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The Century Magazine

The Century Magazine was an illustrated monthly magazine first published in the United States in 1881 by The Century Company of New York City, which had been bought in that year by Roswell Smith and renamed by him after the Century Association. It was the successor of Scribner's Monthly Magazine. It was merged into The Forum in 1930.

The Century Magazine
First issue1881
Final issue1930
CompanyThe Century Company
CountryUnited States
Based inNew York City
LanguageEnglish

History edit

The initial editor was to have been Scribner's editor and co-owner Josiah G. Holland, but he died prior to the appearance of the first issue. He was succeeded by Richard Watson Gilder, the managing editor of Scribner's, who would go on to helm The Century for 28 years. Gilder largely continued the mixture of literature, history, current events, and high-quality illustrations that Holland had used at Scribner's. [1] The magazine was very successful during the 19th century, most notably for a series of articles about the American Civil War which ran for three years during the 1880s. It included reminiscences of 230 participants from all ranks of the service on both sides of the conflict.[2] According to an author writing in The New York Times, the publication of The Century "made New-York, instead of London, the centre of the illustrated periodicals published in the English language…"[3] The magazine was also a notable publisher of fiction, presenting excerpts of Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn in 1884 and 1885 and Henry James' The Bostonians.[4][5][6]

Upon Gilder's death in 1909, Robert Underwood Johnson replaced him as editor. According to Arthur John, the magazine's "later history was marked by sudden shifts in content, format, and editorial direction."[7] Glenn Frank was editor from 1921 to 1925, a period during which The Century was known for its editorials on current events and began to cut back on illustrations, which were completely eliminated after Frank left the magazine. In 1929, due to competition from cheaper magazines and newspapers, The Century became a quarterly, and in 1930 it was merged with The Forum.[2] At the time it folded, The Century had 20,000 subscribers, less than a tenth of its peak circulation of the late nineteenth century.[7] Scribner's Monthly Magazine, the periodical that became The Century in 1881, should not be confused with the Scribner's Magazine that began publication in 1887.[8]

The noted critic and editor Frank Crowninshield briefly served as the magazine's art editor.

Philosophy and political positions edit

The tone and content of The Century changed over its long history. It began as an Evangelical Christian publication, but over time began to speak to a more general educated audience as it developed into the largest periodical in the country.

Religion edit

Novelist and poet Josiah G. Holland was one of the three original founders of Scribner's Monthly and wrote regular editorials for the periodical, setting the tone for the magazine's content. As Holland was deeply religious, Scribner's to a great extent reflected the views and concerns of the Evangelical Christian community.[7] While hostile towards sectarianism within Protestantism, Scribner's initially took a strong stand against both Catholicism and those who doubted the divinity of Christ. In the first issue, under the heading "Papa and the Dogma", Holland claimed that it was freedom that made the Protestant nations of Europe strong while their Catholic neighbors were, as a result of their religion, in a state of decay.[9] Less than one year later, the magazine attacked the skepticism of Henry David Thoreau.[10] Mormon polygamy was also a frequent target. One contributor traveled to Utah to observe the Mormon settlement there and argued that the new sect would have to end its practice of plural marriage if it were to survive and American control could be exercised over the western territories.[11]

At the same time, Scribner's Monthly, being non-dogmatic in its Protestantism, expressed little hostility towards modern science. For example, a three-part series discussed how believing Christians should meet the intellectual challenges of religious skepticism,[12] and in 1874 two writers engaged one another in a debate over whether Christians should attempt to prove the divinity of Christ through science.[13]

By the end of the 1870s, however, Scribner's had departed from its original Evangelical orientation. An April 1879 editorial declared all seekers of truth, whether believing Christians or not, to be allies, regarding this new view as simply an application of the Golden Rule. Catholics were said to have just as much to teach Protestants as Protestants had to teach Catholics.[14] After the magazine became The Century in 1881, it continued to hold onto this secular outlook under Gilder. The break with the past was reflected in the magazine's changing treatment of the question of evolution. In 1875, Scribner's argued that there was insufficient evidence to conclude that Darwinism was true and attributed its wide acceptance to a contemporary bias towards novel ideas, even though the author did not on principle reject the idea that proof could be forthcoming.[15] Upon the death of Charles Darwin in 1883, however, The Century published a laudatory tribute to the scientist written by Alfred Wallace.[16] The magazine remained secular into its later days, in 1923 criticizing the "poisonous dogmatism" of the thought of William Jennings Bryan and what the magazine saw as his religious fundamentalism.[17][18] Over the years, The Century published works by a large number of writers who were agnostics or atheists, including famous skeptic Bertrand Russell.[19][20]

American nationalism edit

From the very beginning of his tenure as editor in 1881 to his death in 1909, The Century reflected the ideals of Gilder.[7] He sought to create and help shape a "refined" American high culture, often contributing his own poetry to that end[21][22][23] Everything from its historical memoirs to political commentary reflected the influence of nineteenth century romanticism.[citation needed]

An unsigned May 1885 editorial expressed pride over the belief of the staff that the periodical had achieved wide circulation while remaining a quality product.[24] This reflected the view that as a general matter there was usually a tradeoff between quality and quantity. The Century was generally seen as a conservative magazine and hoped to promote reconciliation between the North and South after the trauma of the Civil War. According to J. Arthur Bond, the magazine was instrumental in creating and shaping post-war American nationalism.[21] In the words of one contemporary, Gilder's "spirited and tireless endeavor [ ] was to give the organic life of the American people purity of character and nobility of expression."[25] During his tenure as editor, he promoted patriotism and the glorification of American historical figures. Seeing itself as having an "elevating" mission, its "mixture of nationalism and cultural advocacy informed even the most 'ordinary' of the magazine's articles."[21] Often touching on many of these themes, Theodore Roosevelt wrote as a regular contributor to the magazine over three decades, a span which included one article he published while serving as President.[26][27][28] Gilder developed relationships with several contemporary prominent figures, including a close friendship with Grover Cleveland which he wrote about upon the death of the former president.[29] It has been argued that the decline in the popularity of the magazine from the 1890s on was connected to the general triumph of more egalitarian ideologies and the collapse of nineteenth century romanticism and idealism.[citation needed]

Concerns over national unity and the preservation of traditional American culture were reflected in the magazine's writings on immigration. An 1884 article discussed the composition and geographical distribution of immigrant populations, and expressed optimism over the prospect of the newer Americans assimilating into the larger population. At the same time, the article warned that measures should be taken against potential threats to national unity through fractionalization.[30] As immigration increased over the next few decades, however, The Century became more alarmed over its effects on the future of the country, citing concerns over, among other matters, crime, illiteracy, and the overpopulation of cities.[31][32] In 1904, Senator Henry Cabot Lodge took to the pages of the magazine to argue for the importance of keeping out "undesirable" immigrants.[33] Twenty years later, editor Glenn Frank attacked the Ku Klux Klan and other nativists, but nonetheless wrote that "[t]he hour for very severe restrictions on immigration has come…"[34] The same author returned to some of the same themes when he again attacked the KKK several months later for both its religious and racial doctrines.[18]

Reconstruction and civil rights edit

 
D. R. Miller's "War Diary" (The Century, 1886) attracted a great deal of attention.[35]

In the immediate post-Reconstruction era, contributors to The Century debated what should be done about the postwar South and the newly free slaves, generally advocating for amicable relations between the regions and national unity. In 1873 and 1874, Scribner's ran a number of articles under the title "The Great South," a series which lasted fourteen issues. Based on Edward King's travels, the author's accounts generally portrayed the region in a sympathetic light and the series was warmly received by Southerners.[36][37] In 1876, Scribner's published a eulogy to Robert E. Lee, along with an editorial postscript praising the spirit of "sectional friendliness" of the piece.[38][i]

On the question of the freedmen, a wide variety of contemporary views were represented. Writing for Scribner's in 1874, one author argued that blacks were unfit to be schooled with white children.[39] On the other hand, an 1885 article by George W. Cable despaired over what he saw as the failure to protect the rights of southern blacks after the Civil War and argued that this was the result of the former confederate states evading federal law.[40] Henry W. Grady, responding a few months later, disputed the earlier author's characterization of the situation, claiming that while legal rights had been granted, southern whites would never accept social integration between the races.[41] Cable's criticisms of the ex-Confederacy also drew a rebuke by Robert Lewis Dabney.[42]

Even when sympathetic to the cause of the newly freed slaves, writers who argued for helping them usually did so on paternalistic grounds. Bishop T. U. Dudley, for example, expressed doubt that much could be done to elevate the status of American blacks, but argued that Christian principles required helping them to the greatest extent possible.[43]

The question of how much government policy could do to improve the circumstances of the former slaves continued to be debated over the decades. By the turn of the century, the debates were conducted in the language of science. Robert Bennett Bean, a medical doctor, published a 1906 article arguing that social policy should be based on realistic assessments of the relative mental capacities of blacks and whites.[44] He claimed that blacks had, on average, smaller brains than Asians or Caucasians, a finding he attributed to heredity. Similarly, Charles Francis Adams Jr. spent two years in Egypt and the Sudan and referenced his experiences to argue in 1906 that the unfortunate circumstances of American blacks were mainly due to inherently low capabilities rather than history.[45] In the same issue, however, the editors felt it necessary to mention the dissenting view of Franz Boas, who had painted a more optimistic picture of the potential of Africans in a different periodical two years earlier.[46]

Booker T. Washington contributed four articles to the magazine in the first decade of the twentieth century, including one on "Heroes in Black Skins."[47] and another that discussed efforts of blacks to become homeowners.[48] A 1903 editorial sang the praises of Washington, calling him the "Moses of his people" and contrasting him favorably with W.E.B. Du Bois.[49]

Reflecting the magazine's later shift leftward, Du Bois himself contributed an article to The Century in 1923.[50] Several editorials around that time criticized the revived Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s. Frank Tannenbaum, for example, wrote that the Klan of the Reconstruction era "was a reflex of the vindictiveness of Northern politicians and of the unscrupulous carpet-baggers who swooped down upon the South as a vulture upon a wounded and stricken victim."[51][ii] But the contemporary Klan, according to Tannenbaum, had no such justification and simply reflected fears of change and other pathologies of segments of the white population.[51]

Progressive causes edit

The magazine championed several Progressive causes popular in its time. Among these were several civil service reforms including competitive examinations for public offices, which its writers saw as a way to promote good governance and reduce class privilege.[52] Similarly, in 1894 Henry Cabot Lodge attacked the "un-American" practice of patronage.[53] The Century also took up some of the environmental causes of its day, expressing satisfaction over the first attempts by the federal government to preserve the nation's forests,[54] and in its later days supported women's suffrage.[55] Finally, the magazine occasionally published articles in favor of eugenics. Frank, for example, while disparaging the racism of the KKK, encouraged what he called the better individuals of every race to use the tools of modern science to focus on improving the genetic quality of all populations.[18]

Socialism and the labor movement edit

Scribner's generally defended the principles of classical economics and opposed socialism. William Graham Sumner wrote an article for the magazine in this vein praising traditional capitalist virtues such as self-reliance and individualism and attributing poverty to laziness and vice.[56] On the other hand, Holland occasionally directed his ire towards "soulless" corporations that he accused of exploiting workers.[57] In the view of the magazine, both capitalists and workers had moral obligations.

In its early days, The Century tended to adopt the same views as its predecessor. It defended capitalism, but refrained from unreflectively denouncing all forms of regulation. For example, an 1886 article opposed socialism but argued that in the future there would be more need for government activism than there had been in the past.[58] Over the next few decades, The Century published several forceful denunciations of socialist theories and practice.[59] In the 1890s Gilder and his editors took the position that labor unions were a foreign imposition, one of the many negative consequences of a relatively open immigration policy.[60] Similarly, socialism was said to punish success, a concept that was anathema to the philosophy of his magazine.

Despite its conservative leanings, the magazine was open to dissenting views on economic issues in a way that it was not on deeper philosophical matters. The March 1904 issue allowed workers to publish contributions making the case for labor unions as appropriate checks on big business.[61] Two years later, an editorial praised some of the accomplishments of the labor movement, while still maintaining that it needed to be reformed.[62]

In its later years, after the Russian Revolution had brought the issue to the attention of the public, The Century opposed the spread of Communism. Employing Nietzschean terminology, Lothrop Stoddard in 1919 called Bolshevism "the heresy of the Underman," in contrast to Prussianism, the "heresy of the Overman," which had been defeated in the First World War.[63] He went on to argue that the Bolshevik Revolution had only been the local manifestation of a phenomenon that would have to be defeated worldwide and that Vladimir Lenin was "a modern Jenghiz Khan plotting the plunder of a world."

