1870: Entered public schools of Brooklyn, New York.
1873: Obtained first position in
Frost’s Bakery, Smith Street,
Brooklyn,
at 50 cents per week.
1876: August 7: Entered employ
of the Western Union Telegraph
Company
as office-boy.
1882: Entered employ of Henry Holt & Company as stenographer.
1884: Entered employ of Charles Scribner’s Sons as stenographer.
1884: Became editor of The Brooklyn Magazine.
1886: Founded the Bok Syndicate Press.
1887: Published Henry Ward Beecher Memorial (privately printed).
1889: October 20: Became editor of The Ladies’ Home Journal.
1890: Published Successward: Doubleday, McClure & Company.
1894: Published Before He Is Twenty: Fleming H. Revell Company.
1896: October 22: Married Mary Louise Curtis.
1897: September 7: Son born; William Curtis Bok.
1900: Published The Young Man in Business: L. G. Page & Company.
1905: January 25: Son born: Cary William Bok.
1906: Published Her Brother’s
Letters (Anonymous): Moffat,
Yard
& Company.
1907: Degree of LL.D. of Order of
Augustinian Fathers conferred
by
order of Pope Pius X., by the Most Reverend Diomede
Falconio,
D.D., Apostolic Delegate to the United States,
at
Villanova College.
1910: Degree of LL.D. conferred,
in absentia, by Hope College,
Holland,
Michigan (the only Dutch college in the United
States).
1911: Founded, with others.
The Child Federation of
Philadelphia.
1912: Published The Edward Bok
Books of Self-Knowledge;
five
volumes: Fleming H. Revell Company.
1913: Founded, with others, The Merion
Civic Association, at
Merion,
Pennsylvania.
1915: Published Why I Believe
in Poverty: Houghton, Mifflin
Company.
1916: Published poem, God’s
Hand, set to music by Josef
Hofmann:
Schirmer & Company.
1917: Vice-president Philadelphia Belgian Relief Commission.
1917: Member of National Y. M. C. A. War Work Council.
1917: State chairman for Pennsylvania
of Y. M. C. A. War Work
Council.
1918: Member of Executive Committee
and chairman of Publicity
Committee,
Philadelphia War Chest.
1918: Chairman of Philadelphia Y. M. C. A. Recruiting Committee.
1918: State chairman for Pennsylvania
of United War Work
Campaign.
1918: August-November: visited
the battle-fronts in France as
guest
of the British Government.
1918: September 22: Relinquished
editorship of The Ladies’
Home
Journal, completing thirty years of service.