Judge (magazine)
Judge was a weekly magazine published in the United States from 1881 to 1947. It was launched by artists who had seceded from its rival Puck. The founders included cartoonist James Albert Wales, dime novels publisher Frank Tousey and author George H. Jessop.
The first printing of Judge was on October 29, 1881, during the Long Depression. It was 16 pages long and printed on quarto paper. While it did well initially, it soon had trouble competing with Puck.[1] By the 1900s, the magazine had become successful, reaching a circulation of 100,000 by 1912.
Edward Anthony was an editor in the early 1920s. Anthony was later co-author of Frank Buck's first two books, Bring 'em Back Alive and Wild Cargo.
Harold Ross was an editor of Judge between April 5 and August 2, 1924. He used the experience on the magazine to start his own in 1925, The New Yorker.[2] The success of The New Yorker, as well as the depression, put pressure on the magazine. It became a monthly in 1932 and ceased circulation in 1947.
Judge was resurrected in October 1953 as a 32-page weekly. David N. Laux was President and Publisher with Mabel Search as Editorial Director and Al Catalano as Art Director. Contributors included Arthur L. Lippman and Victor Lasky. There were sections with light essays on sport, golf, horse racing, radio, theater, television, bridge and current books, along with submissions from college magazines, a crossword puzzle, single-panel cartoons and humorous pieces. There were several political sections; one-liners, cartoons and longer essays with mostly a conservative bent, in a style foreshadowing Emmett Tyrrell of today's The American Spectator.
Gallery
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A 1896 cartoon, on William Jennings Bryan's "Cross of Gold" speech.
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A 1899 cover of Judge magazine showing a cartoon of U.S. President William McKinley
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A 1906 cover of Judge magazine showing a cartoon of Theodore Roosevelt by Eugene Zimmerman.
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First Reborn Judge, October 26, 1953, cover by David Wasserman.
References
- ^ "Delaware Art Museum". Web.archive.org. 2005-04-15. Retrieved 2012-07-04.
- ^ About Town, by Ben Yagoda, Scribner, 2000, pp. 34-35.