Turn-of-the-20th-century decline edit

While remaining extremely influential and well-regarded among the American elite, the popularity of The Century began to decline in the 1890s and never regained the prominence it had enjoyed as the leading American periodical of the late nineteenth century. By 1900, it had about 125,000 subscribers, half of the circulation it had in the 1880s. The Century suffered due to competition from other cheaper magazines, many of which Gilder and his staff considered vulgar.[7]

Although Gilder had been a zealous reformer, as a conservative in politics and values he never embraced the Progressive movement. As its circulation declined, the magazine took a more pessimistic tone and began to write less and less about current events. An 1898 editorial criticized "the profusion in the literary and pictorial 'output' which has a tendency to befog the intellect and lower the standards of taste."[64] A few months later the magazine lamented that the "age of reflection" had given way to the "age of agitation" spread by "[f]ast trains and cheap print…"[65] Similarly, a 1902 editorial argued that divorce was a threat to civilization, and nothing would be more likely to cure this ill than literature "celebrating the sanctive and ever-lasting virtues of self-control, forbearance, devotion, and honor."[66] Gilder characteristically saw a connection between a decline in morals and contemporary social problems and believed, conversely, that ennobling art could be a solution.

Even in an artistic sense, The Century of the late nineteenth century was slow to adapt to the times. In 1889, after much resistance it became the last major periodical to include photographic illustrations.[7] The editors remained attached to painted drawings, which The Century had become renowned for. In the pages of the magazine Gilder explained this preference by complaining of the trend toward the "minute and literal representation of the visible world" seen in photography, as opposed to painting, which preserved only that which deserved to be recorded for posterity.[67] He went on to argue that the spread of printing and writing would have a similar vulgarizing and cheapening effect on the written word.[67]

Thus, the magazine maintained a great deal of self-awareness about the causes of its declining influence. According to one modern author, in the first decade of the twentieth century, Gilder and the other editors "continued to bear aloft the flame of the ideal" in a changing era and gave "no thought of cheapening the magazine to slow the steady drifting away of subscribers."[7] After Gilder's death in 1909, The Century survived another two decades, but never regained its position as the leading American periodical.

Later years, 1909-1930 edit

Robert Underwood Johnson was editor of The Century from Gilder's death in 1909 until his resignation in 1913.[68] The 1910s were marked by financial difficulties and a further decline, as the magazine competed with other periodicals of both similar and lesser quality. The Century still attracted some of the best fiction authors of the day, however. H.G. Wells' "prophetic trilogy" The World Set Free was serialized in the magazine in the first three issues of 1914.[69][70][71]

Glenn Frank became editor of The Century in 1921, until he left this position in 1925 to become president of the University of Wisconsin–Madison.[72] He wrote a series of editorials in which he laid out his thoughts on the future of Western civilization. The editorials used colorful language and usually stressed the idea that contemporary social problems had created a need for social engineering and government activism in both domestic and international affairs. For example, in 1923, Frank wrote that Senator Lodge and his isolationist supporters were "the amoeba of politics, strange survivals from a prehistoric era of the lowest form of political intelligence."[20] He later argued for what he called "an intelligently flexible conservatism."[73] While warning of what he referred to as the dangers of reactionaries on the right and radicals on the left, Frank was also known for expressing a great deal of optimism over the prospect of using the social sciences to improve human affairs.[74] This kind of enthusiasm for reform through science rather than moral progress was a noticeable break from the philosophy of the magazine during the eras of Holland and Gilder.

Other writers stressed similar themes throughout the Frank era. Reflecting the magazine's tilt to the left, a 1924 article called for "industrial democracy" to be adopted in American factories.[75] Even the magazine's opposition to socialism was tempered, with Benjamin Stolberg arguing that the Red Scare had been an overreaction and that the Bolshevik threat to the United States had failed to materialize.[76] The leftward shift during this time was not total, however, and, despite the tone that Frank's editorials gave to the magazine, The Century remained open to a wide variety of views. Noted conservative G.K. Chesterton, for example, contributed an essay that was highly critical of contemporary art.[77]

Frank was succeeded in 1925 by Hewitt H. Howland, who remained as editor until the magazine merged with The Forum in 1930.[68]

Historical memoirs and major reporting edit

Civil War series edit

In 1877, Scribner's published a series of short accounts from those who took part in the Battle of Mobile Bay.[78] The parent publishing house released a series of books, The Army in the Civil War, in 13 volumes penned by U.S. Army veterans who had participated in the operations that they wrote about. This series became a best-seller.[79] The Century continued this kind of historical reporting with Alexander R. Boteler's first-person account of John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry it published in 1883, followed in the same issue by a rejoinder from Frank B. Sanborn, a self-described "radical abolitionist" who had helped finance the mission.[80][81]

Gilder, himself a Union veteran, soon began regularly running the reflections of major Civil War figures. Originally planned to run for twelve months, the series drew so much interest that it lasted for three years and eventually led to a four-volume book.[82][83][84][85] Among the contributors to the series were Union generals Ulysses S. Grant, William Tecumseh Sherman, Philip Sheridan, and George B. McClellan.[86][87][88] As The Century tried to avoid bias and promote American unity, it also sought out and accepted accounts from those on the Confederate side, including the generals James Longstreet and P. G. T. Beauregard[89][90] The contributions led readers who had served in the war to submit unsolicited recollections and previously unpublished documents to the magazine, in addition to criticisms and rebuttals of published pieces. These submissions were so numerous that in 1885 The Century began to include them in a section titled "Memoranda on the Civil War."[91] The magazine had in effect become a forum for those who had fought each other in battle two decades earlier. In the pages of The Century, they could discuss their battles and mutually celebrate the bravery and heroism of both sides.

The idea for soliciting recollections of the Civil War originally came from assistant editor Clarence Buel, who later wrote of the difficulties he had in going about convincing former military leaders to share their experiences.[92] In fact, Grant would not agree to contribute to the series until the former general and president had run into financial difficulties. The editors became engrossed in the Civil War project, and sometimes took tours of the famous battle sites, bringing along commanders to explain their exploits and artists to draw sketches of the scenes for the magazine.[7] The Century office became a regular meeting place for former comrades and adversaries, as reflected in a letter an excited Gilder sent to his wife exclaiming "Grant one day and Beauregard the next!"[7]

Before the publication of the series, Sherman was the only major figure of the war who had written a first-person account. Afterwards, the works that Grant, Sheridan, and McClellan contributed to The Century led to books by each of those generals.

As a result of the Civil War recollections, the number of subscribers to the magazine jumped to 250,000, a then unprecedented number for a magazine of its kind.[7] Edward Weeks wrote that even by 1950 no "quality magazine" had ever had as many subscribers as The Century did in the 1880s, even though by that time the reading public had tripled in size. As of 1892, it was also the most widely circulated periodical of its price in England, with 20,000 subscribers.[3]

Lincoln biography edit

The Century also acquired the rights to publish excerpts from the manuscript of a biography of President Abraham Lincoln written by his former secretaries John Hay and John G. Nicolay. The result was a series titled Abraham Lincoln: A History, which ran over three years.[93][94][95] Decades later, The Century returned to Abraham Lincoln as a symbol of the republic's lost virtue. The February 1909 issue had a drawing of Lincoln on its cover and included twenty-two portraits of the former president within its pages along with pictures of his life mask and a cast of his hands.[96] Gilder's contribution to the issue, "Lincoln the Leader", held the subject up as an ideal for modern statesmen to emulate.[97]

Russian dissidents edit

In the late 1880s, George Kennan traveled to Russia and wrote a series of reports on the revolutionaries who had opposed Tsar Alexander II and been sent to prisons in Siberia.[98] Seeing him as a writer sympathetic to the autocratic regime and hostile towards its opponents, the Russian government granted Kennan relative freedom to travel around the country. During his travels, however, the author changed his mind and wrote accounts that were highly critical of the regime. His reports included detailed illustrations of the suffering of those who suffered on account of their opposition to the government. In one article, Kennan told the story of how when the decision to assassinate the Tsar was made, 47 individuals volunteered to carry out the mission. Arguing that individuals fighting for civil liberties were rarely as fanatical as the Russian revolutionaries, Kennan wrote that he believed that it was the treatment of prisoners that led to such stringent opposition to the government.[99] He noted that "playing upon the deepest and most intense of human emotions as a means of extorting information from unwilling witnesses" was routine in prisons holding political offenders. For example, a young woman was led to incriminate her loved ones by being told that they had already confessed. Sometimes, a revolutionary would be told that he was going to meet his mother, taken to her, and then stopped and later informed that he would only see her if he answered questions about his past activities. A twenty-two-year-old mother was falsely led to believe that if she did not cooperate with the authorities her infant could be taken from her. The author also reported that it was common practice for prisoners to be left in solitary confinement for years while government officials searched the empire for evidence with which the offenders could be charged.[99] Kennan came to see himself as a voice for the Russian liberals and was subsequently banned from the country. His writings on Russia were eventually published in a two-volume book.[100] A representative of the Russian government replied to Kennan's arguments in The Century in 1893.[101] and the magazine subsequently published a rebuttal by the author.[102]

Kennan's writings on Russia and his subsequent activism were perhaps the main causes behind the rise of anti-Tsar sentiment and sympathy for the revolutionary cause among late nineteenth-century American elites.[103] In addition to publishing magazine articles and books, the author also began to give popular lectures on the subject, including dozens of speeches in Chicago, New York City, and Boston. In order to make an impression on the crowd, Kennan would often appear in front of them in the ragged clothes and shackles of a Russian prisoner. This advocacy inspired the formation of a number of American organizations that took up the cause of the exiles, the most prominent of them being the Society of Friends of Russian Freedom.

Other histories and recollections edit

In the early 1900s, The Century continued to publish the writings of some of the most famous historians of the era along with first-person accounts of those who had worked in the highest levels of government.

Justin Harvey Smith published four articles on the American Revolution in The Century in 1902 and 1903.[104] The next year, S. Weir Mitchell contributed a series on the life of George Washington as a young man.[105][106]

 
1907 advertisement for The Century promoting writings by President Roosevelt and then Secretary of War William Taft

In addition to Theodore Roosevelt, The Century claimed a handful of other presidents as contributors. Grover Cleveland provided an account of perhaps the tensest moment of his two presidential administrations, the 1895 Venezuela border controversy with Britain.[107] Andrew D. White contributed a series titled "Chapters from My Diplomatic Life" on his experiences serving in Germany and Russia.[108] In September 1901, Woodrow Wilson wrote "Edmund Burke and the French Revolution" while still a professor at Princeton.[109] In 1907 future President William Howard Taft wrote about the Panama Canal while serving as Secretary of War.

Over the years, The Century also published first person accounts of individuals who had worked for various presidents. Col. William H. Cook, a bodyguard who served for over 50 years in the White House, shared his memories of the administrations of Andrew Johnson and Rutherford B. Hayes.[110][111] Historian James Ford Rhodes also contributed an article on the Hayes Administration, which the editors called a kind of postscript to the last-published volume of his history of the United States.[112]

Science edit

In its early years, Scribner's Monthly published a regular feature titled "Nature and Science."[113][114] Remaining consistent with its broad mission to educate the public, The Century published articles by some of the most prominent scientists and inventors of the day. Thomas Edison contributed to a symposium on roentgen rays and also once sat for an interview with the magazine.[115][116] In the June 1900 issue, Nikola Tesla contributed a long article on "the problem of increasing human energy."[117] In a piece that combined the magazine's interests in political and scientific issues, geneticist and Marxist J.B.S. Haldane published a 1923 article on the societal implications of technological progress.[118]

Literature and the arts edit

Gilder has been called the "literary arbiter of his time."[119] Support for artistic excellence reflected his belief in the importance of self-improvement and the celebration of high standards.[60] The works that appeared in his time also reflected the magazine's moralism, as they banned references to sex, vulgarity, and insults to Christianity.[60]

The Century published the works of a number of major literary figures. In addition to the aforementioned works of Mark Twain and Henry James, pulp magazine author Ellis Parker Butler contributed 30 stories, articles and poems to the magazine between 1896 and 1913, including "My Cyclone-proof House", which appeared in the November 1896 issue. This short story was Butler's first piece published in a major magazine. His works were illustrated by such famous artists as Jay Hambidge, May Wilson Preston, Florence Scovel Shinn, Frederic Dorr Steele, and Frederic R. Gruger. The Century published a full-color portrait of Butler (with his wife Ada and daughter Elsie) in the December 1909 issue. The portrait was drawn by family friend Ernest L. Blumenschein. The magazine also published the work of Jack London[120] and the first-person account and ink drawings from Tierra del Fuego of American painter Rockwell Kent.[121]

Noted engraver Alexander Wilson Drake was a long-time contributor to both The Century Magazine and its earlier incarnation as Scribner's Monthly. The Century Company produced a memorial edition of Alexander Wilson Drake's fiction and art titled Three Midnight Stories in 1916. The Century also employed many notable editorial cartoonists, including Oscar Cesare.

