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Harper's Weekly

Harper's Weekly, A Journal of Civilization was an American political magazine based in New York City. Published by Harper & Brothers from 1857 until 1916, it featured foreign and domestic news, fiction, essays on many subjects, and humor, alongside illustrations. It carried extensive coverage of the American Civil War, including many illustrations of events from the war. During its most influential period, it was the forum of the political cartoonist Thomas Nast.

Harper's Weekly
Harper's Weekly cover featuring President-Elect Abraham Lincoln; illustration by Winslow Homer from a photograph by Mathew Brady (November 10, 1860)
Illustrators
CategoriesNews, politics
FrequencyWeekly
FounderFletcher Harper
Founded1857 (1857)
First issueJanuary 3, 1857 (1857-January-03)
Final issueMay 13, 1916
CompanyHarper & Brothers
CountryUnited States
Based inNew York City, NY, U.S.
LanguageEnglish

History

Inception

 
Harper & Brothers founders Fletcher, James, John and Joseph Wesley Harper (1860)

Along with his brothers James, John, and Wesley, Fletcher Harper began the publishing company Harper & Brothers in 1825. Following the successful example of The Illustrated London News, Harper started publishing Harper's Magazine in 1850. The monthly publication featured established authors such as Charles Dickens and William Makepeace Thackeray, and within several years, demand for the magazine was great enough to sustain a weekly edition.[1]

In 1857, his company began publishing Harper's Weekly in New York City.[1] By 1860 the circulation of the Weekly had reached 200,000. Illustrations were an important part of the Weekly's content, and it developed a reputation for using some of the most renowned illustrators of the time, notably Winslow Homer, Granville Perkins, Porte Crayon, and Livingston Hopkins.

Among the recurring features were the political cartoons of Thomas Nast, who was recruited in 1862 and worked with the Weekly for more than 20 years. Nast was a feared caricaturist, and is often called the father of American political cartooning.[2] He was the first to use an elephant as the symbol of the Republican Party.[3] He also drew the legendary character of Santa Claus; his version became strongly associated with the figure, who was popularized as part of Christmas customs in the late nineteenth century.

Civil War coverage

 
Harper's Weekly artist Alfred Waud sketching the Gettysburg battlefield
 
Portraits of escaped slave Gordon (July 4, 1863)
 
Sherman's burning of McPhersonville, South Carolina, illustrated by William Waud (March 4, 1865)

Harper's Weekly was the most widely read journal in the United States throughout the period of the Civil War.[4][5] So as not to upset its wide readership in the South, Harper's took a moderate editorial position on the issue of slavery prior to the outbreak of the war. Publications that supported abolition referred to it as "Harper's Weakly". The Weekly had supported the Stephen A. Douglas presidential campaign against Abraham Lincoln, but as the American Civil War broke out, it fully supported Lincoln and the Union. A July 1863 article on the escaped slave Gordon included a photograph of his back, severely scarred from whippings; this provided many readers in the North their first visual evidence of the brutality of slavery. The photograph inspired many free blacks in the North to enlist.[6]

Some of the most important articles and illustrations of the time were Harper's reporting on the war. Besides renderings by Homer and Nast, the magazine also published illustrations by Theodore R. Davis, Henry Mosler, and the brothers Alfred and William Waud.[citation needed]

In 1863, George William Curtis, one of the founders of the Republican Party, became the political editor of the magazine, and remained in that capacity until his death in 1892. His editorials advocated civil service reform, low tariffs, and adherence to the gold standard.[7]

"President maker"

 
Caricature of William "Boss" Tweed by Thomas Nast (October 21, 1871)
 
"No rest for the wicked—sentenced to more hard labor": Self-caricature by Thomas Nast on the cover of Harper's Weekly (December 2, 1876)
 
Harper's Weekly cover featuring Theodore Roosevelt (September 29, 1900)

After the war, Harper's Weekly more openly supported the Republican Party in its editorial positions, and contributed to the election of Ulysses S. Grant in 1868 and 1872. It supported the Radical Republican position on Reconstruction. In the 1870s, the cartoonist Thomas Nast began an aggressive campaign in the journal against the corrupt New York political leader William "Boss" Tweed. Nast turned down a $500,000 bribe to end his attack.[8] Tweed was arrested in 1873 and convicted of fraud.

