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St. Nicholas (magazine)

St. Nicholas Magazine was a popular monthly American children's magazine, founded by Scribner's in 1873.[1] The first editor was Mary Mapes Dodge, who continued her association with the magazine until her death in 1905.[2] Dodge published work by the country's leading writers, including Louisa May Alcott, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Mark Twain, Laura E. Richards and Joel Chandler Harris. Many famous writers were first published in St. Nicholas League, a department that offered awards and cash prizes to the best work submitted by its juvenile readers. Edna St. Vincent Millay, F. Scott Fitzgerald, E. B. White, and Stephen Vincent Benét were all St. Nicholas League winners.[3]

St. Nicholas Magazine
St. Nicholas, 1896
CategoriesChildren's
FounderRoswell Smith and Mary Mapes Dodge
First issueNovember 1873; 149 years ago (1873-11)
Final issue1943 (1943)
CountryUnited States
Based inNew York City
LanguageEnglish
OCLC1764817

St. Nicholas Magazine ceased publication in 1940. A revival was attempted in 1943, but only a few issues were published before St. Nicholas folded once more.

Founding

 
In this 1873 "primal acrostic" the words are pictured instead of described. When the seven objects have been rightly guessed and written one below another, the initial letters will spell the surname of a famous man (Jackson).

In 1870 Roswell Smith, cofounder of the magazine publishing company Scribner & Company, contacted Mary Mapes Dodge to inquire if she would be interested in working for a projected new children's magazine.[4] At the time Dodge was an associate editor of the weekly periodical Hearth and Home,[5] as well as the author of children's novels, including the best-seller Hans Brinker, or the Silver Skates.

Dodge had specific ideas about what a children's magazine should and shouldn't be. She felt it must not be "a milk-and-water variety of the periodicals for adults. In fact, it needs to be stronger, truer, bolder, more uncompromising than the other.... Most children...attend school. Their heads are strained and taxed with the day's lessons. They do not want to be bothered nor amused nor petted. They just want to have their own way over their own magazine."[6]

The first issue of St. Nicholas: Scribner's Illustrated Magazine for Girls and Boys was dated November, 1873. It had 48 pages and a press run of 40,000 copies.[5] Although St. Nicholas never reached the high circulation numbers of some other magazines (in the 1890s The Youth's Companion had 500,000 subscribers compared with St Nicholas's 100,000 in Christmas 1883[7] ), within a few years it had acquired numerous competing children's periodicals. Magazines that merged with St. Nicholas were Our Young Folks and The Children's Hour in 1874, The Schoolday Magazine and The Little Corporal in 1875, and Wide Awake in 1893.[5]

From the start, St. Nicholas was beautifully printed with illustrations from a consistent group of artists and wood engravers, such as Walter James Fenn, used by Scribner & Company's other magazine, Scribner's Monthly.[4]

St. Nicholas League

In 1899 St. Nicholas League began. It was one of the magazine's most important departments, and had the motto of "Live to learn and learn to live." Each month contests were held for the best poems, stories, essays, drawings, photographs, and puzzles submitted by the magazine's young readers. Winners received gold badges, runners-up received silver badges, and "honor members", winners of both gold and silver badges, were sent cash prizes.[3]"There is no doubt about it," E.B. White wrote. "The fierce desire to write and paint that burns in our land today, the incredible amount of writing and painting that still goes on in the face of heavy odds, are directly traceable to St Nicholas."[8]

Many St. Nicholas League winners went on to achieve prominence. The most prolific poetry contest winner was Edna St. Vincent Millay, who had seven poems published in the League. E.B. White and Bennett Cerf won essay contests. William Faulkner made the honor roll for his drawings, and F. Scott Fitzgerald was honored for a photograph.[3]

People

Mary Mapes Dodge as editor

From 1873 until 1881, Mary Mapes Dodge was involved with the day-to-day operations of all aspects of St. Nicholas. She created the magazine departments, wrote the monthly column Jack-in-the-Pulpit, and contributed many stories and poems.