Bohemian composer Antonín Dvořák was another noted contributor to The Century Magazine, writing during his stay at the National Conservatory in New York in the 1890s. In 1894, The Century Magazine published his fine tribute to fellow composer Franz Schubert.[122]

During the 1900s and 1910s the Anglo-Canadian poet, story writer and essayist Marjorie Pickthall was a regular contributor to The Century Magazine.[123]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ The Lost Cause Mythology had already taken root in American letters as evidenced by the positive eulogy just eleven years after the end of the Rebellion.
  2. ^ Again, even Tannenbaum was influenced by Confederate apologists negative portrayal of reconstruction.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Cambridge History English American Lit., XIX. Scribner's Monthly; The Century Magazine.
  2. ^ a b New York Public Library, Century Company Records.
  3. ^ a b NYT, "English View of Roswell Smith," 12 June 1892.
  4. ^ James,"The Bostonians," The Century, May 1885, pp. 58–66.
  5. ^ Twain, "Jim's Investments and King Sollermun," The Century, January 1885, pp. 456–458.
  6. ^ Railton, Prepublishing Huck, (1996).
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j John (1981), pp. ix–xii, 24, 126–132, 233–239, 270–271.
  8. ^ Allen, "Fifty Years of Scribner's Magazine," Scribner's Magazine, January 1937, pp. 19–22.
  9. ^ "Topics of the Time," Holland (ed.), Scribner's Monthly, November 1870, p. 105–108.
  10. ^ "Topics of the Time," Holland (ed.), Scribner's Monthly, July 1871, pp. 316–320.
  11. ^ Steeley, "The Mormons and Their Religion," Scribner's Monthly, February 1872, pp. 396–407.
  12. ^ Blauvelt, "Modern Skepticism," Scribner's Monthly, October 1873, pp. 725–738.
  13. ^ Atwater, "Dr. Blauvelt's 'Notum Orangum,'" Scribner's Monthly, February 1874, pp. 478–482.
  14. ^ "Topics of the Time," Holland (ed.), Scribner's Monthly, April 1879, pp. 899–902.
  15. ^ Drury, "Darwinism," Scribner's Monthly, July 1875, pp. 348–360.
  16. ^ Wallace, "The Debt of Science to Darwin," The Century, January 1883, pp. 420–432.
  17. ^ Frank, "William Jennings Bryan," The Century, September 1923, pp. 793–802.
  18. ^ a b c Frank,"Christianity and Racialism," The Century, December 1924, pp. 277–284.
  19. ^ Russell, "Where Is Industrialism Going?," The Century, November 1923, pp. 141–149.
  20. ^ a b Frank,"The Wages of Complexity," The Century, December 1923, pp. 316–319.
  21. ^ a b c & Bond, "Applying the standards...in the Century Magazine," American Periodicals, April 1999, pp. 55–73.
  22. ^ Gilder,"Doubt," The Century, December 1896, p. 286.
  23. ^ Gilder,"The Heroic Age," The Century, November 1896, p. 38.
  24. ^ "Topics of the Time," Gilder (ed.), The Century, May 1885, pp. 156–157.
  25. ^ Mabie, "Richard Watson Gilder. An Appreciation," The Bookman, January 1910, pp. 488–489.
  26. ^ Roosevelt, "The Ancient Irish Sages," The Century, January 1907, pp. 327–337.
  27. ^ Roosevelt, "Military Preparedness and Unpreparedness," The Century, November 1899, pp. 149–153.
  28. ^ Roosevelt, "Ranch Life in the Far West," The Century, February 1888, pp. 495–510.
  29. ^ Gilder,"Grover Cleveland: Conversations-Letters," The Century, October 1909, p. 846–860.
  30. ^ Chamberlin, "The Foreign Elements in our Population," The Century, September 1884, p. 761–770.
  31. ^ Ross, "American and Immigrant Blood," The Century, December 1913, p. 225–232.
  32. ^ Sargent, "Immigration," The Century, January 1904, p. 470–472.
  33. ^ Lodge, "A Million Immigrants a Year," The Century, January 1904, p. 466–469.
  34. ^ Frank,"A Sensible Immigration Policy," The Century, May 1924, pp. 135–139.
  35. ^ Willard, Frances Elizabeth; Livermore, Mary Ashton Rice (1893). "MILLER, Mrs. Dora Richards". A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life. Charles Wells Moulton. pp. 504–05. Retrieved 22 March 2024.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  36. ^ King, "A Ramble in Virginia," Scribner's Monthly, April 1874, pp. 645–673.
  37. ^ King, "Old and New Louisiana," Scribner's Monthly, April 1874, pp. 129–159.
  38. ^ Jones,"A Piece of Secret History," Scribner's Monthly, February 1876, pp. 519–521.
  39. ^ Ruffner,"The Co-Education of the White and Colored Races," Scribner's Monthly, May 1874, pp. 86–89.
  40. ^ Chamberlin, "The Freedman's Case in Equity," The Century, January 1885, pp. 409–418.
  41. ^ Grady,"In Plain Black and White," The Century, April 1885, pp. 909–917.
  42. ^ Dabney, "George W. Cable in The Century Magazine," Southern Historical Society Papers, May 1885, pp. 148–153.
  43. ^ Dudley, "How Shall We Help the Negro?," The Century, June 1885, pp. 273–279.
  44. ^ Bean, "The Negro Brain, with Diagrams," The Century, September 1906, pp. 778–784.
  45. ^ Adams, "Reflex Light from Africa," The Century, May 1906, pp. 156–157.
  46. ^ "Topics of the Time," Boas, Gilder (ed.), The Century, May 1904, pp. 156–157.
  47. ^ Washington, "Heroes in Black Skins," The Century, September 1903, pp. 724–729.
  48. ^ Washington, "Negro Homes," The Century, May 1908, pp. 71–79.
  49. ^ "Topics of the Time," Gilder (ed.), The Century, September 1903, pp. 796–797.
  50. ^ DuBois, "Back to Africa," The Century, February 1923, pp. 539–548.
  51. ^ a b Tannenbaum, "The Ku Klux Klan," The Century, April 1923, pp. 873–882.
  52. ^ "Topics of the Time," Gilder (ed.), The Century, August 1884, pp. 627–628.
  53. ^ Lodge, "Why Patronage in Offices is Un-American," The Century, October 1890, pp. 837–843.
  54. ^ Scidmore, "Our New National Forest Reserves," The Century, September 1893, pp. 792–796.
  55. ^ Fraser, "What Came of Votes for Women," The Century, May 1926, pp. 48–56.
  56. ^ Sumner, "Socialism," Scribner's Monthly, October 1878, pp. 887–892.
  57. ^ "Topics of the Time," Holland (ed.), Scribner's Monthly, October 1878, pp. 894–896.
  58. ^ Gladden, "The Strength and Weakness of Socialism," The Century, March 1886, p. 737–748.
  59. ^ Miller, "Why Socialism Is Impracticable," The Century, April 1910, p. 903–908.
  60. ^ a b c Tomsich (1971), pp. 4–6, 105–106, 121–122.
  61. ^ "Topics of the Time," Gilder (ed.), The Century, March 1904, pp. 790–799.
  62. ^ "Topics of the Time," Gilder (ed.), The Century, October 1906, pp. 958–959.
  63. ^ Stoddard, "Bolshevism: The Heresy of the Underman," The Century, June 1919, pp. 237–240.
  64. ^ "Topics of the Time," Gilder (ed.), The Century, March 1898, p. 789.
  65. ^ "Topics of the Time," Gilder (ed.), The Century, May 1898, pp. 152–153.
  66. ^ "Topics of the Time," Gilder (ed.), The Century, June 1902, pp. 320–321.
  67. ^ a b "Topics of the Time," Gilder (ed.), The Century, February 1897, pp. 634–635.
  68. ^ a b Chew (1950), pp. 122–131.
  69. ^ Wells, "The World Set Free, Pt 1" The Century, January 1914, pp. 697–711.
  70. ^ Wells, "The World Set Free, Pt 2-The Last War in the World" The Century, February 1914, pp. 566–580.
  71. ^ Wells, "The World Set Free, Pt 3-The Trap to Catch the Sun" The Century, March 1914, pp. 331–344.
  72. ^ Larsen, "How Glenn Frank Became President of the University of Wisconsin" Wisconsin Magazine of History, March 1963, pp. 197–205.
  73. ^ Frank,"The Balance Sheet of Civilization," The Century, January 1925, pp. 422–428.
  74. ^ Stouffer, "Some Observations on Study Design," American Journal of Sociology, January 1950, pp. 355–361.
  75. ^ Myers,"Democracy in American Factories," The Century, May 1924, pp. 101–114.
  76. ^ Stolberg,"The Peter Mans of Communism," The Century, June 1925, pp. 219–227.
  77. ^ Chesterton,"Are Artists Going Mad?," The Century, December 1922, pp. 271–278.
  78. ^ Kinney, "Farragut in Mobile Bay," Scribner's Monthly, February 1877, pp. 539–544.
  79. ^ Nicolay (1885), pp. 1–252; Force (1885), pp. 1–236; Webb (1885), pp. 1–258; Ropes (1885), pp. 1–266; Palfrey (1885), pp. 1–260; Doubleday (1885), pp. 1–278; Cist (1885), pp. 1–322; Greene (1885), pp. 1–314; Cox (1885a), pp. 1–306; Cox (1885b), pp. 1–296; Pond (1885), pp. 1–502; Humphreys (1885), pp. 1–502; Phisterer (1885), pp. 1–368.
  80. ^ Boteler, "The John Brown Raid," The Century, July 1883, p. 399–410.
  81. ^ Sanborn, "Comment By a Radical Abolitionist," The Century, July 1883, pp. 411–415.
  82. ^ Johnson & Buel, The Opening Battles Battles and Leader, vol. I (1887).
  83. ^ Johnson & Buel, The Struggle Intensifies Battles and Leader, vol. II (1887).
  84. ^ Johnson & Buel, The Tide Shifts Battles and Leader, vol. III (1887).
  85. ^ Johnson & Buel, Retreat with Honor Battles and Leader, vol. IV (1887).
  86. ^ Grant, "Personal Memoirs of (U.S.) Grant," The Century, February 1886, pp. 573–581.
  87. ^ McClellan, "From the Peninsula to Antietam," The Century, May 1886, pp. 122–130.
  88. ^ Sherman, "General Sherman and the March to the Sea," The Century, July 1887, pp. 464–46.
  89. ^ Longstreet, "The Battle of Fredericksburg," The Century, August 1886, pp. 609–625.
  90. ^ Beauregard, "The Battle of Bull Run," The Century, November 1884, pp. 80–106.
  91. ^ "Memoranda on the Civil War," Gilder (ed.), The Century, July 1885, p. 478.
  92. ^ "Clarence C. Buel Obituary," The New York Times, May 24, 1933, p. 20.
  93. ^ Nicolay & Hay "Abraham Lincoln: A History, Part 1" The Century, August 1887, pp. 248–277.
  94. ^ Nicolay & Hay "Abraham Lincoln: A History, Part 2" The Century, August 1887, pp. 509–533.
  95. ^ Nicolay & Hay "Abraham Lincoln: A History, Part 3" The Century, January 1888, pp. 419–436.
  96. ^ "Lincoln Issue," Gilder (ed.), The Century, February 1909.
  97. ^ Gilder, "Lincoln the Leader," The Century, February 1909, pp. 479–507.
  98. ^ Kennan, "Siberia and the Exile System: Across the Russian Frontier," The Century, May 1888, pp. 3–23.
  99. ^ a b Kennan, "Prison Life of the Russian Revolutionists," The Century, December 1887, pp. 285–297.
  100. ^ Kennan (1891a), pp. 1–575; Kennan (1891b), pp. 1–573.
  101. ^ Botkine, "A Voice for Russia," The Century, February 1893, pp. 611–614.
  102. ^ Kennan, "A Voice for the People of Russia," The Century, July 1893, pp. 461–471.
  103. ^ Good (1982), pp. 273–287.
  104. ^ Smith, "The Prologue of the American Revolution," The Century, March 1903, pp. 713–733.
  105. ^ Mitchell, "The Youth of Washington, Pt. 1," The Century, April 1904, pp. 897–905.
  106. ^ Mitchell, "The Youth of Washington, Pt. 2," The Century, August 1904, pp. 614–623.
  107. ^ Cleveland, "The Venezuelan Border Controversy," The Century, July 1901, pp. 405–418.
  108. ^ White, "Chapters from My Diplomatic Life," The Century, August 1903, pp. 591–603.
  109. ^ Wilson, "Edmund Burke and the French Revolution," The Century, September 1901, pp. 784–791.
  110. ^ Crook, "Andrew Johnson in the White House," The Century, October 1908, pp. 863–876.
  111. ^ Crook, "Rutherford B. Hayes in the White House," The Century, March 1909, pp. 643–665.
  112. ^ Rhodes, "A Review of President Hayes's Administration," The Century, October 1909, pp. =883-891.
  113. ^ "Nature and Science," Holland (ed.), Scribner's Monthly, November 1872, p. 121–124.
  114. ^ "Nature and Science," Holland (ed.), Scribner's Monthly, April 1875, p. 771–773.
  115. ^ "Photographing the Unseen," Gilder (ed.), The Century, May 1896, pp. 120–130.
  116. ^ "Edison on Invention and Inventors," Johnson (ed.), The Century, July 1911, pp. 415–419.
  117. ^ Tesla, "The Problem of Increasing Human Energy," The Century, June 1900, pp. 175–210.
  118. ^ Haldane, "If You Were Alive in 2123," The Century, August 1923, pp. 45–80.
  119. ^ White (1930), pp. 229–234.
  120. ^ London, "The Sea-Wolf," The Century, February 1904, pp. 584–597.
  121. ^ Kent, "A Voyager's Log," The Century, July–October 1923, pp. 37–59.
  122. ^ Dvořák, "Franz Schubert," The Century, July 1894, pp. 341–346.
  123. ^ Godard (2009).