Nast and Harper's also played an important part in securing Rutherford B. Hayes' 1876 presidential election. Later on Hayes remarked that Nast was "the most powerful, single-handed aid [he] had".[9] After the election, Nast's role in the magazine diminished considerably. Since the late 1860s, Nast and George W. Curtis had frequently differed on political matters and particularly on the role of cartoons in political discourse.[10] Curtis believed that mockery by caricature should be reserved for Democrats, and did not approve of Nast's cartoons assailing Republicans such as Carl Schurz and Charles Sumner, who opposed policies of the Grant administration. Harper's publisher Fletcher Harper strongly supported Nast in his disputes with Curtis. In 1877, Harper died, and his nephews, Joseph W. Harper Jr. and John Henry Harper, assumed control of the magazine. They were more sympathetic to Curtis' arguments for rejecting cartoons that contradicted his editorial positions.[11]

In 1884, however, Curtis and Nast agreed that they could not support the Republican candidate James G. Blaine, whose association with corruption was anathema to them.[12] Instead they supported the Democratic candidate, Grover Cleveland. Nast's cartoons helped Cleveland become the first Democrat to be elected president since 1856. In the words of the artist's grandson, Thomas Nast St Hill, "it was generally conceded that Nast's support won Cleveland the small margin by which he was elected. In his last national political campaign, Nast had, in fact, 'made a president.'"[13]

Nast's final contribution to Harper's Weekly was his Christmas illustration in December 1886. Journalist Henry Watterson said that "in quitting Harper's Weekly, Nast lost his forum: in losing him, Harper's Weekly lost its political importance."[14] Nast's biographer Fiona Deans Halloran says "the former is true to a certain extent, the latter unlikely. Readers may have missed Nast's cartoons, but Harper's Weekly remained influential."[15]

 
George Harvey, Harper's Weekly editor 1901–13

Early 1900s

After 1900, Harper's Weekly devoted more print to political and social issues, and featured articles by some of the more prominent political figures of the time, such as Theodore Roosevelt. Harper's editor George Harvey was an early supporter of Woodrow Wilson's candidacy, proposing him for the Presidency at a Lotos Club dinner in 1906.[16] After that dinner, Harvey would make sure that he "emblazoned each issue of Harper's Weekly with the words 'For President—Woodrow Wilson'".[17]

Harper's Weekly published its final issue on May 13, 1916.[18] It was absorbed by The Independent, which in turn merged with The Outlook in 1928.

1970s

In the mid-1970s Harper's Magazine used the Harper's Weekly title for a spinoff publication, again published in New York. Published biweekly for most of its run, the revived Harper's Weekly depended on contributions from readers for much of its content.

Publications

On January 14, 1893, Harper's Weekly became the first American magazine to publish a Sherlock Holmes story—"The Adventure of the Cardboard Box".[19]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Palmquist & Kailborn 2002, p. 279.
  2. ^ Halloran 2012, p. 289.
  3. ^ Halloran 2012, p. 214.
  4. ^ "Harper's Weekly archives". onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu. Retrieved March 23, 2018.
  5. ^ Heidler et al 2002, p. 931.
  6. ^ Goodyear III, Frank H. . Click! Photography Changes Everything. Smithsonian Photography Initiative. Archived from the original on May 1, 2013.
  7. ^ Halloran 2012, p. 254.
  8. ^ Paine 1904, pp. 181–182.
  9. ^ Paine 1904, p. 349.
  10. ^ Halloran 2012, p. 228.
  11. ^ Halloran 2012, p. 230.
  12. ^ Halloran 2012, p. 255.
  13. ^ Nast & St. Hill 1974, p. 33.
  14. ^ Paine 1904, p. 528.
  15. ^ Halloran 2012, p. 270.
  16. ^ Link 1970, p. 4.
  17. ^ Throntveit 2008, p. 30.
  18. ^ Mott 1938, p. 469.
  19. ^ Panek 1990, p. 53.