In the first issue she explained why she chose St. Nicholas for the name of the magazine:

Is he not the boys' and girls' own Saint, the especial friend of young Americans?... And what is more, isn't he the kindest, best, and jolliest old dear that ever was known?... He has attended so many heart-warmings in his long, long day that he glows without knowing it, and, coming as he does, at a holy time, casts a light upon the children's faces that lasts from year to year.... Never to dim this light, young friends, by word or token, to make it even brighter, when we can, in good, pleasant helpful ways, and to clear away clouds that sometimes shut it out, is our aim and prayer.[9]

In order to retain her juvenile readers for many years, Dodge created departments for different age groups. For Very Little Folks (1873–1897) was a page of simple stories printed in large type. The Puzzle Box contained riddles, math and word games. Young Contributors Department (begun in 1875) encouraged the writing skills of older children. The Agassiz Association was begun in 1885 to develop the awareness of nature, and the importance of conservation.[5] Hundreds of Agassiz chapters were organized across the nation, and reports of activities were printed in the department.[4]

Dodge knew many famous writers, and was able to persuade them to submit their work to her magazine. Frances Hodgson Burnett's novel Little Lord Fauntleroy first appeared as a St. Nicholas serial, beginning in the November 1885 issue. Her novella Sara Crewe appeared in the December 1887 issue.[10] Other novels to be serialized in St. Nicholas were Louisa May Alcott's Eight Cousins and Mark Twain's Tom Sawyer Abroad. Dodge asked Rudyard Kipling to do a fiction series, and he sent her the Jungle Book stories.[4]

Within a few years, St. Nicholas increased in size to 96 pages, and reached a circulation of 70,000 subscribers.[5]

In 1881, the Scribner publishing house withdrew from ownership of its two magazines, and they were purchased by The Century Company. Scribner's Monthly became Century Magazine, and St. Nicholas: Scribner's Illustrated Magazine for Girls and Boys became St. Nicholas: An Illustrated Magazine for Young Folks. The printing and art facilities of the prosperous new owner was made available to St. Nicholas, and the magazine continued to thrive.[4]

Dodge's eldest son, Harry, died in 1881. In her grief she relinquished much of her responsibilities to her assistant editor, William Fayal Clarke. Though no longer in control of all day-to-day operations, Dodge continued working at St. Nicholas until her death in 1905.[10]

 
Christmas number

William Fayal Clarke as editor

William Fayal Clarke was twenty years old when, in 1874, he joined the staff of St. Nicholas. In 1878 he was promoted to associate editor.[4] Starting in 1881, he took on more responsibilities when, upon the death of her son, Mary Mapes Dodge limited her work load.

As editor, Clarke placed more emphasis on departments, perhaps because he lacked Dodge's close ties to famous authors. Departments devoted to short plays, science and philately (stamp collecting) were added to St. Nicholas. Circulation remained at about 70,000.[4]

In 1927, Clarke stepped down as editor. He retired in 1928, after 54 years with the magazine. Within a few years, St. Nicholas began a steady decline in circulation.

Final years

In November 1927 George F. Thomson, the former editor of Our Young Folks (a magazine taken over by St. Nicholas in 1874) became editor. He was replaced after two years, and a rapid turnover of editors began.[4]

In 1930 St. Nicholas was sold to American Education Press, and the magazine's full name was changed to St. Nicholas for Boys and Girls. In 1935 St. Nicholas was sold to Educational Publishing Corporation.[4]

Editors under the last two owners were Albert Gallatin Lanier (1930), May Lamberton Becker (1930–32), Eric J. Bender (1932–34), Chesla Sherlock (1935),[4] Vertie A. Coyne (1936–40), and Juliet Lit Sterne (1943).[5]

In 1940 the format was changed to a large-print picture-and-story-magazine, aimed at beginner readers. Slick paper was replaced with soft paper. The last issue was February 1940.[5][11]

With a March 1943 issue, St. Nicholas was brought back, in a format similar to early days. Its owner and editor was Juliet Lit Stearns; business manager was F. Orlin Tremaine.[12] It failed after four issues.[5]

Availability of issues and stories

 
St Nicholas-cover

A popular service provided to St. Nicholas subscribers was that, for a small fee, six issues could be sent off to be bound into a hard-back volume, with crimson covers and a gold-stamped title.[13] These bound volumes are available through used book sellers.