References edit

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  • Beauregard, P.G.T. (November 1884). "The Battle of Bull Run". The Century: 80–106.
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  • Botkine, Pierre (February 1893). "A Voice for Russia". The Century: 611–614.
  • Cable, George W. (January 1885). "The Freedman's Case in Equity". The Century: 409–418.
  • Chamberlin, Joseph Edgar (September 1884). "The Foreign Elements in our Population". The Century: 761–770.
  • Chesterton, Gilbert K. (December 1922). "Are Artists Going Mad?". The Century: 271–278.
  • Chew, Samuel C, ed. (1950). Fruit Among the Leaves: An Anniversary Anthology (PDF). New York, NY: Appleton, Century, Crofts, Inc. pp. 122–131. ISBN 978-0-8486-8611-6. LCCN 50008362. OCLC 2173427. Retrieved 2019-01-27.
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  • Frank, Glenn (May 1924). "A Sensible Immigration Policy". The Century: 135–139.
  • Frank, Glenn (December 1924). "Christianity and Racialism". The Century: 277–284.
  • Frank, Glenn (January 1925). "The Balance Sheet of Civilization". The Century: 422–428.
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  • Gilder, Richard Watson (December 1896). "Doubt". The Century: 286.
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  • Gilder, Richard Watson (February 1909). "Lincoln the Leader". The Century: 479–507.
  • Gladden, Washington (March 1886). "The Strength and Weakness of Socialism". The Century: 737–748.
  • Godard, Barbara (2009). "Marjorie Pickthall". Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online. Retrieved November 1, 2010.
  • Good, Jane E. (1982). "America and the Russian Revolutionary Movement, 1888-1905". Russian Review. 41 (3): 273–287. doi:10.2307/129602. ISSN 0036-0341. JSTOR 129602.
  • Grady, Henry W. (April 1885). "In Plain Black and White". The Century: 909–917.
  • Grant, Ulysses S. (February 1886). "Personal Memoirs of (U.S.) Grant". The Century: 573–581.
  • Haldane, J.B.S. (August 1923). "If You Were Alive in 2123". The Century: 45–80.
  • James, Henry (May 1885). "The Bostonians". The Century: 58–66.
  • John, Arthur (1981). The Best Years of the Century. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois. pp. ix–xii, 24, 126–132, 233–239, 270–271. ISBN 978-0-252-00857-3.
  • Johnson, Robert Underwood; Buel, Clarence Clough (1887). Robert Underwood Johnson; Clarence Clough Buel (eds.). The Opening Battles. Battles and Leaders of the Civil War: Being for the Most Part Contributions by Union and Confederate officers: Based upon "The Century War Series". Vol. I (Subscription ed.). New York City: The Century Company. pp. 1–784. OCLC 48764702.
  • Johnson, Robert Underwood; Buel, Clarence Clough (1887). Robert Underwood Johnson; Clarence Clough Buel (eds.). The Struggle Intensifies. Battles and Leaders of the Civil War: Being for the Most Part Contributions by Union and Confederate officers: Based upon "The Century War Series". Vol. II (Subscription ed.). New York City: The Century Company. pp. 1–786. OCLC 48764702.
  • Johnson, Robert Underwood; Buel, Clarence Clough (1887). Robert Underwood Johnson; Clarence Clough Buel (eds.). The Tide Shifts. Battles and Leaders of the Civil War: Being for the Most Part Contributions by Union and Confederate officers: Based upon "The Century War Series". Vol. III (Subscription ed.). New York City: The Century Company. pp. 1–778. OCLC 48764702.
  • Johnson, Robert Underwood; Buel, Clarence Clough (1887). Robert Underwood Johnson; Clarence Clough Buel (eds.). Retreat with Honor. Battles and Leaders of the Civil War: Being for the Most Part Contributions by Union and Confederate officers: Based upon "The Century War Series". Vol. IV (Subscription ed.). New York City: The Century Company. pp. 1–778. OCLC 48764702.
  • Jones, Charles C. Jr. (February 1876). "A Piece of Secret History". Scribner's Monthly: 519–521.
  • Kennan, George (May 1888). "Siberia and the Exile System: Across the Russian Frontier". The Century: 3–23.
  • Kennan, George (December 1887). "Prison Life of the Russian Revolutionists". The Century: 285–297.
  • Kennan, George (December 1887). "A Voice for the People of Russia". The Century: 461–471.
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  • Kent, Rockwell (July–October 1923). "A Voyager's Log". The Century: 37–59.
  • King, Edward (April 1874). "A Ramble in Virginia". Scribner's Monthly: 645–673.
  • King, Edward (December 1873). "Old and New Louisiana". Scribner's Monthly: 129–159.
  • Kinney, John Coddington (February 1877). "Farragut in Mobile Bay". Scribner's Monthly: 539–544.
  • Larsen, Lawrence H. (1963). "How Glenn Frank Became President of the University of Wisconsin". Wisconsin Magazine of History. 46: 197–205.
  • Lodge, Henry Cabot (October 1890). "Why Patronage in Offices is Un-American". The Century: 837–843.
  • Lodge, Henry Cabot (January 1904). "A Million Immigrants a Year". The Century: 466–469.
  • Longstreet, James (August 1886). "The Battle of Fredericksburg". The Century: 609–625.
  • London, Jack (February 1904). "The Sea-Wolf". The Century: 584–597.
  • Mabie, Hamilton Wright (January 1910). "Richard Watson Gilder. An Appreciation". The Bookman: 488–489.
  • McClellan, George B. (May 1886). "From the Peninsula to Antietam". The Century: 122–130.
  • Miller, Charles R. (April 1910). "Why Socialism Is Impracticable". The Century: 903–908.
  • Mitchell, S. Weir (April 1904). "The Youth of Washington, Pt. 1". The Century: 897–905.
  • Mitchell, 1 S. Weir (August 1904). "The Youth of Washington, Pt. 2". The Century: 614–623.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • Myers, James (May 1924). "Democracy in American Factories". The Century: 101–114.
  • Nicolay, John G.; Hay, John (December 1886). "Abraham Lincoln: A History". The Century: 248–277.
  • Nicolay, John G.; Hay, John (August 1887). "Abraham Lincoln: A History". The Century: 509–533.
  • Nicolay, John G.; Hay, John (January 1888). "Abraham Lincoln: A History". The Century: 419–436.
  • Gilder, Richard Watson, ed. (May 1896). "Photographing the Unseen". The Century: 120–130.
  • Railton, Stephen (1996). "Prepublishing Huck (from "Mark Twain In His Times")". Retrieved 2009-10-24.
  • Rhodes, James Ford (October 1909). "A Review of President Hayes's Administration". The Century: 883–891.
  • Roosevelt, Theodore (January 1907). "The Ancient Irish Sages". The Century: 327–337.
  • Roosevelt, Theodore (November 1899). "Military Preparedness and Unpreparedness". The Century: 149–153.
  • Roosevelt, Theodore (February 1888). "Ranch Life in the Far West". The Century: 495–510.
  • Ross, Edward Alsworth (December 1913). "American and Immigrant Blood". The Century: 225–232.
  • Russell, Bertrand (November 1923). "Where Is Industrialism Going?". The Century: 141–149.
  • Ruffner, W.H. (May 1874). "The Co-Education of the White and Colored Races". Scribner's Monthly: 86–89.
  • Sanborn, Frank B. (July 1883). "Comment By a Radical Abolitionist". The Century: 411–415.
  • Sargent, Frank P. (January 1904). "Immigration". The Century: 470–472.
  • Scidmore, Eliza Ruhamah (September 1893). "Our New National Forest Reserves". The Century: 792–796.
  • Sherman, William Tecumseh (July 1887). "General Sherman and the March to the Sea". The Century: 464–46.
  • Smith, Justin H. (March 1903). "The Prologue of the American Revolution". The Century: 713–733.
  • Steeley, R.H. (February 1872). "The Mormons and Their Religion". Scribner's Monthly: 396–407.
  • Stoddard, Lothrop (June 1919). "Bolshevism: The Heresy of the Underman". The Century: 237–240.
  • Stolberg, Benjamin (June 1925). "The Peter Mans of Communism". The Century: 219–227.
  • Stouffer, Samuel A. (January 1950). "Some Observations on Study Design". American Journal of Sociology. 55 (4). University of Chicago Press: 355–361. doi:10.1086/220558. eISSN 1537-5390. ISSN 0002-9602. S2CID 143677043. Retrieved 2019-01-27.
  • Sumner, W.G. (October 1878). "Socialism". Scribner's Monthly: 887–892.
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  • Gilder, Richard Watson, ed. (February 1909). "February 1909 Issue". The Century.
  • Gilder, Richard Watson, ed. (July 1885). "Memoranda on the Civil War". The Century: 478.
  • Holland, Josiah Gilbert, ed. (April 1875). "Nature and Science". Scribner's Monthly: 121–124.
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  • Holland, Josiah Gilbert, ed. (July 1871). "Topics of the Time". Scribner's Monthly: 316–320.
  • Holland, Josiah Gilbert, ed. (October 1878). "Topics of the Time". Scribner's Monthly: 894–896.
  • Holland, Josiah Gilbert, ed. (April 1879). "Topics of the Time". Scribner's Monthly: 899–902.
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  • Gilder, Richard Watson, ed. (March 1898). "Topics of the Time". The Century: 789.
  • Gilder, Richard Watson, ed. (May 1898). "Topics of the Time". The Century: 152–153.
  • Gilder, Richard Watson, ed. (June 1902). "Topics of the Time". The Century: 320–321.
  • Gilder, Richard Watson, ed. (September 1903). "Topics of the Time". The Century: 796–797.
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  • Wallace, Alfred R. (January 1883). "The Debt of Science to Darwin". The Century: 420–432.
  • Washington, Booker T. (September 1903). "Heroes in Black Skins". The Century: 724–729.
  • Washington, Booker T. (May 1908). "Negro Homes". The Century: 71–79.
  • Wells, H.G. (January 1914). "The World Set Free". The Century: 697–711.
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  • Wells, H.G. (March 1914). "The Trap to Catch the Sun". The Century. The World Set Free: 331–344.
  • "Clarence C. Buel". The New York Times: 20. May 24, 1933.
  • White, Andrew D. (August 1903). "Chapters from My Diplomatic Life". The Century: 591–603.
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External links edit