References

  • DeBrava, Valerie (2001). "The Offending Hand of War in Harper's Weekly," American Periodicals, vol. 11, pp. 49-64. In JSTOR
  • Goodyear III, Frank H. (October 7, 2011). . Smithsonian Institution. Archived from the original on May 1, 2013. Retrieved August 26, 2013.
  • Halloran, Fiona Deans (2012). Thomas Nast: The Father of Modern Political Cartoons. Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-80783-587-6.
  • Heidler, David Stephen; Heidler, Jeanne T.; Coles, David J. (2002). Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: A Political, Social, and Military History. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-39304-758-X.
  • Link, Arthur S. (February 1970). "Woodrow Wilson: The American as Southerner". The Journal of Southern History. 36 (1): 3–17. doi:10.2307/2206599. JSTOR 2206599.
  • Mott, Frank Luther (1938). A History of American Magazines, 1850–1865. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-39551-0.
  • Nast, Thomas; St. Hill, Thomas N. (1974). Thomas Nast: Cartoons and Illustrations. New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 0-486-23067-8.
  • Paine, Albert Bigelow (1904). Th. Nast, His Period and His Pictures. MacMillan – via Internet Archive.
  • Palmquist, Peter; Kailborn, Thomas (2002). Pioneer Photographers of the Far West: A Biographical Dictionary, 1840–1865. Stanford University Press.
  • Panek, LeRoy L. (1990). Probable Cause: Crime Fiction in America. Popular Press. ISBN 978-0-87972-486-3.
  • Prettyman, Gib (2001). "Harper's Weekly and the Spectacle of Industrialization," American Periodicals, vol. 11, pp. 24–28. In JSTOR
  • Throntveit, Trygve (2008). "'Common Counsel': Woodrow Wilson's Pragmatic Progressivism, 1885–1913". In John Milton Cooper Jr. (ed.). Reconsidering Woodrow Wilson. Woodrow Wilson Center Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-9074-1.

External links

  • Online Books Page. Harper's Weekly digitized issues, various dates
  • Virginia Civil War Archive[dead link] – online images including those illustrations in Harper's Weekly during 1861–1865 that relate specifically to the Commonwealth of Virginia and its part in the Civil War.
  • Access for Issues 1861–1865 via sonofthesouth.net
  • Hathi Trust. Harper's Weekly

