American Decades
People in the News
Robert S. Abbott, the child of former slaves, founded the Chicago Defender on a shoestring budget in 1905. Its masthead carried the motto "American race prejudice must be destroyed!"
In his Chicago Record column "Stories of the Streets and of the Town," distinctively midwestern humorist and fablist George Ade immortalized the vernacular in such pieces as "The Fable of the Good Fairy of the Eighth Ward and the Dollar Excursion of the Steam Fitters."
Known as the "dean of American magazine editors," Henry Mills Alden reigned at Harper's from 1869 to 1919. He gave special attention to American writers and to burgeoning social problems, and Harper's became the most widely circulated periodical in the country.
One of the most famous muckrakers, Ray Stannard Baker wrote about industry and labor for McClure's, where he was associate editor from 1899 to 1905. His...
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1900's Media
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Book Publishing
- City Life and the Two Journalisms
- The Galveston Flood
- The Heyday of the Foreign Language Press
- "Let Munsey Kill It!": The Birth of the Newspaper Chain
- The New York Journal and the Assassination of William Mckinley
- Patent-Medicine Advertisements
- The Murder of Stanford White
- The Race to the North Pole
- The San Francisco Earthquake and Fire
- Sunday Color Comics
- Theodore Roosevelt Sues Joseph Pulitzer for Libel
- The Wireless Telegraph
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in the Media, 1900–1909
