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American Heritage (magazine)

American Heritage is a magazine dedicated to covering the history of the United States for a mainstream readership. Until 2007, the magazine was published by Forbes.[1] Since that time, Edwin S. Grosvenor has been its editor and publisher.[2] Print publication was suspended early in 2013,[3] but the magazine relaunched in digital format with the Summer 2017 issue[4][5] after a Kickstarter campaign raised $31,203 from 587 backers.[6][7] The 70th Anniversary issue of the magazine (Winter 2020) on the subject "What Makes America Great?" includes essays by such historians as Fergus Bordewich, Douglas Brinkley, Joseph Ellis, and David S. Reynolds.[8]

American Heritage
Cover of the Spring 2018 issue featuring United States President William McKinley
Editor-in-chiefEdwin S. Grosvenor
CategoriesAmerican history
FrequencyQuarterly
Circulation160,000
Founded1947
Final issue2013 (print; relaunched digitally in 2017)
CompanyAmerican Heritage Publishing Company
CountryUnited States
Based inRockville, Maryland
LanguageEnglish
Websitewww.americanheritage.com
ISSN0002-8738

History edit

From 1947 to 1949 the American Association for State and Local History published a house organ, American Heritage: A Journal of Community History. In September 1949, AASLH launched the magazine with broader scope for the general public, but keeping certain features geared to educators and historical societies.

In 1954, AASLH sold the magazine to a quartet of writers and editors from Time, Inc. including James Parton, Oliver Jensen, Joseph J. Thorndike and founding editor Bruce Catton, the Pulitzer Prize-winning historian of the Civil War. They formed the American Heritage Publishing Company and introduced the hardcover, 120-page advertising-free "magazine" with Volume 6, Number 1 in December 1954.[9][5] Though, in essence, an entirely new magazine, the publishers kept the volume numbering because the previous incarnation had been indexed in the Reader's Guide to Periodical Literature. Each year begins in December and continues through the following October, published every other month. For example, Volume XXV issues are December 1973, February 1974, April 1974, June 1974, August 1974, and October 1974. December 1974 begins Volume XXVI.

Bruce Catton remained with the magazine for 25 years until his death in 1979 and published over 100 essays.[10] He warned historians against "regarding the past so fondly we are unable to get it in proper focus, and we see virtues that were not there.”[11][12]

In 1964, David McCullough began his writing career as an editor and writer for American Heritage, which he sometimes calls "my graduate school".[13] McCullough wrote numerous articles for the magazine.[14] He turned his article for the June 1966 issue on the Johnstown Flood, Run for Your Lives,[15] into a full-length book titled, The Johnstown Flood. When it became an unexpected bestseller, McCullough left the magazine in 1968 to commit full-time to writing. Later American Heritage articles by McCullough on the transcontinental railroad and Harry Truman also became bestselling books.

McGraw-Hill purchased the American Heritage Publishing Company in 1969.[16] Samuel P. Reed acquired the magazine in 1978.[17] By 1980, costs made the hardcover version prohibitive for a regular subscription. Subscribers could choose the new regular newsstand high-quality softcover or the "Collector's Edition", even plusher and thicker than the previous hardcover. Each is usually about 80 pages and has more "relevant" features and shorter articles than in the early years, but the scope and direction and purpose had not changed. Forbes bought the magazine in 1986.[17]

On May 17, 2007, the magazine, published on a bimonthly basis, announced that it had stopped publication, at least temporarily, with the April/May 2007 issue."[18] On October 27, 2007, Edwin S. Grosvenor, purchased the magazine from Forbes for $500,000 in cash and $10 million in subscription liabilities.[19] Grosvenor, who serves as president and editor-in-chief, is the former editor of the fine arts magazine, Portfolio. Grosvenor was also the editor of the literary magazine, Current Books, and magazines for Marriott and Hyatt Hotels. He was also the CEO of KnowledgeMax, Inc., an online bookseller.