century, magazine, illustrated, monthly, magazine, first, published, united, states, 1881, century, company, york, city, which, been, bought, that, year, roswell, smith, renamed, after, century, association, successor, scribner, monthly, magazine, merged, into. The Century Magazine was an illustrated monthly magazine first published in the United States in 1881 by The Century Company of New York City which had been bought in that year by Roswell Smith and renamed by him after the Century Association It was the successor of Scribner s Monthly Magazine It was merged into The Forum in 1930 The Century MagazineFirst issue1881Final issue1930CompanyThe Century CompanyCountryUnited StatesBased inNew York CityLanguageEnglish Contents 1 History 2 Philosophy and political positions 2 1 Religion 2 2 American nationalism 2 3 Reconstruction and civil rights 2 4 Progressive causes 2 5 Socialism and the labor movement 2 6 Turn of the 20th century decline 2 7 Later years 1909 1930 3 Historical memoirs and major reporting 3 1 Civil War series 3 2 Lincoln biography 3 3 Russian dissidents 3 4 Other histories and recollections 4 Science 5 Literature and the arts 6 See also 7 Footnotes 8 Citations 9 References 10 External linksHistory editThe initial editor was to have been Scribner s editor and co owner Josiah G Holland but he died prior to the appearance of the first issue He was succeeded by Richard Watson Gilder the managing editor of Scribner s who would go on to helm The Century for 28 years Gilder largely continued the mixture of literature history current events and high quality illustrations that Holland had used at Scribner s 1 The magazine was very successful during the 19th century most notably for a series of articles about the American Civil War which ran for three years during the 1880s It included reminiscences of 230 participants from all ranks of the service on both sides of the conflict 2 According to an author writing in The New York Times the publication of The Century made New York instead of London the centre of the illustrated periodicals published in the English language 3 The magazine was also a notable publisher of fiction presenting excerpts of Mark Twain s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn in 1884 and 1885 and Henry James The Bostonians 4 5 6 Upon Gilder s death in 1909 Robert Underwood Johnson replaced him as editor According to Arthur John the magazine s later history was marked by sudden shifts in content format and editorial direction 7 Glenn Frank was editor from 1921 to 1925 a period during which The Century was known for its editorials on current events and began to cut back on illustrations which were completely eliminated after Frank left the magazine In 1929 due to competition from cheaper magazines and newspapers The Century became a quarterly and in 1930 it was merged with The Forum 2 At the time it folded The Century had 20 000 subscribers less than a tenth of its peak circulation of the late nineteenth century 7 Scribner s Monthly Magazine the periodical that became The Century in 1881 should not be confused with the Scribner s Magazine that began publication in 1887 8 The noted critic and editor Frank Crowninshield briefly served as the magazine s art editor Philosophy and political positions editThe tone and content of The Century changed over its long history It began as an Evangelical Christian publication but over time began to speak to a more general educated audience as it developed into the largest periodical in the country Religion edit Novelist and poet Josiah G Holland was one of the three original founders of Scribner s Monthly and wrote regular editorials for the periodical setting the tone for the magazine s content As Holland was deeply religious Scribner s to a great extent reflected the views and concerns of the Evangelical Christian community 7 While hostile towards sectarianism within Protestantism Scribner s initially took a strong stand against both Catholicism and those who doubted the divinity of Christ In the first issue under the heading Papa and the Dogma Holland claimed that it was freedom that made the Protestant nations of Europe strong while their Catholic neighbors were as a result of their religion in a state of decay 9 Less than one year later the magazine attacked the skepticism of Henry David Thoreau 10 Mormon polygamy was also a frequent target One contributor traveled to Utah to observe the Mormon settlement there and argued that the new sect would have to end its practice of plural marriage if it were to survive and American control could be exercised over the western territories 11 At the same time Scribner s Monthly being non dogmatic in its Protestantism expressed little hostility towards modern science For example a three part series discussed how believing Christians should meet the intellectual challenges of religious skepticism 12 and in 1874 two writers engaged one another in a debate over whether Christians should attempt to prove the divinity of Christ through science 13 By the end of the 1870s however Scribner s had departed from its original Evangelical orientation An April 1879 editorial declared all seekers of truth whether believing Christians or not to be allies regarding this new view as simply an application of the Golden Rule Catholics were said to have just as much to teach Protestants as Protestants had to teach Catholics 14 After the magazine became The Century in 1881 it continued to hold onto this secular outlook under Gilder The break with the past was reflected in the magazine s changing treatment of the question of evolution In 1875 Scribner s argued that there was insufficient evidence to conclude that Darwinism was true and attributed its wide acceptance to a contemporary bias towards novel ideas even though the author did not on principle reject the idea that proof could be forthcoming 15 Upon the death of Charles Darwin in 1883 however The Century published a laudatory tribute to the scientist written by Alfred Wallace 16 The magazine remained secular into its later days in 1923 criticizing the poisonous dogmatism of the thought of William Jennings Bryan and what the magazine saw as his religious fundamentalism 17 18 Over the years The Century published works by a large number of writers who were agnostics or atheists including famous skeptic Bertrand Russell 19 20 American nationalism edit From the very beginning of his tenure as editor in 1881 to his death in 1909 The Century reflected the ideals of Gilder 7 He sought to create and help shape a refined American high culture often contributing his own poetry to that end 21 22 23 Everything from its historical memoirs to political commentary reflected the influence of nineteenth century romanticism citation needed An unsigned May 1885 editorial expressed pride over the belief of the staff that the periodical had achieved wide circulation while remaining a quality product 24 This reflected the view that as a general matter there was usually a tradeoff between quality and quantity The Century was generally seen as a conservative magazine and hoped to promote reconciliation between the North and South after the trauma of the Civil War According to J Arthur Bond the magazine was instrumental in creating and shaping post war American nationalism 21 In the words of one contemporary Gilder s spirited and tireless endeavor was to give the organic life of the American people purity of character and nobility of expression 25 During his tenure as editor he promoted patriotism and the glorification of American historical figures Seeing itself as having an elevating mission its mixture of nationalism and cultural advocacy informed even the most ordinary of the magazine s articles 21 Often touching on many of these themes Theodore Roosevelt wrote as a regular contributor to the magazine over three decades a span which included one article he published while serving as President 26 27 28 Gilder developed relationships with several contemporary prominent figures including a close friendship with Grover Cleveland which he wrote about upon the death of the former president 29 It has been argued that the decline in the popularity of the magazine from the 1890s on was connected to the general triumph of more egalitarian ideologies and the collapse of nineteenth century romanticism and idealism citation needed Concerns over national unity and the preservation of traditional American culture were reflected in the magazine s writings on immigration An 1884 article discussed the composition and geographical distribution of immigrant populations and expressed optimism over the prospect of the newer Americans assimilating into the larger population At the same time the article warned that measures should be taken against potential threats to national unity through fractionalization 30 As immigration increased over the next few decades however The Century became more alarmed over its effects on the future of the country citing concerns over among other matters crime illiteracy and the overpopulation of cities 31 32 In 1904 Senator Henry Cabot Lodge took to the pages of the magazine to argue for the importance of keeping out undesirable immigrants 33 Twenty years later editor Glenn Frank attacked the Ku Klux Klan and other nativists but nonetheless wrote that t he hour for very severe restrictions on immigration has come 34 The same author returned to some of the same themes when he again attacked the KKK several months later for both its religious and racial doctrines 18 Reconstruction and civil rights edit nbsp D R Miller s War Diary The Century 1886 attracted a great deal of attention 35 In the immediate post Reconstruction era contributors to The Century debated what should be done about the postwar South and the newly free slaves generally advocating for amicable relations between the regions and national unity In 1873 and 1874 Scribner s ran a number of articles under the title The Great South a series which lasted fourteen issues Based on Edward King s travels the author s accounts generally portrayed the region in a sympathetic light and the series was warmly received by Southerners 36 37 In 1876 Scribner s published a eulogy to Robert E Lee along with an editorial postscript praising the spirit of sectional friendliness of the piece 38 i On the question of the freedmen a wide variety of contemporary views were represented Writing for Scribner s in 1874 one author argued that blacks were unfit to be schooled with white children 39 On the other hand an 1885 article by George W Cable despaired over what he saw as the failure to protect the rights of southern blacks after the Civil War and argued that this was the result of the former confederate states evading federal law 40 Henry W Grady responding a few months later disputed the earlier author s characterization of the situation claiming that while legal rights had been granted southern whites would never accept social integration between the races 41 Cable s criticisms of the ex Confederacy also drew a rebuke by Robert Lewis Dabney 42 Even when sympathetic to the cause of the newly freed slaves writers who argued for helping them usually did so on paternalistic grounds Bishop T U Dudley for example expressed doubt that much could be done to elevate the status of American blacks but argued that Christian principles required helping them to the greatest extent possible 43 The question of how much government policy could do to improve the circumstances of the former slaves continued to be debated over the decades By the turn of the century the debates were conducted in the language of science Robert Bennett Bean a medical doctor published a 1906 article arguing that social policy should be based on realistic assessments of the relative mental capacities of blacks and whites 44 He claimed that blacks had on average smaller brains than Asians or Caucasians a finding he attributed to heredity Similarly Charles Francis Adams Jr spent two years in Egypt and the Sudan and referenced his experiences to argue in 1906 that the unfortunate circumstances of American blacks were mainly due to inherently low capabilities rather than history 45 In the same issue however the editors felt it necessary to mention the dissenting view of Franz Boas who had painted a more optimistic picture of the potential of Africans in a different periodical two years earlier 46 Booker T Washington contributed four articles to the magazine in the first decade of the twentieth century including one on Heroes in Black Skins 47 and another that discussed efforts of blacks to become homeowners 48 A 1903 editorial sang the praises of Washington calling him the Moses of his people and contrasting him favorably with W E B Du Bois 49 Reflecting the magazine s later shift leftward Du Bois himself contributed an article to The Century in 1923 50 Several editorials around that time criticized the revived Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s Frank Tannenbaum for example wrote that the Klan of the Reconstruction era was a reflex of the vindictiveness of Northern politicians and of the unscrupulous carpet baggers who swooped down upon the South as a vulture upon a wounded and stricken victim 51 ii But the contemporary Klan according to Tannenbaum had no such justification and simply reflected fears of change and other pathologies of segments of the white population 51 Progressive causes edit The magazine championed several Progressive causes popular in its time Among these were several civil service reforms including competitive examinations for public offices which its writers saw as a way to promote good governance and reduce class privilege 52 Similarly in 1894 Henry Cabot Lodge attacked the un American practice of patronage 53 The Century also took up some of the environmental causes of its day expressing satisfaction over the first attempts by the federal government to preserve the nation s forests 54 and in its later days supported women s suffrage 55 Finally the magazine occasionally published articles in favor of eugenics Frank for example while disparaging the racism of the KKK encouraged what he called the better individuals of every race