Many anthologies of favorite St. Nicholas stories have been compiled. The two best-known collections were edited by Henry Steele Commager and published by Random House (the head of Random House, Bennett Cerf, had once been a St. Nicholas subscriber and (as noted above) contributor to the famous St. Nicholas League). The St. Nicholas Anthology came out in 1948, followed by The Second St. Nicholas Anthology in 1950. Treasury of Best-Loved Stories, Poems Games & Riddles from St. Nicholas Magazine, edited by Commager, was published in 1978 by Greenwich House. The first two volumes were reprinted by Greenwich House in 1982 and 1984. In addition, Burton Frye compiled A St. Nicholas Anthology: the Early Years for Meredith House in 1969.

In 2003 and again in 2004, William F. Buckley Jr. edited The National Review Treasury of Classic Children's Literature and The National Review Treasury of Classic Children's Literature: Volume Two, both with stories gathered from St. Nicholas.

A number of St. Nicholas issues can be downloaded free of charge. Sources shown in External Links are Project Gutenberg and A Tribute to St. Nicholas: A Magazine for Young Folks, which contains a menu of online links.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Harper's Young People and Its Rivals" (PDF). The Magazinist. Retrieved March 19, 2016.
  2. ^ "Mary Mapes Dodge Dead", The New York Times, August 22, 1905.
  3. ^ a b c "The Magazine That Taught Faulkner, Fitzgerald, and Millay How to Write", American Heritage, December 1985.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Mott, Frank Luther, A History of American Magazines, Volume III: 1865-1885, Harvard University Press, 1938.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Kelly, R. Gordon, Children's Periodicals of the United States, pages 377 - 388, Greenwood Press, 1984.
  6. ^ "Children's Magazines", Scribner's Monthly, July 1873.
  7. ^ "Literary Gossip". The Week: A Canadian Journal of Politics, Literature, Science and Arts. 1 (2): 28. 13 Dec 1883.
  8. ^ "The Cradle of American Lit". The Attic. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  9. ^ "Introduction", St. Nicholas: Scribner's Illustrated Magazine For Girls and Boys, November 1873.
  10. ^ a b "St. Nicholas Correspondence", de Grummond Children's Literature Collection, University of Southern Mississippi. Updated 2012-12-04. This is the introduction to the library's holdings which are "only a minute part of the correspondence of the editors of St. Nicholas magazine." See the Biographical Sketch.
  11. ^ Marilyn J. Coleman; Lawrence H. Ganong (2 September 2014). The Social History of the American Family: An Encyclopedia. SAGE Publications. p. 829. ISBN 978-1-4522-8615-0. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
  12. ^ "Famous St. Nicholas Magazine Bought by Mrs. Juliet Lit Stearn," Morning Post (Camden, NJ), March 13, 1940; Ed Bodin, The Manuscript Man (column), Birmingham News, January 31, 1943.
  13. ^ Becker, May Lamberton, Introduction to The St. Nicholas Anthology, Random House, 1948.

External links

  • St. Nicholas at University of Florida's Digital Collection — complete issues and volumes, 1873–1897 (vols. 1–24)
  • St. Nicholas at HathiTrust Digital Library — full view, complete or nearly so, 1873–1922 (vols. 1–49); limited search beginning 1922–1923 (vol. 50)
  • Works by or about St. Nicholas Magazine at Internet Archive
  • "Onward and Upward with the Arts" — 1934 New Yorker essay by E.B. White about the St. Nicholas League
  • St. Nicholas at Google Books — scanned books original editions illustrated (PDF only, medium quality scans)
  • St. Nicholas at The Online Books Page — outdated and incomplete index of some of the volumes on Google Books
  • "A Tribute to St. Nicholas: a magazine for young folks — essay with index of contents available at Project Gutenberg, Google Books, and elsewhere online
  • "St. Nicholas", "The Letter Box", St. Nicholas Magazine, January 1875 — reprint at St. Nicholas Center: Discovering the truth about Santa Claus
  • Project Gutenberg St. Nicholas issues
Other
  • Children's Periodicals in the United States During the Nineteenth Century and the Influence of Mary Mapes Dodge by Erica E. Weiss (Fall 1999) at The Online Archive of Nineteenth Century Women's Writings