After suspending print publication in 2013, the magazine relaunched digitally in 2017 with a new website and subscriber management system.[5]

Contents edit

For a magazine that has lasted seven decades, its way of covering history has changed much over the years. Each issue is still an eclectic collection of articles on the people, places, and events from the entire history of the United States. Today, there is mention of television shows and Web sites, and a greater diversity of articles such as Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates' recent article, "Growing Up Colored,"[20] about life as a young boy in segregated West Virginia.

Recent content has included a special 70th Anniversary issue on "What Makes America Great" (Winter 2020)[21] and an issue on the history of gun control with essays by historian Joseph J. Ellis, law professor Adam Winkler, and gun rights advocate Robert A. Levy.[22]

Some historians have criticized the magazine for what they say is a lack of seriousness. Reviewing David McCullough's book on John Adams in The New Republic,[23] Sean Wilentz stated that during the 1950s, "[Bernard] DeVoto's style of seriousness [was] eclipsed by the more journalistic and sentimentally descriptive style of American Heritage, whose influence is everywhere." Wilentz claimed that McCullough and film maker Ken Burns followed the American Heritage style: "popular history as passive nostalgic spectacle" marching "under the banner of 'narrative'". The magazine's editor at the time, Richard Snow, replied that "this magazine has never taken an overly sentimentalized or simplistic view of the past" and that American Heritage is "a magazine addressed to a lay audience and thus it has the usual fixtures—columns, picture stories, and so forth—and a variety of topics, some of greater consequence than others... but that it publishes many historians "whose work nobody has ever called simplistic, or sentimental, or undemanding.[24]

Numerous articles in American Heritage have later been expanded into bestselling books, including:

In addition to running four to six articles, American Heritage's regular features include

  • "History News" - news and happenings in museums, historic sites, movies
  • "Heritage Travel" - guides to what to see in historic American areas
  • "Now on the Web" - what's being written relating to history around the Web
  • "Letters to the Editor" - readers' letters
  • "My Brush With History" - readers' own stories about incidents in their lives that have some interesting historical significance

Other media edit

During the early 1960s, American Heritage sponsored a series of popular military board games produced by the Milton Bradley Company.

Beginning in 1973, and presumably as part of the then-current national lead-up to the Bicentennial, American Heritage teamed up with producer David L. Wolper for a series of four hour-long television specials (broadcast every few months between late 1973 and early 1975) based on events and people in American history, in documentary-like filmed dramatizations with actors taking the roles of historic figures, and key events re-enacted. The specials, sponsored by Texaco, were narrated by actor Cliff Robertson and broadcast on ABC.

The American Heritage Specials edit

[29]

 
The Philadelphia descendants of former King Joseph Napoleon featured in American Heritage 1970

Editors edit

Notable staff and contributors edit

Awards edit

American Heritage has been the finalist or winner of several National Magazine Awards, especially between 1985 and 1993:

  • 1975, Finalist, National Magazine Award (Visual Excellence), Frank H. Johnson, editor [37]
  • 1985, Winner, National Magazine Award (General Excellence), Byron Dobell, editor [38]
  • 1985, Winner, National Magazine Award (Single-Topic Issue), Byron Dobell, editor [39]
  • 1986, Finalist, National Magazine Award (General Excellence), Byron Dobell, editor [38]
  • 1986, Finalist, National Magazine Award (Design), Byron Dobell, editor, Beth Whitaker, art director [38]
  • 1987, Finalist, National Magazine Award (General Excellence), Byron Dobell, editor [40]
  • 1988, Finalist, National Magazine Award (General Excellence), Byron Dobell, editor [41]
  • 1989, Winner, National Magazine Award (General Excellence), Byron Dobell, editor [42]
  • 1990, Finalist, National Magazine Award (Design), Byron Dobell, editor, Theodore Kalomirakis, art director [43]
  • 1990, Finalist, National Magazine Award (General Excellence), Byron Dobell, editor [44]
  • 1991, Finalist, National Magazine Award (General Excellence), Byron Dobell, editor [45]
  • 1993, Finalist, National Magazine Award (General Excellence), Richard F. Snow, editor [46]
  • 1999, Finalist, National Magazine Award (General Excellence), Richard F. Snow, editor [47]