to use the tools of modern science to focus on improving the genetic quality of all populations 18 Socialism and the labor movement edit Scribner s generally defended the principles of classical economics and opposed socialism William Graham Sumner wrote an article for the magazine in this vein praising traditional capitalist virtues such as self reliance and individualism and attributing poverty to laziness and vice 56 On the other hand Holland occasionally directed his ire towards soulless corporations that he accused of exploiting workers 57 In the view of the magazine both capitalists and workers had moral obligations In its early days The Century tended to adopt the same views as its predecessor It defended capitalism but refrained from unreflectively denouncing all forms of regulation For example an 1886 article opposed socialism but argued that in the future there would be more need for government activism than there had been in the past 58 Over the next few decades The Century published several forceful denunciations of socialist theories and practice 59 In the 1890s Gilder and his editors took the position that labor unions were a foreign imposition one of the many negative consequences of a relatively open immigration policy 60 Similarly socialism was said to punish success a concept that was anathema to the philosophy of his magazine Despite its conservative leanings the magazine was open to dissenting views on economic issues in a way that it was not on deeper philosophical matters The March 1904 issue allowed workers to publish contributions making the case for labor unions as appropriate checks on big business 61 Two years later an editorial praised some of the accomplishments of the labor movement while still maintaining that it needed to be reformed 62 In its later years after the Russian Revolution had brought the issue to the attention of the public The Century opposed the spread of Communism Employing Nietzschean terminology Lothrop Stoddard in 1919 called Bolshevism the heresy of the Underman in contrast to Prussianism the heresy of the Overman which had been defeated in the First World War 63 He went on to argue that the Bolshevik Revolution had only been the local manifestation of a phenomenon that would have to be defeated worldwide and that Vladimir Lenin was a modern Jenghiz Khan plotting the plunder of a world Turn of the 20th century decline edit While remaining extremely influential and well regarded among the American elite the popularity of The Century began to decline in the 1890s and never regained the prominence it had enjoyed as the leading American periodical of the late nineteenth century By 1900 it had about 125 000 subscribers half of the circulation it had in the 1880s The Century suffered due to competition from other cheaper magazines many of which Gilder and his staff considered vulgar 7 Although Gilder had been a zealous reformer as a conservative in politics and values he never embraced the Progressive movement As its circulation declined the magazine took a more pessimistic tone and began to write less and less about current events An 1898 editorial criticized the profusion in the literary and pictorial output which has a tendency to befog the intellect and lower the standards of taste 64 A few months later the magazine lamented that the age of reflection had given way to the age of agitation spread by f ast trains and cheap print 65 Similarly a 1902 editorial argued that divorce was a threat to civilization and nothing would be more likely to cure this ill than literature celebrating the sanctive and ever lasting virtues of self control forbearance devotion and honor 66 Gilder characteristically saw a connection between a decline in morals and contemporary social problems and believed conversely that ennobling art could be a solution Even in an artistic sense The Century of the late nineteenth century was slow to adapt to the times In 1889 after much resistance it became the last major periodical to include photographic illustrations 7 The editors remained attached to painted drawings which The Century had become renowned for In the pages of the magazine Gilder explained this preference by complaining of the trend toward the minute and literal representation of the visible world seen in photography as opposed to painting which preserved only that which deserved to be recorded for posterity 67 He went on to argue that the spread of printing and writing would have a similar vulgarizing and cheapening effect on the written word 67 Thus the magazine maintained a great deal of self awareness about the causes of its declining influence According to one modern author in the first decade of the twentieth century Gilder and the other editors continued to bear aloft the flame of the ideal in a changing era and gave no thought of cheapening the magazine to slow the steady drifting away of subscribers 7 After Gilder s death in 1909 The Century survived another two decades but never regained its position as the leading American periodical Later years 1909 1930 edit Robert Underwood Johnson was editor of The Century from Gilder s death in 1909 until his resignation in 1913 68 The 1910s were marked by financial difficulties and a further decline as the magazine competed with other periodicals of both similar and lesser quality The Century still attracted some of the best fiction authors of the day however H G Wells prophetic trilogy The World Set Free was serialized in the magazine in the first three issues of 1914 69 70 71 Glenn Frank became editor of The Century in 1921 until he left this position in 1925 to become president of the University of Wisconsin Madison 72 He wrote a series of editorials in which he laid out his thoughts on the future of Western civilization The editorials used colorful language and usually stressed the idea that contemporary social problems had created a need for social engineering and government activism in both domestic and international affairs For example in 1923 Frank wrote that Senator Lodge and his isolationist supporters were the amoeba of politics strange survivals from a prehistoric era of the lowest form of political intelligence 20 He later argued for what he called an intelligently flexible conservatism 73 While warning of what he referred to as the dangers of reactionaries on the right and radicals on the left Frank was also known for expressing a great deal of optimism over the prospect of using the social sciences to improve human affairs 74 This kind of enthusiasm for reform through science rather than moral progress was a noticeable break from the philosophy of the magazine during the eras of Holland and Gilder Other writers stressed similar themes throughout the Frank era Reflecting the magazine s tilt to the left a 1924 article called for industrial democracy to be adopted in American factories 75 Even the magazine s opposition to socialism was tempered with Benjamin Stolberg arguing that the Red Scare had been an overreaction and that the Bolshevik threat to the United States had failed to materialize 76 The leftward shift during this time was not total however and despite the tone that Frank s editorials gave to the magazine The Century remained open to a wide variety of views Noted conservative G K Chesterton for example contributed an essay that was highly critical of contemporary art 77 Frank was succeeded in 1925 by Hewitt H Howland who remained as editor until the magazine merged with The Forum in 1930 68 Historical memoirs and major reporting editCivil War series edit In 1877 Scribner s published a series of short accounts from those who took part in the Battle of Mobile Bay 78 The parent publishing house released a series of books The Army in the Civil War in 13 volumes penned by U S Army veterans who had participated in the operations that they wrote about This series became a best seller 79 The Century continued this kind of historical reporting with Alexander R Boteler s first person account of John Brown s raid on Harpers Ferry it published in 1883 followed in the same issue by a rejoinder from Frank B Sanborn a self described radical abolitionist who had helped finance the mission 80 81 Gilder himself a Union veteran soon began regularly running the reflections of major Civil War figures Originally planned to run for twelve months the series drew so much interest that it lasted for three years and eventually led to a four volume book 82 83 84 85 Among the contributors to the series were Union generals Ulysses S Grant William Tecumseh Sherman Philip Sheridan and George B McClellan 86 87 88 As The Century tried to avoid bias and promote American unity it also sought out and accepted accounts from those on the Confederate side including the generals James Longstreet and P G T Beauregard 89 90 The contributions led readers who had served in the war to submit unsolicited recollections and previously unpublished documents to the magazine in addition to criticisms and rebuttals of published pieces These submissions were so numerous that in 1885 The Century began to include them in a section titled Memoranda on the Civil War 91 The magazine had in effect become a forum for those who had fought each other in battle two decades earlier In the pages of The Century they could discuss their battles and mutually celebrate the bravery and heroism of both sides The idea for soliciting recollections of the Civil War originally came from assistant editor Clarence Buel who later wrote of the difficulties he had in going about convincing former military leaders to share their experiences 92 In fact Grant would not agree to contribute to the series until the former general and president had run into financial difficulties The editors became engrossed in the Civil War project and sometimes took tours of the famous battle sites bringing along commanders to explain their exploits and artists to draw sketches of the scenes for the magazine 7 The Century office became a regular meeting place for former comrades and adversaries as reflected in a letter an excited Gilder sent to his wife exclaiming Grant one day and Beauregard the next 7 Before the publication of the series Sherman was the only major figure of the war who had written a first person account Afterwards the works that Grant Sheridan and McClellan contributed to The Century led to books by each of those generals As a result of the Civil War recollections the number of subscribers to the magazine jumped to 250 000 a then unprecedented number for a magazine of its kind 7 Edward Weeks wrote that even by 1950 no quality magazine had ever had as many subscribers as The Century did in the 1880s even though by that time the reading public had tripled in size As of 1892 it was also the most widely circulated periodical of its price in England with 20 000 subscribers 3 Lincoln biography edit The Century also acquired the rights to publish excerpts from the manuscript of a biography of President Abraham Lincoln written by his former secretaries John Hay and John G Nicolay The result was a series titled Abraham Lincoln A History which ran over three years 93 94 95 Decades later The Century returned to Abraham Lincoln as a symbol of the republic s lost virtue The February 1909 issue had a drawing of Lincoln on its cover and included twenty two portraits of the former president within its pages along with pictures of his life mask and a cast of his hands 96 Gilder s contribution to the issue Lincoln the Leader held the subject up as an ideal for modern statesmen to emulate 97 Russian dissidents edit In the late 1880s George Kennan traveled to Russia and wrote a series of reports on the revolutionaries who had opposed Tsar Alexander II and been sent to prisons in Siberia 98 Seeing him as a writer sympathetic to the autocratic regime and hostile towards its opponents the Russian government granted Kennan relative freedom to travel around the country During his travels however the author changed his mind and wrote accounts that were highly critical of the regime His reports included detailed illustrations of the suffering of those who suffered on account of their opposition to the government In one article Kennan told the story of how when the decision to assassinate the Tsar was made 47 individuals volunteered to carry out the mission Arguing that individuals fighting for civil liberties were rarely as fanatical as the Russian revolutionaries Kennan wrote that he believed that it was the treatment of prisoners that led to such stringent opposition to the government 99 He noted that playing upon the deepest and most intense of human emotions as a means of extorting information from unwilling witnesses was routine in prisons holding political offenders For example a young woman was led to incriminate her loved ones by being told that they had already confessed Sometimes a revolutionary would be told that he was going to meet his mother taken to her and then stopped and later informed that he would only see her if he answered questions about his past activities A twenty two year old mother was falsely led to believe that if she did not cooperate with the authorities her infant could be taken from her The author also reported that it was common practice for prisoners to be left in solitary confinement for years while government officials searched the empire for evidence with which the offenders could be charged 99 Kennan came to see himself as a voice for the Russian liberals and was subsequently banned from the country His writings on Russia were eventually published in a two volume book 100 A representative of the Russian government replied to Kennan s arguments in The Century in 1893 101 and the magazine subsequently published a rebuttal by the author 102 Kennan s writings on Russia and his subsequent activism were perhaps the main causes behind the rise of anti Tsar sentiment and sympathy for the revolutionary cause among late nineteenth century American elites 103 In addition to publishing magazine articles and books the author also began to give popular lectures on the subject including dozens of speeches in Chicago New York City and Boston In order to make an impression on the crowd