harper, weekly, confused, with, harper, magazine, harper, bazaar, harpers, wine, spirit, journal, civilization, american, political, magazine, based, york, city, published, harper, brothers, from, 1857, until, 1916, featured, foreign, domestic, news, fiction, . Not to be confused with Harper s Magazine Harper s Bazaar or Harpers Wine amp Spirit Harper s Weekly A Journal of Civilization was an American political magazine based in New York City Published by Harper amp Brothers from 1857 until 1916 it featured foreign and domestic news fiction essays on many subjects and humor alongside illustrations It carried extensive coverage of the American Civil War including many illustrations of events from the war During its most influential period it was the forum of the political cartoonist Thomas Nast Harper s WeeklyHarper s Weekly cover featuring President Elect Abraham Lincoln illustration by Winslow Homer from a photograph by Mathew Brady November 10 1860 IllustratorsWinslow Homer Livingston Hopkins Thomas Nast Granville Perkins Theodore R DavisCategoriesNews politicsFrequencyWeeklyFounderFletcher HarperFounded1857 1857 First issueJanuary 3 1857 1857 January 03 Final issueMay 13 1916CompanyHarper amp BrothersCountryUnited StatesBased inNew York City NY U S LanguageEnglish Contents 1 History 1 1 Inception 1 2 Civil War coverage 1 3 President maker 1 4 Early 1900s 1 5 1970s 2 Publications 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditInception Edit Harper amp Brothers founders Fletcher James John and Joseph Wesley Harper 1860 Along with his brothers James John and Wesley Fletcher Harper began the publishing company Harper amp Brothers in 1825 Following the successful example of The Illustrated London News Harper started publishing Harper s Magazine in 1850 The monthly publication featured established authors such as Charles Dickens and William Makepeace Thackeray and within several years demand for the magazine was great enough to sustain a weekly edition 1 In 1857 his company began publishing Harper s Weekly in New York City 1 By 1860 the circulation of the Weekly had reached 200 000 Illustrations were an important part of the Weekly s content and it developed a reputation for using some of the most renowned illustrators of the time notably Winslow Homer Granville Perkins Porte Crayon and Livingston Hopkins Among the recurring features were the political cartoons of Thomas Nast who was recruited in 1862 and worked with the Weekly for more than 20 years Nast was a feared caricaturist and is often called the father of American political cartooning 2 He was the first to use an elephant as the symbol of the Republican Party 3 He also drew the legendary character of Santa Claus his version became strongly associated with the figure who was popularized as part of Christmas customs in the late nineteenth century Civil War coverage Edit Harper s Weekly artist Alfred Waud sketching the Gettysburg battlefield Portraits of escaped slave Gordon July 4 1863 Sherman s burning of McPhersonville South Carolina illustrated by William Waud March 4 1865 Harper s Weekly was the most widely read journal in the United States throughout the period of the Civil War 4 5 So as not to upset its wide readership in the South Harper s took a moderate editorial position on the issue of slavery prior to the outbreak of the war Publications that supported abolition referred to it as Harper s Weakly The Weekly had supported the Stephen A Douglas presidential campaign against Abraham Lincoln but as the American Civil War broke out it fully supported Lincoln and the Union A July 1863 article on the escaped slave Gordon included a photograph of his back severely scarred from whippings this provided many readers in the North their first visual evidence of the brutality of slavery The photograph inspired many free blacks in the North to enlist 6 Some of the most important articles and illustrations of the time were Harper s reporting on the war Besides renderings by Homer and Nast the magazine also published illustrations by Theodore R Davis Henry Mosler and the brothers Alfred and William Waud citation needed In 1863 George William Curtis one of the founders of the Republican Party became the political editor of the magazine and remained in that capacity until his death in 1892 His editorials advocated civil service reform low tariffs and adherence to the gold standard 7 President maker Edit Caricature of William Boss Tweed by Thomas Nast October 21 1871 No rest for the wicked sentenced to more hard labor Self caricature by Thomas Nast on the cover of Harper s Weekly December 2 1876 Harper s Weekly cover featuring Theodore Roosevelt September 29 1900 After the war Harper s Weekly more openly supported the Republican Party in its editorial positions and contributed to the election of Ulysses S Grant in 1868 and 1872 It supported the Radical Republican position on Reconstruction In the 1870s the cartoonist Thomas Nast began an aggressive campaign in the journal against the corrupt New York political leader William Boss Tweed Nast turned down a 500 000 bribe to end his attack 8 Tweed was arrested in 1873 and convicted of fraud Nast and Harper s also played an important part in securing Rutherford B Hayes 1876 presidential election Later on Hayes remarked that Nast was the most powerful single handed aid he had 9 After the election Nast s role in the magazine diminished considerably Since the late 1860s Nast and George W Curtis had frequently differed on political matters and particularly on the role of cartoons in political discourse 10 Curtis believed