The American Magazine was a
periodical publication founded in June
1906, a continuation of failed publications purchased a few years earlier from publishing mogul
Miriam Leslie. The original title,
Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly, had began publishing in 1876 and was renamed
Leslie's Monthly Magazine in 1904, and then was renamed again as
Leslie's Magazine in 1905. From September 1905 through May 1906 it was called the
American Illustrated Magazine; then subsequently shortened as
The American Magazine until publication ceased in 1956.
In June 1906,
muckraking journalists Ray Stannard Baker,
Lincoln Steffens and
Ida M. Tarbell left
McClure's to help create
American Magazine. Baker contributed articles using the pseudonym
David Grayson. Under John S. Phillips, who served as editor until 1915, the monthly magazine departed somewhat from the muckraking style and focused on human interest stories, social issues and fiction. Initially published by his Phillips Publishing Company of
Springfield,
Ohio, it later was taken over by Crowell Publishing Company, which merged with
Collier's.
The American Magazine was published by Crowell-Collier until it folded in 1956.
Editors
With the changes in 1915, the periodical's editor was John M. Siddall (1915-23), and it...
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