nicholas, magazine, nicholas, magazine, popular, monthly, american, children, magazine, founded, scribner, 1873, first, editor, mary, mapes, dodge, continued, association, with, magazine, until, death, 1905, dodge, published, work, country, leading, writers, i. St Nicholas Magazine was a popular monthly American children s magazine founded by Scribner s in 1873 1 The first editor was Mary Mapes Dodge who continued her association with the magazine until her death in 1905 2 Dodge published work by the country s leading writers including Louisa May Alcott Frances Hodgson Burnett Mark Twain Laura E Richards and Joel Chandler Harris Many famous writers were first published in St Nicholas League a department that offered awards and cash prizes to the best work submitted by its juvenile readers Edna St Vincent Millay F Scott Fitzgerald E B White and Stephen Vincent Benet were all St Nicholas League winners 3 St Nicholas MagazineSt Nicholas 1896CategoriesChildren sFounderRoswell Smith and Mary Mapes DodgeFirst issueNovember 1873 149 years ago 1873 11 Final issue1943 1943 CountryUnited StatesBased inNew York CityLanguageEnglishOCLC1764817St Nicholas Magazine ceased publication in 1940 A revival was attempted in 1943 but only a few issues were published before St Nicholas folded once more Contents 1 Founding 2 St Nicholas League 3 People 3 1 Mary Mapes Dodge as editor 3 2 William Fayal Clarke as editor 4 Final years 5 Availability of issues and stories 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksFounding Edit In this 1873 primal acrostic the words are pictured instead of described When the seven objects have been rightly guessed and written one below another the initial letters will spell the surname of a famous man Jackson In 1870 Roswell Smith cofounder of the magazine publishing company Scribner amp Company contacted Mary Mapes Dodge to inquire if she would be interested in working for a projected new children s magazine 4 At the time Dodge was an associate editor of the weekly periodical Hearth and Home 5 as well as the author of children s novels including the best seller Hans Brinker or the Silver Skates Dodge had specific ideas about what a children s magazine should and shouldn t be She felt it must not be a milk and water variety of the periodicals for adults In fact it needs to be stronger truer bolder more uncompromising than the other Most children attend school Their heads are strained and taxed with the day s lessons They do not want to be bothered nor amused nor petted They just want to have their own way over their own magazine 6 The first issue of St Nicholas Scribner s Illustrated Magazine for Girls and Boys was dated November 1873 It had 48 pages and a press run of 40 000 copies 5 Although St Nicholas never reached the high circulation numbers of some other magazines in the 1890s The Youth s Companion had 500 000 subscribers compared with St Nicholas s 100 000 in Christmas 1883 7 within a few years it had acquired numerous competing children s periodicals Magazines that merged with St Nicholas were Our Young Folks and The Children s Hour in 1874 The Schoolday Magazine and The Little Corporal in 1875 and Wide Awake in 1893 5 From the start St Nicholas was beautifully printed with illustrations from a consistent group of artists and wood engravers such as Walter James Fenn used by Scribner amp Company s other magazine Scribner s Monthly 4 St Nicholas League EditIn 1899 St Nicholas League began It was one of the magazine s most important departments and had the motto of Live to learn and learn to live Each month contests were held for the best poems stories essays drawings photographs and puzzles submitted by the magazine s young readers Winners received gold badges runners up received silver badges and honor members winners of both gold and silver badges were sent cash prizes 3 There is no doubt about it E B White wrote The fierce desire to write and paint that burns in our land today the incredible amount of writing and painting that still goes on in the face of heavy odds are directly traceable to St Nicholas 8 Many St Nicholas League winners went on to achieve prominence The most prolific poetry contest winner was Edna St Vincent Millay who had seven poems published in the League E B White and Bennett Cerf won essay contests William Faulkner made the honor roll for his drawings and F Scott Fitzgerald was honored for a photograph 3 People EditMary Mapes Dodge as editor