that mockery by caricature should be reserved for Democrats and did not approve of Nast s cartoons assailing Republicans such as Carl Schurz and Charles Sumner who opposed policies of the Grant administration Harper s publisher Fletcher Harper strongly supported Nast in his disputes with Curtis In 1877 Harper died and his nephews Joseph W Harper Jr and John Henry Harper assumed control of the magazine They were more sympathetic to Curtis arguments for rejecting cartoons that contradicted his editorial positions 11 In 1884 however Curtis and Nast agreed that they could not support the Republican candidate James G Blaine whose association with corruption was anathema to them 12 Instead they supported the Democratic candidate Grover Cleveland Nast s cartoons helped Cleveland become the first Democrat to be elected president since 1856 In the words of the artist s grandson Thomas Nast St Hill it was generally conceded that Nast s support won Cleveland the small margin by which he was elected In his last national political campaign Nast had in fact made a president 13 Nast s final contribution to Harper s Weekly was his Christmas illustration in December 1886 Journalist Henry Watterson said that in quitting Harper s Weekly Nast lost his forum in losing him Harper s Weekly lost its political importance 14 Nast s biographer Fiona Deans Halloran says the former is true to a certain extent the latter unlikely Readers may have missed Nast s cartoons but Harper s Weekly remained influential 15 George Harvey Harper s Weekly editor 1901 13 Early 1900s Edit After 1900 Harper s Weekly devoted more print to political and social issues and featured articles by some of the more prominent political figures of the time such as Theodore Roosevelt Harper s editor George Harvey was an early supporter of Woodrow Wilson s candidacy proposing him for the Presidency at a Lotos Club dinner in 1906 16 After that dinner Harvey would make sure that he emblazoned each issue of Harper s Weekly with the words For President Woodrow Wilson 17 Harper s Weekly published its final issue on May 13 1916 18 It was absorbed by The Independent which in turn merged with The Outlook in 1928 1970s Edit In the mid 1970s Harper s Magazine used the Harper s Weekly title for a spinoff publication again published in New York Published biweekly for most of its run the revived Harper s Weekly depended on contributions from readers for much of its content Publications EditOn January 14 1893 Harper s Weekly became the first American magazine to publish a Sherlock Holmes story The Adventure of the Cardboard Box 19 See also EditHarper amp BrothersNotes Edit a b Palmquist amp Kailborn 2002 p 279 Halloran 2012 p 289 Halloran 2012 p 214 Harper s Weekly archives onlinebooks library upenn edu Retrieved March 23 2018 Heidler et al 2002 p 931 Goodyear III Frank H Photography changes the way we record and respond to social issues Click Photography Changes Everything Smithsonian Photography Initiative Archived from the original on May 1 2013 Halloran 2012 p 254 Paine 1904 pp 181 182 Paine 1904 p 349 Halloran 2012 p 228 Halloran 2012 p 230 Halloran 2012 p 255 Nast amp St Hill 1974 p 33 Paine 1904 p 528 Halloran 2012 p 270 Link 1970 p 4 Throntveit 2008 p 30 Mott 1938 p 469 Panek 1990 p 53 References EditDeBrava Valerie 2001 The Offending Hand of War in Harper s Weekly American Periodicals vol 11 pp 49 64 In JSTOR Goodyear III Frank H October 7 2011 Photography changes the way we record and respond to social issues Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on May 1 2013 Retrieved August 26 2013 Halloran Fiona Deans 2012 Thomas Nast The Father of Modern Political Cartoons Chapel Hill NC The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 80783 587 6 Heidler David Stephen Heidler Jeanne T Coles David J 2002 Encyclopedia of the American Civil War A Political Social and Military History W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 39304 758 X Link Arthur S February 1970 Woodrow Wilson The American as Southerner The Journal of Southern History 36 1 3 17 doi 10 2307 2206599 JSTOR 2206599 Mott Frank Luther 1938 A History of American Magazines 1850 1865 Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 39551 0 Nast Thomas St Hill Thomas N 1974 Thomas Nast Cartoons and Illustrations New York Dover Publications ISBN 0 486 23067 8 Paine Albert Bigelow 1904 Th Nast His Period and His Pictures MacMillan via Internet Archive Palmquist Peter Kailborn Thomas 2002 Pioneer Photographers of the Far West A Biographical Dictionary 1840 1865 Stanford University Press Panek LeRoy L 1990 Probable Cause Crime Fiction in America Popular Press ISBN 978 0 87972 486 3 Prettyman Gib 2001 Harper s Weekly and the Spectacle of Industrialization American Periodicals vol 11 pp 24 28 In JSTOR Throntveit Trygve 2008 Common Counsel Woodrow Wilson s Pragmatic Progressivism 1885 1913 In John Milton Cooper Jr ed Reconsidering Woodrow Wilson Woodrow Wilson Center Press ISBN 978 0 8018 9074 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Harper s Weekly Online Books Page Harper s Weekly digitized issues various dates Virginia Civil War Archive dead link online images including those illustrations in Harper s Weekly during 1861 1865 that relate specifically to the Commonwealth of Virginia and its part in the Civil War Access for Issues 1861 1865 via sonofthesouth net Hathi Trust Harper s Weekly Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harper 27s Weekly amp oldid 1126587069, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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