Lippincott's Monthly Magazine
An article from Lippincott's Monthly Magazine from July 1884 | |
Frequency | Monthly |
---|---|
First issue | 1868 |
Final issue | 1916 |
Company | J. B. Lippincott & Co. |
Country | United States |
Based in | Philadelphia |
Language | English |
Lippincott's Monthly Magazine was a 19th-century literary magazine published in Philadelphia from 1868 to 1915, when it relocated to New York to become McBride's Magazine. It merged with Scribner's Magazine in 1916.
Lippincott's published original works, general articles, and literary criticism. It is indexed in the Reader's Guide Retrospective database, and the full-text of many issues are available online from Project Gutenberg, and in various commercial databases such as the American Periodicals Series from ProQuest.
Early names
- 1868–1870: Lippincott's Magazine of Literature, Science and Education
- 1871–1885: Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science
Notable authors
Lippincott's published several notable authors of the day, including:
- Willa Cather
- Florence Earle Coates, Philadelphia poet whose poetry was featured nearly five dozen[1] times in Lippincott's between 1885 and 1915.
- Arthur Conan Doyle: The Sign of Four (February 1890)
- Rudyard Kipling: The Light that Failed (January 1891)
- Oscar Wilde: The Picture of Dorian Gray (July 1890)
- Gertrude Atherton: Doomswoman (1892)
- Paul Laurence Dunbar: "The Sport of the Gods"1901
References
- ↑ Bohm, Sonja N., comp. The Published Works of Florence Earle Coates (Magazines). 2009. Print.
- Publication history from OCLC's WorldCat Database and American Periodicals Series (APS) Online.
- Science in the Nineteenth-Century Periodicals