Samuel Eliot Morison Award edit

In 1976, the American Heritage Publishing Company founded and sponsored an award called the Samuel Eliot Morison Award, named for the historian Samuel Eliot Morison. It had the goal of annually honoring an American author whose work shows "that good history is literature as well as high scholarship."[48] The first award was presented on September 28, 1977, by Henry A. Kissinger at the Pierpont Morgan Library, valued at $5,000.[48] It ran for two years.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Grosvenor, Edwin S. 2009-09-16 at the Wayback Machine "Editor's Letter," American Heritage, Winter 2008.
  2. ^ Rich, Motoko (October 24, 2007). "American Heritage is Bought". The New York Times.
  3. ^ [1]"American Heritage Magazine Temporarily Suspends Publication," History News Network, May 2, 2013.
  4. ^ "American Heritage Returns in Digital Format". PRNewswire.com. PR Newswire.
  5. ^ a b c Reynolds, Mark (June 2017). "Open configuration options American Heritage is Back!". American Heritage Magazine. 63 (1).
  6. ^ "AMERICAN HERITAGE". www.americanheritage.com.
  7. ^ "Saving American Heritage, the Famed Magazine of History". Kickstarter.com. Retrieved December 18, 2016.
  8. ^ "Winter 2020 Issue". American Heritage Magazine. 64:1.
  9. ^ Reynolds, Mark C. (November–December 2004). "Golden Anniversary". American Heritage. American Heritage Publishing. 55 (6). Retrieved January 22, 2012.
  10. ^ "Bio and Essays of Bruce Catton". American Heritage Magazine. Retrieved January 27, 2020.
  11. ^ Blight, David. "Bruce Catton". American Heritage Magazine. 62:1 (Spring 2012).
  12. ^ Jensen, Oliver. "Working with Bruce Catton". American Heritage Magazine. 30:2 (February/March 1979).
  13. ^ . American Academy of Achievement. Archived from the original on May 17, 2008. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  14. ^ Brief biography and list of American Heritage articles by David McCullough.
  15. ^ "Run For Your Lives! | AMERICAN HERITAGE". www.americanheritage.com.
  16. ^ Christianson, Elin B. (1972). "Mergers in the Publishing Industry, 1958-1970". The Journal of Library History. 7 (1): 5–32. ISSN 0022-2259. JSTOR 25540337. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
  17. ^ a b "Forbes Buys American Heritage Magazine". AP NEWS. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
  18. ^ McGrath, Charles (May 17, 2007). "Magazine Suspends Its Run in History". The New York Times. Retrieved March 8, 2008.
  19. ^ Rich, Motoko (October 24, 2007). "American Heritage Is Bought". The New York Times. Retrieved March 8, 2008.
  20. ^ "Growing Up Colored | AMERICAN HERITAGE". www.americanheritage.com.
  21. ^ "American Heritage Winter 2020". American Heritage. 64 (1).
  22. ^ Grosvenor, Edwin (September 2019). "Introduction: A Special Issue on the Right to Bear Arms". American Heritage. 64 (4). Retrieved January 25, 2020.
  23. ^ Wilentz, Sean. "America Made Easy McCullough, Adams, and the decline of popular history". The New Republic. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  24. ^ Snow, Richard. "Has American Heritage Gone Soft?". History News Network. Archived from the original on August 27, 2013. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  25. ^ "A Yankee Among The War Lords | AMERICAN HERITAGE". www.americanheritage.com.
  26. ^ "Pulitzer Prizes for 1972". www.pulitzer.org.
  27. ^ "Maiden Voyage | AMERICAN HERITAGE". www.americanheritage.com.
  28. ^ ""Four Good Legs Between Us" | AMERICAN HERITAGE". www.americanheritage.com.
  29. ^ "THE AMERICAN HERITAGE SPECIALS - David L. Wolper". www.davidlwolper.com. Retrieved September 2, 2021.
  30. ^ Catton, Bruce. "Bio and article list". American Heritage. Retrieved April 6, 2013.
  31. ^ Jensen, Oliver. "Bio and article list". American Heritage. Retrieved April 6, 2013.
  32. ^ Josephy, Alvin. "Bio and article list". American Heritage. Retrieved April 6, 2013.
  33. ^ Ward, Geoffrey. "Bio and article list". American Heritage. Retrieved April 6, 2013.
  34. ^ Dobell, Byron. "Bio and article list". American Heritage. Retrieved April 6, 2013.
  35. ^ Snow, Richard. "Bio and article list". American Heritage. Retrieved April 6, 2013.
  36. ^ Grosvenor, Edwin. "Bio and article list". American Heritage. Retrieved April 6, 2013.
  37. ^ Id., American Society of Magazine Editors, www.Magazine.org 2019-12-30 at the Wayback Machine, entire year cited.
  38. ^ a b c Id., For the April/May, June/July, and December issues.
  39. ^ Id., For "A Medical Picture of the United States", October/November issue.
  40. ^ Id., For the August/September, October/November, and December issues.
  41. ^ Id., For the July/August, November, December and issues.
  42. ^ Id., For the May/June, September/October, and November issues.
  43. ^ Id., For the February, March, and July/August issues.
  44. ^ Id., For the March, May/June, and December issues.
  45. ^ Id., For the February, May/June, and September issues.
  46. ^ Id., For the February/March, May/June, and December issues.
  47. ^ Id., For the May/June, November, and December issues.
  48. ^ a b c Albin Krebs (September 29, 1977). "Notes on People". The New York Times. Retrieved December 23, 2017.
  49. ^ "Samuel Eliot Morison Award 1978". American Heritage. 29 (6). October 1978. Retrieved December 23, 2017.