Edit From 1873 until 1881 Mary Mapes Dodge was involved with the day to day operations of all aspects of St Nicholas She created the magazine departments wrote the monthly column Jack in the Pulpit and contributed many stories and poems In the first issue she explained why she chose St Nicholas for the name of the magazine Is he not the boys and girls own Saint the especial friend of young Americans And what is more isn t he the kindest best and jolliest old dear that ever was known He has attended so many heart warmings in his long long day that he glows without knowing it and coming as he does at a holy time casts a light upon the children s faces that lasts from year to year Never to dim this light young friends by word or token to make it even brighter when we can in good pleasant helpful ways and to clear away clouds that sometimes shut it out is our aim and prayer 9 In order to retain her juvenile readers for many years Dodge created departments for different age groups For Very Little Folks 1873 1897 was a page of simple stories printed in large type The Puzzle Box contained riddles math and word games Young Contributors Department begun in 1875 encouraged the writing skills of older children The Agassiz Association was begun in 1885 to develop the awareness of nature and the importance of conservation 5 Hundreds of Agassiz chapters were organized across the nation and reports of activities were printed in the department 4 Dodge knew many famous writers and was able to persuade them to submit their work to her magazine Frances Hodgson Burnett s novel Little Lord Fauntleroy first appeared as a St Nicholas serial beginning in the November 1885 issue Her novella Sara Crewe appeared in the December 1887 issue 10 Other novels to be serialized in St Nicholas were Louisa May Alcott s Eight Cousins and Mark Twain s Tom Sawyer Abroad Dodge asked Rudyard Kipling to do a fiction series and he sent her the Jungle Book stories 4 Within a few years St Nicholas increased in size to 96 pages and reached a circulation of 70 000 subscribers 5 In 1881 the Scribner publishing house withdrew from ownership of its two magazines and they were purchased by The Century Company Scribner s Monthly became Century Magazine and St Nicholas Scribner s Illustrated Magazine for Girls and Boys became St Nicholas An Illustrated Magazine for Young Folks The printing and art facilities of the prosperous new owner was made available to St Nicholas and the magazine continued to thrive 4 Dodge s eldest son Harry died in 1881 In her grief she relinquished much of her responsibilities to her assistant editor William Fayal Clarke Though no longer in control of all day to day operations Dodge continued working at St Nicholas until her death in 1905 10 Christmas number William Fayal Clarke as editor Edit William Fayal Clarke was twenty years old when in 1874 he joined the staff of St Nicholas In 1878 he was promoted to associate editor 4 Starting in 1881 he took on more responsibilities when upon the death of her son Mary Mapes Dodge limited her work load As editor Clarke placed more emphasis on departments perhaps because he lacked Dodge s close ties to famous authors Departments devoted to short plays science and philately stamp collecting were added to St Nicholas Circulation remained at about 70 000 4 In 1927 Clarke stepped down as editor He retired in 1928 after 54 years with the magazine Within a few years St Nicholas began a steady decline in circulation Final years EditIn November 1927 George F Thomson the former editor of Our Young Folks a magazine taken over by St Nicholas in 1874 became editor He was replaced after two years and a rapid turnover of editors began 4 In 1930 St Nicholas was sold to American Education Press and the magazine s full name was changed to St Nicholas for Boys and Girls In 1935 St Nicholas was sold to Educational Publishing Corporation 4 Editors under the last two owners were Albert Gallatin Lanier 1930 May Lamberton Becker 1930 32 Eric J Bender 1932 34 Chesla Sherlock 1935 4 Vertie A Coyne 1936 40 and Juliet Lit Sterne 1943 5 In 1940 the format was changed to a large print picture and story magazine aimed at beginner readers Slick paper was replaced with soft paper The last issue was February 1940 5 11 With a March 1943 issue St Nicholas was brought back in a format similar to early days Its owner and editor was Juliet Lit Stearns business manager was F Orlin Tremaine 12 It failed after