Eleanor Hoyt Brainerd, and Raoul Whitfield.
The last issue of Everybody's Magazine was published in March 1929.[1]
Gallery
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Bijou Fernandez, published, 1903
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George Bellows
Return of the Useless, published December 1918 to illustrate "Belgium: The Crowning Crime"
References
- 1 2 "Everybody's Magazine". Spartacus Educational. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
- ↑ William Hard (1912). "Unemployment as a Coming Issue". Hein Online. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
- 1 2 Mott, Frank Luther. Sketches of 21 Magazines: 1905-1930, p. 72-87 (1968)
- ↑ Ed Hulse, The Blood 'n' Thunder Guide to Collecting Pulps. Murania Press, 2009. ISBN 0-9795955-0-9 (pp. 168-169)