External links edit

  • Official website  

american, heritage, magazine, american, heritage, magazine, dedicated, covering, history, united, states, mainstream, readership, until, 2007, magazine, published, forbes, since, that, time, edwin, grosvenor, been, editor, publisher, print, publication, suspen. American Heritage is a magazine dedicated to covering the history of the United States for a mainstream readership Until 2007 the magazine was published by Forbes 1 Since that time Edwin S Grosvenor has been its editor and publisher 2 Print publication was suspended early in 2013 3 but the magazine relaunched in digital format with the Summer 2017 issue 4 5 after a Kickstarter campaign raised 31 203 from 587 backers 6 7 The 70th Anniversary issue of the magazine Winter 2020 on the subject What Makes America Great includes essays by such historians as Fergus Bordewich Douglas Brinkley Joseph Ellis and David S Reynolds 8 American HeritageCover of the Spring 2018 issue featuring United States President William McKinleyEditor in chiefEdwin S GrosvenorCategoriesAmerican historyFrequencyQuarterlyCirculation160 000Founded1947Final issue2013 print relaunched digitally in 2017 CompanyAmerican Heritage Publishing CompanyCountryUnited StatesBased inRockville MarylandLanguageEnglishWebsitewww wbr americanheritage wbr comISSN0002 8738 Contents 1 History 2 Contents 2 1 Other media 2 1 1 The American Heritage Specials 3 Editors 4 Notable staff and contributors 5 Awards 5 1 Samuel Eliot Morison Award 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editFrom 1947 to 1949 the American Association for State and Local History published a house organ American Heritage A Journal of Community History In September 1949 AASLH launched the magazine with broader scope for the general public but keeping certain features geared to educators and historical societies In 1954 AASLH sold the magazine to a quartet of writers and editors from Time Inc including James Parton Oliver Jensen Joseph J Thorndike and founding editor Bruce Catton the Pulitzer Prize winning historian of the Civil War They formed the American Heritage Publishing Company and introduced the hardcover 120 page advertising free magazine with Volume 6 Number 1 in December 1954 9 5 Though in essence an entirely new magazine the publishers kept the volume numbering because the previous incarnation had been indexed in the Reader s Guide to Periodical Literature Each year begins in December and continues through the following October published every other month For example Volume XXV issues are December 1973 February 1974 April 1974 June 1974 August 1974 and October 1974 December 1974 begins Volume XXVI Bruce Catton remained with the magazine for 25 years until his death in 1979 and published over 100 essays 10 He warned historians against regarding the past so fondly we are unable to get it in proper focus and we see virtues that were not there 11 12 In 1964 David McCullough began his writing career as an editor and writer for American Heritage which he sometimes calls my graduate school 13 McCullough wrote numerous articles for the magazine 14 He turned his article for the June 1966 issue on the Johnstown Flood Run for Your Lives 15 into a full length book titled The Johnstown Flood When it became an unexpected bestseller McCullough left the magazine in 1968 to commit full time to writing Later American Heritage articles by McCullough on the transcontinental railroad and Harry Truman also became bestselling books McGraw Hill purchased the American Heritage Publishing Company in 1969 16 Samuel P Reed acquired the magazine in 1978 17 By 1980 costs made the hardcover version prohibitive for a regular subscription Subscribers could choose the new regular newsstand high quality softcover or the Collector s Edition even plusher and thicker than the previous hardcover Each is usually about 80 pages and has more relevant features and shorter articles than in the early years but the scope and direction and purpose had not changed Forbes bought the magazine in 1986 17 On May 17 2007 the magazine published on a bimonthly