American Decades
"The Scopes Trial: Aftermath"
Editorial
By: H.L. Mencken
Date: September 14, 1925
Source: Mencken, H.L. "Aftermath" Baltimore Evening Sun, September 14, 1925. Available online at http://www.positiveatheism.org/hist/menck05.htm#SCOPESD; website home page: http://www.positiveatheism.org (accessed April 24, 2003).
About the Author: Henry Louis Mencken (1880–1956) emerged as one of the nation's most renowned and controversial social commentators. By age twenty-five, Mencken had risen from entry-level reporter to editor of the Baltimore Herald. His criticism of American social norms, and his support of Germany throughout the First World War, brought great criticism. During the war, magazines and newspapers that normally printed Mencken's reports censored him and refused to publish his...
[The entire page is 2352 words long]
1920's Media Primary Sources
- "First WEAF Commercial Continuity"
- "See the Children Safely to School"
- Advertising for Women
- Sedition or Propaganda
- Time and The New Yorker
- "Harlem"
- "The Scopes Trial: Aftermath"
- "The Four Horsemen"
- Radio Act of 1927
- "Far-Off Speakers Seen as Well as Heard Here in Test of Television"
- Sacco and Vanzetti Case Political Cartoons
- The President's Daughter
- "Dead!"
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