four issues 5 Availability of issues and stories Edit St Nicholas cover A popular service provided to St Nicholas subscribers was that for a small fee six issues could be sent off to be bound into a hard back volume with crimson covers and a gold stamped title 13 These bound volumes are available through used book sellers Many anthologies of favorite St Nicholas stories have been compiled The two best known collections were edited by Henry Steele Commager and published by Random House the head of Random House Bennett Cerf had once been a St Nicholas subscriber and as noted above contributor to the famous St Nicholas League The St Nicholas Anthology came out in 1948 followed by The Second St Nicholas Anthology in 1950 Treasury of Best Loved Stories Poems Games amp Riddles from St Nicholas Magazine edited by Commager was published in 1978 by Greenwich House The first two volumes were reprinted by Greenwich House in 1982 and 1984 In addition Burton Frye compiled A St Nicholas Anthology the Early Years for Meredith House in 1969 In 2003 and again in 2004 William F Buckley Jr edited The National Review Treasury of Classic Children s Literature and The National Review Treasury of Classic Children s Literature Volume Two both with stories gathered from St Nicholas A number of St Nicholas issues can be downloaded free of charge Sources shown in External Links are Project Gutenberg and A Tribute to St Nicholas A Magazine for Young Folks which contains a menu of online links See also Edit Children s literature portalThe Brownies BookReferences Edit Harper s Young People and Its Rivals PDF The Magazinist Retrieved March 19 2016 Mary Mapes Dodge Dead The New York Times August 22 1905 a b c The Magazine That Taught Faulkner Fitzgerald and Millay How to Write American Heritage December 1985 a b c d e f g h i j Mott Frank Luther A History of American Magazines Volume III 1865 1885 Harvard University Press 1938 a b c d e f g h Kelly R Gordon Children s Periodicals of the United States pages 377 388 Greenwood Press 1984 Children s Magazines Scribner s Monthly July 1873 Literary Gossip The Week A Canadian Journal of Politics Literature Science and Arts 1 2 28 13 Dec 1883 The Cradle of American Lit The Attic Retrieved 1 February 2019 Introduction St Nicholas Scribner s Illustrated Magazine For Girls and Boys November 1873 a b St Nicholas Correspondence de Grummond Children s Literature Collection University of Southern Mississippi Updated 2012 12 04 This is the introduction to the library s holdings which are only a minute part of the correspondence of the editors of St Nicholas magazine See the Biographical Sketch Marilyn J Coleman Lawrence H Ganong 2 September 2014 The Social History of the American Family An Encyclopedia SAGE Publications p 829 ISBN 978 1 4522 8615 0 Retrieved 8 August 2016 Famous St Nicholas Magazine Bought by Mrs Juliet Lit Stearn Morning Post Camden NJ March 13 1940 Ed Bodin The Manuscript Man column Birmingham News January 31 1943 Becker May Lamberton Introduction to The St Nicholas Anthology Random House 1948 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to St Nicholas magazine St Nicholas at University of Florida s Digital Collection complete issues and volumes 1873 1897 vols 1 24 St Nicholas at HathiTrust Digital Library full view complete or nearly so 1873 1922 vols 1 49 limited search beginning 1922 1923 vol 50 Works by or about St Nicholas Magazine at Internet Archive Onward and Upward with the Arts 1934 New Yorker essay by E B White about the St Nicholas League St Nicholas at Google Books scanned books original editions illustrated PDF only medium quality scans St Nicholas at The Online Books Page outdated and incomplete index of some of the volumes on Google Books A Tribute to St Nicholas a magazine for young folks essay with index of contents available at Project Gutenberg Google Books and elsewhere online St Nicholas The Letter Box St Nicholas Magazine January 1875 reprint at St Nicholas Center Discovering the truth about Santa Claus Project Gutenberg St Nicholas issuesOtherChildren s Periodicals in the United States During the Nineteenth Century and the Influence of Mary Mapes Dodge by Erica E Weiss Fall 1999 at The Online Archive of Nineteenth Century Women s Writings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Nicholas magazine amp oldid 1135031745, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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