basis announced that it had stopped publication at least temporarily with the April May 2007 issue 18 On October 27 2007 Edwin S Grosvenor purchased the magazine from Forbes for 500 000 in cash and 10 million in subscription liabilities 19 Grosvenor who serves as president and editor in chief is the former editor of the fine arts magazine Portfolio Grosvenor was also the editor of the literary magazine Current Books and magazines for Marriott and Hyatt Hotels He was also the CEO of KnowledgeMax Inc an online bookseller After suspending print publication in 2013 the magazine relaunched digitally in 2017 with a new website and subscriber management system 5 Contents editFor a magazine that has lasted seven decades its way of covering history has changed much over the years Each issue is still an eclectic collection of articles on the people places and events from the entire history of the United States Today there is mention of television shows and Web sites and a greater diversity of articles such as Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates recent article Growing Up Colored 20 about life as a young boy in segregated West Virginia Recent content has included a special 70th Anniversary issue on What Makes America Great Winter 2020 21 and an issue on the history of gun control with essays by historian Joseph J Ellis law professor Adam Winkler and gun rights advocate Robert A Levy 22 Some historians have criticized the magazine for what they say is a lack of seriousness Reviewing David McCullough s book on John Adams in The New Republic 23 Sean Wilentz stated that during the 1950s Bernard DeVoto s style of seriousness was eclipsed by the more journalistic and sentimentally descriptive style of American Heritage whose influence is everywhere Wilentz claimed that McCullough and film maker Ken Burns followed the American Heritage style popular history as passive nostalgic spectacle marching under the banner of narrative The magazine s editor at the time Richard Snow replied that this magazine has never taken an overly sentimentalized or simplistic view of the past and that American Heritage is a magazine addressed to a lay audience and thus it has the usual fixtures columns picture stories and so forth and a variety of topics some of greater consequence than others but that it publishes many historians whose work nobody has ever called simplistic or sentimental or undemanding 24 Numerous articles in American Heritage have later been expanded into bestselling books including Barbara W Tuchman s three part series on Gen Joseph Stilwell in 1970 beginning with A Yankee Among The War Lords 25 that was later published as Stilwell and the American Experience in China 1911 45 which won the Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction in 1972 26 Walter Lord s 1955 article Maiden Voyage The first and last trip of the unsinkable Titanic 27 that became the bestselling A Night to Remember which was made into a movie Laura Hillenbrand s 1998 article Four Good Legs Between Us 28 that became the 2001 book Seabiscuit An American Legend and the 2003 film Seabiscuit which was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture In addition to running four to six articles American Heritage s regular features include History News news and happenings in museums historic sites movies Heritage Travel guides to what to see in historic American areas Now on the Web what s being written relating to history around the Web Letters to the Editor readers letters My Brush With History readers own stories about incidents in their lives that have some interesting historical significanceOther media edit During the early 1960s American Heritage sponsored a series of popular military board games produced by the Milton Bradley Company Beginning in 1973 and presumably as part of the then current national lead up to the Bicentennial American Heritage teamed up with producer David L Wolper for a series of four hour long television specials broadcast every few months between late 1973 and early 1975 based on events and people in American history in documentary