New York Ledger

The New York Ledger was a weekly story paper published in Manhattan, New York. It was established in 1855 by Robert E. Bonner, by transforming the weekly financial journal called The Merchant's Ledger that he had purchased in 1851. Bonner turned the paper over to three sons to operate in 1887.[1]

The date of last issue was 1898, when it was changed to The Ledger Monthly, which disappeared by 1903.[2][3]

Notable contributors included Ethel Lynn Beers, Sylvanus Cobb, Jr. (The Gunmaker of Moscow), Fanny Fern (whose first column appeared in 1855), William H. Peck, and E. D. E. N. Southworth (The Hidden Hand, among many others). The Ledger's principles were denoted to be "devoted", "choice literature", "romance", "the news", and "commerce".[4]

Unrelated papers

A unrelated political weekly called the New York Ledger was published in New York City from 1908 to 1910.[5]

A special issue was printed TV-only especially for the CSI: New York episode "Civilized Lies", which was aired on January 11, 2013. The newspaper appeared in Law & Order episode "Happily Ever After", which aired in October 23, 1990, and Elementary episode "The Diabolical Kind", which was aired in January 2, 2014. The newspaper also appeared in the mystery/crime series Person of Interest, episode "Pretenders", which originally aired October 28, 2014. In the Mindy Project season 4 episode 23 aired June 14, 2016, the fictional character Dr. Jody Kimball-Kinney read in the opening sequence a faux issue of the New York Ledger with the headline "Congress Passes Law Regulating Air Emission". Its typography is that of The New York Times.

References

  1. "Robert Bonner Is Dead". The New York Times. July 7, 1899.
  2. "The New York Ledger: History and Context". Fanny Fern in The New York Ledger. Kevin McMullen, ed. Retrieved October 9, 2014.
  3. Mott, Frank Luther (1938). A History of American Magazines, 1850–1865. Fourth Printing, 1970. Volume 2, Supplement, Sketch 12. The New York Ledger at Google Books.
  4. The New York Ledger. XVIII: 1. March 15, 1862. Missing or empty |title= (help);
  5. (1 August 1908)New Democratic Paper, The Fourth Estate, p. 5


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