Kennan would often appear in front of them in the ragged clothes and shackles of a Russian prisoner This advocacy inspired the formation of a number of American organizations that took up the cause of the exiles the most prominent of them being the Society of Friends of Russian Freedom Other histories and recollections edit In the early 1900s The Century continued to publish the writings of some of the most famous historians of the era along with first person accounts of those who had worked in the highest levels of government Justin Harvey Smith published four articles on the American Revolution in The Century in 1902 and 1903 104 The next year S Weir Mitchell contributed a series on the life of George Washington as a young man 105 106 nbsp 1907 advertisement for The Century promoting writings by President Roosevelt and then Secretary of War William Taft In addition to Theodore Roosevelt The Century claimed a handful of other presidents as contributors Grover Cleveland provided an account of perhaps the tensest moment of his two presidential administrations the 1895 Venezuela border controversy with Britain 107 Andrew D White contributed a series titled Chapters from My Diplomatic Life on his experiences serving in Germany and Russia 108 In September 1901 Woodrow Wilson wrote Edmund Burke and the French Revolution while still a professor at Princeton 109 In 1907 future President William Howard Taft wrote about the Panama Canal while serving as Secretary of War Over the years The Century also published first person accounts of individuals who had worked for various presidents Col William H Cook a bodyguard who served for over 50 years in the White House shared his memories of the administrations of Andrew Johnson and Rutherford B Hayes 110 111 Historian James Ford Rhodes also contributed an article on the Hayes Administration which the editors called a kind of postscript to the last published volume of his history of the United States 112 Science editIn its early years Scribner s Monthly published a regular feature titled Nature and Science 113 114 Remaining consistent with its broad mission to educate the public The Century published articles by some of the most prominent scientists and inventors of the day Thomas Edison contributed to a symposium on roentgen rays and also once sat for an interview with the magazine 115 116 In the June 1900 issue Nikola Tesla contributed a long article on the problem of increasing human energy 117 In a piece that combined the magazine s interests in political and scientific issues geneticist and Marxist J B S Haldane published a 1923 article on the societal implications of technological progress 118 Literature and the arts editGilder has been called the literary arbiter of his time 119 Support for artistic excellence reflected his belief in the importance of self improvement and the celebration of high standards 60 The works that appeared in his time also reflected the magazine s moralism as they banned references to sex vulgarity and insults to Christianity 60 The Century published the works of a number of major literary figures In addition to the aforementioned works of Mark Twain and Henry James pulp magazine author Ellis Parker Butler contributed 30 stories articles and poems to the magazine between 1896 and 1913 including My Cyclone proof House which appeared in the November 1896 issue This short story was Butler s first piece published in a major magazine His works were illustrated by such famous artists as Jay Hambidge May Wilson Preston Florence Scovel Shinn Frederic Dorr Steele and Frederic R Gruger The Century published a full color portrait of Butler with his wife Ada and daughter Elsie in the December 1909 issue The portrait was drawn by family friend Ernest L Blumenschein The magazine also published the work of Jack London 120 and the first person account and ink drawings from Tierra del Fuego of American painter Rockwell Kent 121 Noted engraver Alexander Wilson Drake was a long time contributor to both The Century Magazine and its earlier incarnation as Scribner s Monthly The Century Company produced a memorial edition of Alexander Wilson Drake s fiction and art titled Three Midnight Stories in 1916 The Century also employed many notable editorial cartoonists including Oscar Cesare Bohemian composer Antonin Dvorak was another noted contributor to The Century Magazine writing during his stay at the National Conservatory in New York in the 1890s In 1894 The Century Magazine published his fine tribute to fellow composer Franz Schubert 122 During the 1900s and 1910s the Anglo Canadian poet story writer and essayist Marjorie Pickthall was a regular contributor to The Century Magazine 123 See also editCentury Dictionary Century type familyFootnotes edit The Lost Cause Mythology had already taken root in American letters as evidenced by the positive eulogy just eleven years after the end of the Rebellion Again even Tannenbaum was influenced by Confederate apologists negative portrayal of reconstruction Citations edit Cambridge History English American Lit XIX Scribner s Monthly The Century Magazine a b New York Public Library Century Company Records a b NYT English View of Roswell Smith 12 June 1892 James The Bostonians The Century May 1885 pp 58 66 Twain Jim s Investments and King Sollermun The Century January 1885 pp 456 458 Railton Prepublishing Huck 1996 a b c d e f g h i j John 1981 pp ix xii 24 126 132 233 239 270 271 Allen Fifty Years of Scribner s Magazine Scribner s Magazine January 1937 pp 19 22 Topics of the Time Holland ed Scribner s Monthly November 1870 p 105 108 Topics of the Time Holland ed Scribner s Monthly July 1871 pp 316 320 Steeley The Mormons and Their Religion Scribner s Monthly February 1872 pp 396 407 Blauvelt Modern Skepticism Scribner s Monthly October 1873 pp 725 738 Atwater Dr Blauvelt s Notum Orangum Scribner s Monthly February 1874 pp 478 482 Topics of the Time Holland ed Scribner s Monthly April 1879 pp 899 902 Drury Darwinism Scribner s Monthly July 1875 pp 348 360 Wallace The Debt of Science to Darwin The Century January 1883 pp 420 432 Frank William Jennings Bryan The Century September 1923 pp 793 802 a b c Frank Christianity and Racialism The Century December 1924 pp 277 284 Russell Where Is Industrialism Going The Century November 1923 pp 141 149 a b Frank The Wages of Complexity The Century December 1923 pp 316 319 a b c amp Bond Applying the standards in the Century Magazine American Periodicals April 1999 pp 55 73 Gilder Doubt The Century December 1896 p 286 Gilder The Heroic Age The Century November 1896 p 38 Topics of the Time Gilder ed The Century May 1885 pp 156 157 Mabie Richard Watson Gilder An Appreciation The Bookman January 1910 pp 488 489 Roosevelt The Ancient Irish Sages The Century January 1907 pp 327 337 Roosevelt Military Preparedness and Unpreparedness The Century November 1899 pp 149 153 Roosevelt Ranch Life in the Far West The Century February 1888 pp 495 510 Gilder Grover Cleveland Conversations Letters The Century October 1909 p 846 860 Chamberlin The Foreign Elements in our Population The Century September 1884 p 761 770 Ross American and Immigrant Blood The Century December 1913 p 225 232 Sargent Immigration The Century January 1904 p 470 472 Lodge A Million Immigrants a Year The Century January 1904 p 466 469 Frank A Sensible Immigration Policy The Century May 1924 pp 135 139 Willard Frances Elizabeth Livermore Mary Ashton Rice 1893 MILLER Mrs Dora Richards A Woman of the Century Fourteen Hundred seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life Charles Wells Moulton pp 504 05 Retrieved 22 March 2024 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain King A Ramble in Virginia Scribner s Monthly April 1874 pp 645 673 King Old and New Louisiana Scribner s Monthly April 1874 pp 129 159 Jones A Piece of Secret History Scribner s Monthly February 1876 pp 519 521 Ruffner The Co Education of the White and Colored Races Scribner s Monthly May 1874 pp 86 89 Chamberlin The Freedman s Case in Equity The Century January 1885 pp 409 418 Grady In Plain Black and White The Century April 1885 pp 909 917 Dabney George W Cable in The Century Magazine Southern Historical Society Papers May 1885 pp 148 153 Dudley How Shall We Help the Negro The Century June 1885 pp 273 279 Bean The Negro Brain with Diagrams The Century September 1906 pp 778 784 Adams Reflex Light from Africa The Century May 1906 pp 156 157 Topics of the Time Boas Gilder ed The Century May 1904 pp 156 157 Washington Heroes in Black Skins The Century September 1903 pp 724 729 Washington Negro Homes The Century May 1908 pp 71 79 Topics of the Time Gilder ed The Century September 1903 pp 796 797 DuBois Back to Africa The Century February 1923 pp 539 548 a b Tannenbaum The Ku Klux Klan The Century April 1923 pp 873 882 Topics of the Time Gilder ed The Century August 1884 pp 627 628 Lodge Why Patronage in Offices is Un American The Century October 1890 pp 837 843 Scidmore Our New National Forest Reserves The Century September 1893 pp 792 796 Fraser What Came of Votes for Women The Century May 1926 pp 48 56 Sumner Socialism Scribner s Monthly October 1878 pp 887 892 Topics of the Time Holland ed Scribner s Monthly October 1878 pp 894 896 Gladden The Strength and Weakness of Socialism The Century March 1886 p 737 748 Miller Why Socialism Is Impracticable The Century April 1910 p 903 908 a b c Tomsich 1971 pp 4 6 105 106 121 122 Topics of the Time Gilder ed The Century March 1904 pp 790 799 Topics of the Time Gilder ed The Century October 1906 pp 958 959 Stoddard Bolshevism The Heresy of the Underman The Century June 1919 pp 237 240 Topics of the Time Gilder ed The Century March 1898 p 789 Topics of the Time Gilder ed The Century May 1898 pp 152 153 Topics of the Time Gilder ed The Century June 1902 pp 320 321 a b Topics of the Time Gilder ed The Century February 1897 pp 634 635 a b Chew 1950 pp 122 131 Wells The World Set Free Pt 1 The Century January 1914 pp 697 711 Wells The World Set Free Pt 2 The Last War in the World The Century February 1914 pp 566 580 Wells The World Set Free Pt 3 The Trap to Catch the Sun The Century March 1914 pp 331 344 Larsen How Glenn Frank Became President of the University of Wisconsin Wisconsin Magazine of History March 1963 pp 197 205 Frank The Balance Sheet of Civilization The Century January 1925 pp 422 428 Stouffer Some Observations on Study Design American Journal of Sociology January 1950 pp 355 361 Myers Democracy in American Factories The Century May 1924 pp 101 114 Stolberg The Peter Mans of Communism The Century June 1925 pp 219 227 Chesterton Are Artists Going Mad The Century December 1922 pp 271 278 Kinney Farragut in Mobile Bay Scribner s Monthly February 1877 pp 539 544 Nicolay 1885 pp 1 252 Force 1885 pp 1 236 Webb 1885 pp 1 258 Ropes 1885 pp 1 266 Palfrey 1885 pp 1 260 Doubleday 1885 pp 1 278 Cist 1885 pp 1 322 Greene 1885 pp 1 314 Cox 1885a pp 1 306 Cox 1885b pp 1 296 Pond 1885 pp 1 502 Humphreys 1885 pp 1 502 Phisterer 1885 pp 1 368 Boteler The John Brown Raid The Century July 1883 p 399 410 Sanborn Comment By a Radical Abolitionist The Century July 1883 pp 411 415 Johnson amp Buel The Opening Battles Battles and Leader vol I 1887 Johnson amp Buel The Struggle Intensifies Battles and Leader vol II 1887 Johnson amp Buel The Tide Shifts Battles and Leader vol III 1887 Johnson amp Buel Retreat with Honor Battles and Leader vol IV 1887 Grant Personal Memoirs of U S Grant The Century February 1886 pp 573 581 McClellan From the Peninsula to Antietam The Century May 1886 pp 122 130 Sherman General Sherman and the March to the Sea The Century July 1887 pp 464 46 Longstreet The Battle of Fredericksburg The Century August 1886 pp 609 625 Beauregard The Battle of Bull Run The Century November 1884 pp 80 106 Memoranda on the Civil War Gilder ed The Century July 1885 p 478 Clarence C Buel Obituary The New York Times May 24 1933 p 20 Nicolay amp Hay Abraham Lincoln A History Part 1 The Century August 1887 pp 248 277 Nicolay amp Hay Abraham Lincoln A History Part 2 The Century August 1887 pp 509 533 Nicolay amp Hay Abraham Lincoln A History Part 3 The Century January 1888 pp 419 436 Lincoln Issue Gilder ed The Century February 1909 Gilder Lincoln the Leader The Century February 1909 pp 479 507 Kennan Siberia and the Exile System Across the Russian Frontier The Century May 1888 pp 3 23 a b Kennan Prison Life of the Russian Revolutionists The Century December 1887 pp 285 297 Kennan 1891a pp 1 575 Kennan 1891b pp 1 573 Botkine A Voice for Russia The Century February 1893 pp 611 614 Kennan A Voice for the People of Russia The Century July 1893 pp 461 471 Good 1982 pp 273 287 Smith The Prologue of the American Revolution The Century March 1903 pp 713 733 Mitchell The Youth of Washington Pt 1 The Century April 1904 pp 897 905 Mitchell The Youth of Washington Pt 2 The Century August 1904 pp 614 623 Cleveland The Venezuelan Border Controversy The Century July 1901 pp 405 418 White Chapters from My Diplomatic Life The Century August 1903 pp 591 603 Wilson Edmund Burke and the French Revolution The Century September 1901 pp 784 791 Crook Andrew Johnson in the White House The Century October 1908 pp 863 876 Crook Rutherford B Hayes in the White House The Century March 1909 pp 643 665 Rhodes A Review of President Hayes s Administration The Century October 1909 pp 883 891 Nature and Science Holland ed Scribner s Monthly November 1872 p 121 124 Nature and Science Holland ed Scribner s Monthly April 1875 p 771 773 Photographing the Unseen Gilder ed The Century May 1896 pp 120 130 Edison on Invention and Inventors Johnson ed The Century July 1911 pp 415 419 Tesla The Problem of Increasing Human Energy The Century June 1900 pp 175 210 Haldane If You Were Alive in 2123 The Century August 1923 pp 45 80 White 1930 pp 229 234 London The Sea Wolf The Century February 1904 pp 584 597 Kent A Voyager s Log The Century July October 1923 pp 37 59 Dvorak Franz Schubert The Century July 1894 pp 341 346 Godard 2009 References edit XIX Later Magazines 10 Scribner s Monthly The Century Magazine The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes 1907 21 Vol XVII Later National Literature Part II 14 June 2022 LCCN 2004540041 Century Company