This section contains 8,045 words (approx. 27 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: Thompson, Eleanor Wolf. “The Magazines and Their Editors.” In Education for Ladies 1830-1860: Ideas on Education in Magazines for Women, pp. 1-23. Morningside Heights, N. Y.: King's Crown Press, 1947.
In the following essay, Thompson discusses the many magazines for women in pre-Civil War America.
The Magazine for ladies in the United States1—north, south, east, and west—in the decades before the Civil War was Godey's Lady's Book.2 Was it not named The Lady's Book, with an accent on “the” and did not the astute Mr. Godey tell his readers that it was “the book of the nation”3 and keep them informed of its ever growing circulation until in January 1860, he could with joy “wish his hundred and fifty thousand subscribers the compliments of the season”?4 The understanding Mr. Godey did not for a moment think every lady read her own Lady's Book.5 In January 1859 he estimated...
This section contains 8,045 words (approx. 27 pages at 300 words per page) |