like filmed dramatizations with actors taking the roles of historic figures and key events re enacted The specials sponsored by Texaco were narrated by actor Cliff Robertson and broadcast on ABC The American Heritage Specials edit The World Turned Upside Down George Washington and the Battle of Yorktown originally broadcast November 27 1973 Lincoln Trial by Fire Abraham Lincoln George McClellan and the Civil War originally broadcast January 20 1974 The Yanks are Coming General John J Pershing and World War I originally broadcast April 22 1974 The Honorable Sam Houston Sam Houston and his failed efforts to keep Texas out of the Confederacy originally broadcast January 22 1975 29 nbsp The Philadelphia descendants of former King Joseph Napoleon featured in American Heritage 1970Editors editBruce Catton 1954 1959 30 Oliver Jensen 1959 1976 31 Alvin M Josephy Jr 1976 1978 32 Geoffrey Ward 1978 1982 33 Byron Dobell 1982 1989 34 Richard Snow 1989 2007 35 Edwin S Grosvenor 2007 present 36 Notable staff and contributors editDaniel Aaron Elie Abel Dean Acheson Stephen Ambrose Cleveland Amory Kevin Baker Bernard Bailyn Carlos Baker Russell Baker Michael Beschloss David W Blight Fergus Bordewich Alan Brinkley Douglas Brinkley Bruce Catton Sir Arthur C Clarke Henry Steele Commager Malcolm Cowley Tom D Crouch Paul Dickson John Dos Passos John Eisenhower Joseph Ellis Thomas Fleming James Thomas Flexner Eric Foner John A Garraty Henry Louis Gates Jr John Steele Gordon Annette Gordon Reed T A Heppenheimer Harold Holzer Herbert Hoover A E Dick Howard James Horn Jane Kamensky John F Kennedy Edward G Lengel John Lukacs Gerard Magliocca Pauline Maier David McCullough James M McPherson Peter S Onuf Nathaniel Philbrick David S Reynolds Jeffrey Rosen Arthur M Schlesinger Jr Peter Schweizer Robert A M Stern Jean Strouse Alan Taylor Barbara Tuchman Steven Waldman Geoffrey Ward Bernard Weisberger Gordon S Wood Joshua M ZeitzAwards editAmerican Heritage has been the finalist or winner of several National Magazine Awards especially between 1985 and 1993 1975 Finalist National Magazine Award Visual Excellence Frank H Johnson editor 37 1985 Winner National Magazine Award General Excellence Byron Dobell editor 38 1985 Winner National Magazine Award Single Topic Issue Byron Dobell editor 39 1986 Finalist National Magazine Award General Excellence Byron Dobell editor 38 1986 Finalist National Magazine Award Design Byron Dobell editor Beth Whitaker art director 38 1987 Finalist National Magazine Award General Excellence Byron Dobell editor 40 1988 Finalist National Magazine Award General Excellence Byron Dobell editor 41 1989 Winner National Magazine Award General Excellence Byron Dobell editor 42 1990 Finalist National Magazine Award Design Byron Dobell editor Theodore Kalomirakis art director 43 1990 Finalist National Magazine Award General Excellence Byron Dobell editor 44 1991 Finalist National Magazine Award General Excellence Byron Dobell editor 45 1993 Finalist National Magazine Award General Excellence Richard F Snow editor 46 1999 Finalist National Magazine Award General Excellence Richard F Snow editor 47 Samuel Eliot Morison Award edit For other awards with this name see Samuel Eliot Morison Award disambiguation In 1976 the American Heritage Publishing Company founded and sponsored an award called the Samuel Eliot Morison Award named for the historian Samuel Eliot Morison It had the goal of annually honoring an American author whose work shows that good history is literature as well as high scholarship 48 The first award was presented on September 28 1977 by Henry A Kissinger at the Pierpont Morgan Library valued at 5 000 48 It ran for two years 1976 Joseph P Lash Roosevelt and Churchill 1939 1941 The Partnership That Saved the West 48 1977 David McCullough The Path Between the Seas The Creation of the Panama Canal 1870 1914 49 See also editThe American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language American Heritage of Invention amp TechnologyReferences edit Grosvenor Edwin S Archived 2009 09 16 at the Wayback Machine Editor s Letter American Heritage Winter 