Records Biographical historical notes The New York Public Library Digital Collections Retrieved 2021 08 24 An English View of Roswell Smith The New York Times 5 June 12 1892 Adams Charles Francis May 1906 Reflex Light from Africa The Century 101 111 Allen Fredrick Lewis January 1937 Fifty Years of Scribner s Magazine Scribner s Magazine 19 22 Atwater Lyman H February 1874 Dr Blauvelt s Notum Orangum Scribner s Monthly 478 482 Bean Robert Bennett September 1906 The Negro Brain with Diagrams The Century 778 784 Beauregard P G T November 1884 The Battle of Bull Run The Century 80 106 Blauvelt Augustus October 1873 Modern Skepticism Scribner s Monthly 725 738 Bond J Arthur April 1999 Applying the standards of intrinsic excellence Nationalism and Arnoldian Cultural Valuation in the Century Magazine American Periodicals 9 55 73 Boteler Alexander R July 1883 The John Brown Raid The Century 399 410 Botkine Pierre February 1893 A Voice for Russia The Century 611 614 Cable George W January 1885 The Freedman s Case in Equity The Century 409 418 Chamberlin Joseph Edgar September 1884 The Foreign Elements in our Population The Century 761 770 Chesterton Gilbert K December 1922 Are Artists Going Mad The Century 271 278 Chew Samuel C ed 1950 Fruit Among the Leaves An Anniversary Anthology PDF New York NY Appleton Century Crofts Inc pp 122 131 ISBN 978 0 8486 8611 6 LCCN 50008362 OCLC 2173427 Retrieved 2019 01 27 Cleveland Grover July 1901 The Venezuelan Border Controversy The Century 405 418 Crook William H October 1908 Andrew Johnson in the White House The Century 863 876 Crook William H March 1909 Rutherford B Hayes in the White House The Century 643 665 Dabney R L May 1885 George W Cable in The Century Magazine Southern Historical Society Papers Vol 13 pp 148 153 Drury J B July 1875 Darwinism Scribner s Monthly 348 360 DuBois W E Burghardt February 1923 Back to Africa The Century 539 548 Dudley T U June 1885 How Shall We Help the Negro The Century 273 279 Dvorak Antonin July 1894 Franz Schubert The Century 341 346 Johnson Robert Underwood ed July 1911 Edison on Invention and Inventors The Century 415 419 Frank Glenn September 1923 William Jennings Bryan The Century 793 802 Frank Glenn December 1923 The Wages of Complexity The Century 316 319 Frank Glenn May 1924 A Sensible Immigration Policy The Century 135 139 Frank Glenn December 1924 Christianity and Racialism The Century 277 284 Frank Glenn January 1925 The Balance Sheet of Civilization The Century 422 428 Fraser Helen May 1926 What Came of Votes for Women The Century 48 56 Gilder Richard Watson December 1896 Doubt The Century 286 Gilder Richard Watson November 1896 The Heroic Age The Century 38 Gilder Richard Watson October 1909 Grover Cleveland Conversations Letters The Century 846 860 Gilder Richard Watson February 1909 Lincoln the Leader The Century 479 507 Gladden Washington March 1886 The Strength and Weakness of Socialism The Century 737 748 Godard Barbara 2009 Marjorie Pickthall Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online Retrieved November 1 2010 Good Jane E 1982 America and the Russian Revolutionary Movement 1888 1905 Russian Review 41 3 273 287 doi 10 2307 129602 ISSN 0036 0341 JSTOR 129602 Grady Henry W April 1885 In Plain Black and White The Century 909 917 Grant Ulysses S February 1886 Personal Memoirs of U S Grant The Century 573 581 Haldane J B S August 1923 If You Were Alive in 2123 The Century 45 80 James Henry May 1885 The Bostonians The Century 58 66 John Arthur 1981 The Best Years of the Century Urbana IL University of Illinois pp ix xii 24 126 132 233 239 270 271 ISBN 978 0 252 00857 3 Johnson Robert Underwood Buel Clarence Clough 1887 Robert Underwood Johnson Clarence Clough Buel eds The Opening Battles Battles and Leaders of the Civil War Being for the Most Part Contributions by Union and Confederate officers Based upon The Century War Series Vol I Subscription ed New York City The Century Company pp 1 784 OCLC 48764702 Johnson Robert Underwood Buel Clarence Clough 1887 Robert Underwood Johnson Clarence Clough Buel eds The Struggle Intensifies Battles and Leaders of the Civil War Being for the Most Part Contributions by Union and Confederate officers Based upon The Century War Series Vol II Subscription ed New York City The Century Company pp 1 786 OCLC 48764702 Johnson Robert Underwood Buel Clarence Clough 1887 Robert Underwood Johnson Clarence Clough Buel eds The Tide Shifts Battles and Leaders of the Civil War Being for the Most Part Contributions by Union and Confederate officers Based upon The Century War Series Vol III Subscription ed New York City The Century Company pp 1 778 OCLC 48764702 Johnson Robert Underwood Buel Clarence Clough 1887 Robert Underwood Johnson Clarence Clough Buel eds Retreat with Honor Battles and Leaders of the Civil War Being for the Most Part Contributions by Union and Confederate officers Based upon The Century War Series Vol IV Subscription ed New York City The Century Company pp 1 778 OCLC 48764702 Jones Charles C Jr February 1876 A Piece of Secret History Scribner s Monthly 519 521 Kennan George May 1888 Siberia and the Exile System Across the Russian Frontier The Century 3 23 Kennan George December 1887 Prison Life of the Russian Revolutionists The Century 285 297 Kennan George December 1887 A Voice for the People of Russia The Century 461 471 Kennan George 1891a Siberia and the Exile System PDF Vol I New York NY Century Co LCCN 04016713 OCLC 23864003 Retrieved 2020 04 02 Kennan George 1891b Siberia and the Exile System PDF Vol II New York NY Century Co LCCN 04016713 OCLC 00275447 Retrieved 2020 04 02 Kent Rockwell July October 1923 A Voyager s Log The Century 37 59 King Edward April 1874 A Ramble in Virginia Scribner s Monthly 645 673 King Edward December 1873 Old and New Louisiana Scribner s Monthly 129 159 Kinney John Coddington February 1877 Farragut in Mobile Bay Scribner s Monthly 539 544 Larsen Lawrence H 1963 How Glenn Frank Became President of the University of Wisconsin Wisconsin Magazine of History 46 197 205 Lodge Henry Cabot October 1890 Why Patronage in Offices is Un American The Century 837 843 Lodge Henry Cabot January 1904 A Million Immigrants a Year The Century 466 469 Longstreet James August 1886 The Battle of Fredericksburg The Century 609 625 London Jack February 1904 The Sea Wolf The Century 584 597 Mabie Hamilton Wright January 1910 Richard Watson Gilder An Appreciation The Bookman 488 489 McClellan George B May 1886 From the Peninsula to Antietam The Century 122 130 Miller Charles R April 1910 Why Socialism Is Impracticable The Century 903 908 Mitchell S Weir April 1904 The Youth of Washington Pt 1 The Century 897 905 Mitchell 1 S Weir August 1904 The Youth of Washington Pt 2 The Century 614 623 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Myers James May 1924 Democracy in American Factories The Century 101 114 Nicolay John G Hay John December 1886 Abraham Lincoln A History The Century 248 277 Nicolay John G Hay John August 1887 Abraham Lincoln A History The Century 509 533 Nicolay John G Hay John January 1888 Abraham Lincoln A History The Century 419 436 Gilder Richard Watson ed May 1896 Photographing the Unseen The Century 120 130 Railton Stephen 1996 Prepublishing Huck from Mark Twain In His Times Retrieved 2009 10 24 Rhodes James Ford October 1909 A Review of President Hayes s Administration The Century 883 891 Roosevelt Theodore January 1907 The Ancient Irish Sages The Century 327 337 Roosevelt Theodore November 1899 Military Preparedness and Unpreparedness The Century 149 153 Roosevelt Theodore February 1888 Ranch Life in the Far West The Century 495 510 Ross Edward Alsworth December 1913 American and Immigrant Blood The Century 225 232 Russell Bertrand November 1923 Where Is Industrialism Going The Century 141 149 Ruffner W H May 1874 The Co Education of the White and Colored Races Scribner s Monthly 86 89 Sanborn Frank B July 1883 Comment By a Radical Abolitionist The Century 411 415 Sargent Frank P January 1904 Immigration The Century 470 472 Scidmore Eliza Ruhamah September 1893 Our New National Forest Reserves The Century 792 796 Sherman William Tecumseh July 1887 General Sherman and the March to the Sea The Century 464 46 Smith Justin H March 1903 The Prologue of the American Revolution The Century 713 733 Steeley R H February 1872 The Mormons and Their Religion Scribner s Monthly 396 407 Stoddard Lothrop June 1919 Bolshevism The Heresy of the Underman The Century 237 240 Stolberg Benjamin June 1925 The Peter Mans of Communism The Century 219 227 Stouffer Samuel A January 1950 Some Observations on Study Design American Journal of Sociology 55 4 University of Chicago Press 355 361 doi 10 1086 220558 eISSN 1537 5390 ISSN 0002 9602 S2CID 143677043 Retrieved 2019 01 27 Sumner W G October 1878 Socialism Scribner s Monthly 887 892 Tannenbaum Frank April 1923 The Ku Klux Klan The Century 873 882 Tesla Nikola June 1900 The Problem of Increasing Human Energy The Century 175 210 Tomsich John 1971 A Genteel Endeavor American Culture and Politics in the Gilded Age PDF Stanford University Press pp 4 6 105 106 121 122 ISBN 978 0 8047 0762 6 LCCN 75119503 OCLC 1149302676 Retrieved 2019 01 27 Gilder Richard Watson ed February 1909 February 1909 Issue The Century Gilder Richard Watson ed July 1885 Memoranda on the Civil War The Century 478 Holland Josiah Gilbert ed April 1875 Nature and Science Scribner s Monthly 121 124 Holland Josiah Gilbert ed April 1875 Nature and Science Scribner s Monthly 771 773 Holland Josiah Gilbert ed November 1870 Topics of the Time Scribner s Monthly 105 108 Holland Josiah Gilbert ed July 1871 Topics of the Time Scribner s Monthly 316 320 Holland Josiah Gilbert ed October 1878 Topics of the Time Scribner s Monthly 894 896 Holland Josiah Gilbert ed April 1879 Topics of the Time Scribner s Monthly 899 902 Gilder Richard Watson ed August 1884 Topics of the Time The Century 627 628 Gilder Richard Watson ed May 1885 Topics of the Time The Century 899 902 Gilder Richard Watson ed February 1897 Topics of the Time The Century 634 635 Gilder Richard Watson ed March 1898 Topics of the Time The Century 789 Gilder Richard Watson ed May 1898 Topics of the Time The Century 152 153 Gilder Richard Watson ed June 1902 Topics of the Time The Century 320 321 Gilder Richard Watson ed September 1903 Topics of the Time The Century 796 797 Gilder Richard Watson ed March 1904 Topics of the Time The Century 790 799 Boas Franz May 1904 Gilder Richard Watson ed Topics of the Time The Century 156 157 Gilder Richard Watson ed October 1906 Topics of the Time The Century 958 959 Twain Mark January 1885 Jim s Investments and King Sollermun The Century 456 458 Wallace Alfred R January 1883 The Debt of Science to Darwin The Century 420 432 Washington Booker T September 1903 Heroes in Black Skins The Century 724 729 Washington Booker T May 1908 Negro Homes The Century 71 79 Wells H G January 1914 The World Set Free The Century 697 711 Wells H G February 1914 The Last War in the World The Century The World Set Free 566 580 Wells H G March 1914 The Trap to Catch the Sun The Century The World Set Free 331 344 Clarence C Buel The New York Times 20 May 24 1933 White Andrew D August 1903 Chapters from My Diplomatic Life The Century 591 603 White William Allen November 1930 A Reader in the Eighties and Nineties The Bookman 229 234 Wilson Woodrow September 1901 Edmund Burke and the French Revolution The Century 784 791 Online Subscription Editions of Scribner s prior series The Army in the Civil War Nicolay John G 1885 The Outbreak of Rebellion PDF The Army in the Civil War Vol I Subscription ed New York NY Charles Scribner s Sons pp 1 252 LCCN 05032153 OCLC 701696977 Retrieved 2020 04 02 Force Manning Ferguson 1885 From Fort Henry to Corinth PDF The Army in the Civil War Vol II Subscription ed New York NY Charles Scribner s Sons pp 1 236 LCCN 05032153 OCLC 701696977 Retrieved 2020 04 02 Webb Alexander Stewart 1885 The Peninsula McClellan s Campaign of 1862 PDF The Army in the Civil War Vol III Subscription ed New York NY Charles Scribner s Sons pp 1 258 LCCN 05032153 OCLC 1040015302 Retrieved 2020 04 02 Ropes John Codman 1885 The Army under Pope PDF The Army in the Civil War Vol IV Subscription ed New York NY Charles Scribner s Sons pp 1 266 LCCN 05032153 OCLC 1039990436 Retrieved 2020 04 02 Palfrey Francis Winthrop 1885 The Antietam and Fredericksburg PDF The Army in the Civil War Vol V Subscription ed New York NY Charles Scribner s Sons pp 1 260 LCCN 05032153 OCLC 1040012349 Retrieved 2020 04 02 Doubleday Abner 1885 Chancellorsville and Gettysburg PDF The Army in the Civil War Vol VI Subscription ed New York NY Charles Scribner s Sons pp 1 278 LCCN 05032153 OCLC 701696977 Retrieved 2020 04 02 Cist Henry Martyn 1885 The Army of the Cumberland PDF The Army in the Civil War Vol VII Subscription ed New York NY Charles Scribner s Sons pp 1 322 ISBN 978 1 58218 565 1 LCCN 02008041 OCLC 1039977104 Retrieved 2020 04 02 Greene Francis Vinton 1885 The Mississippi PDF The Army in the Civil War Vol VIII Subscription ed New York NY Charles Scribner s Sons pp 1 314 LCCN 05032153 OCLC 701696977 Retrieved 2020 04 02 Cox J D 1885a Atlanta PDF The Army in the Civil War Vol IX Subscription ed New York NY Charles Scribner s Sons pp 1 306 LCCN 05032153 OCLC 1855131 Retrieved 2020 04 02 Cox J D 1885b The March to the Sea Franklin and Nashville PDF The Army in the Civil War Vol X Subscription ed New York NY Charles Scribner s Sons pp 1 296 LCCN 05032153 OCLC 1040003233 Retrieved 2020 04 02 Pond George E 1885 The Shenandoah Valley in 1864 PDF The Army in the Civil War Vol XI Subscription ed New York NY Charles Scribner s Sons pp 1 502 LCCN 05032153 OCLC 701696977 Retrieved 2020 04 02 Humphreys Andrew Atkinson 1885 The Virginia campaign of 64 and 65 PDF The Army in the Civil War Vol XII Subscription ed New York NY Charles Scribner s Sons pp 1 502 LCCN 05032153 OCLC 701696977 Retrieved 2020 04 02 Phisterer Frederick 1885 Statistical record of the armies of the United States PDF The Army in the Civil War Vol XIII Subscription ed New York NY Charles Scribner s Sons pp 1 368 LCCN 05032153 OCLC 701696977 Retrieved 2020 04 02 External links edit nbsp 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