2008 Rich Motoko October 24 2007 American Heritage is Bought The New York Times 1 American Heritage Magazine Temporarily Suspends Publication History News Network May 2 2013 American Heritage Returns in Digital Format PRNewswire com PR Newswire a b c Reynolds Mark June 2017 Open configuration options American Heritage is Back American Heritage Magazine 63 1 AMERICAN HERITAGE www americanheritage com Saving American Heritage the Famed Magazine of History Kickstarter com Retrieved December 18 2016 Winter 2020 Issue American Heritage Magazine 64 1 Reynolds Mark C November December 2004 Golden Anniversary American Heritage American Heritage Publishing 55 6 Retrieved January 22 2012 Bio and Essays of Bruce Catton American Heritage Magazine Retrieved January 27 2020 Blight David Bruce Catton American Heritage Magazine 62 1 Spring 2012 Jensen Oliver Working with Bruce Catton American Heritage Magazine 30 2 February March 1979 David McCullough Biography American Academy of Achievement Archived from the original on May 17 2008 Retrieved January 22 2013 Brief biography and list of American Heritage articles by David McCullough Run For Your Lives AMERICAN HERITAGE www americanheritage com Christianson Elin B 1972 Mergers in the Publishing Industry 1958 1970 The Journal of Library History 7 1 5 32 ISSN 0022 2259 JSTOR 25540337 Retrieved March 6 2021 a b Forbes Buys American Heritage Magazine AP NEWS Retrieved March 6 2021 McGrath Charles May 17 2007 Magazine Suspends Its Run in History The New York Times Retrieved March 8 2008 Rich Motoko October 24 2007 American Heritage Is Bought The New York Times Retrieved March 8 2008 Growing Up Colored AMERICAN HERITAGE www americanheritage com American Heritage Winter 2020 American Heritage 64 1 Grosvenor Edwin September 2019 Introduction A Special Issue on the Right to Bear Arms American Heritage 64 4 Retrieved January 25 2020 Wilentz Sean America Made Easy McCullough Adams and the decline of popular history The New Republic Retrieved January 22 2013 Snow Richard Has American Heritage Gone Soft History News Network Archived from the original on August 27 2013 Retrieved January 22 2013 A Yankee Among The War Lords AMERICAN HERITAGE www americanheritage com Pulitzer Prizes for 1972 www pulitzer org Maiden Voyage AMERICAN HERITAGE www americanheritage com Four Good Legs Between Us AMERICAN HERITAGE www americanheritage com THE AMERICAN HERITAGE SPECIALS David L Wolper www davidlwolper com Retrieved September 2 2021 Catton Bruce Bio and article list American Heritage Retrieved April 6 2013 Jensen Oliver Bio and article list American Heritage Retrieved April 6 2013 Josephy Alvin Bio and article list American Heritage Retrieved April 6 2013 Ward Geoffrey Bio and article list American Heritage Retrieved April 6 2013 Dobell Byron Bio and article list American Heritage Retrieved April 6 2013 Snow Richard Bio and article list American Heritage Retrieved April 6 2013 Grosvenor Edwin Bio and article list American Heritage Retrieved April 6 2013 Id American Society of Magazine Editors www Magazine org Archived 2019 12 30 at the Wayback Machine entire year cited a b c Id For the April May June July and December issues Id For A Medical Picture of the United States October November issue Id For the August September October November and December issues Id For the July August November December and issues Id For the May June September October and November issues Id For the February March and July August issues Id For the March May June and December issues Id For the February May June and September issues Id For the February March May June and December issues Id For the May June November and December issues a b c Albin Krebs September 29 1977 Notes on People The New York Times Retrieved December 23 2017 Samuel Eliot Morison Award 1978 American Heritage 29 6 October 1978 Retrieved December 23 2017 External links editOfficial website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American Heritage magazine amp oldid 1146953048, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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