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Evening Tattler (1839–1843)[edit]

Evening Tattler

Founded as a daily newspaper July 8, 1839, in New York by Rufus Wilmot Griswold (1815–1857) and poet, Park Benjamin, Sr. (1809–1864). Dillon & Co. (William Dillon) acquired it in November 1841. By 1842, it was published by Dillon & Hooper (John Hooper).
Griswold founded, on February 8, 1838, the Vergennes Vermonter, which he sold April 29, 1939, to John E. Roberts (1812–1895) and his brother, Hiram Roberts (1814–1885).
OCLC 70049244, 9466950, 191281962

Scholastic and collegiate publications[edit]

The Tattler (Mineral Wells, Texas)
Student newspaper from Mineral Wells High School in Mineral Wells, Texas that included local and school news along with advertising.[1] First published around 1912.
The Tattler (George W. Brackenridge High School, San Antonio)
First published around 1918; OCLC 310369338
The Tatler (El Paso High School)
School newspaper, not to be confused with The Tattler, a yearbook published by the same school; OCLC 799873431
The Tattler (El Paso High School)
School yearbook, not to be confused with The Tatler, a newspaper published by the same school; OCLC 36718295
The Tattler, University of Texas at Austin
Physical plant and utilities newsletter; OCLC 31893228
The Tattler, "the worst college yearly in the South," University of Texas at Austin. First published 1924; OCLC 805937842

Hollywood Sun-Tattler (Hollywood, Florida)[edit]

Hollywood Sun-Tattler (Hollywood, Florida)

New York Tattler[edit]

New York Tattler

. . . was a fictitious tabloid in the 1875 novel, The Story of Sevenoaks, by Josiah Gilbert Holland, described as "a paper with more enterprise than brains, more brains than candor, and with no conscience at all; a paper which manufactured hoaxes and vended them for news, bought and sold scandals by the sheet as if they were country gingerbread, and damaged reputations one day for the privilege and profit of mending them the next.
The Story of Sevenoaks (illustrated novel), by Josiah Gilbert Holland, published in Scribner's Monthly, Vol. 10, No. 2, June 1875, Chapter 8, p. 155

The Florida Tattler[edit]

The Florida Tattler, Jacksonville, Florida; former African American owned newspaper published by Taylor and Son Print. Co.; OCLC 664611226, 1066485957

Porcher L'Engle Taylor, Sr. (1902–1964), founded the Florida Tattler in the early 1930s and ran it through the 1960s. Taylor was a Tuskegee graduate and pioneering civil rights activist. His paper chronicled numerous matters affecting the African-American community.

"Tom the Tattler" (column), Chicago Freeman[edit]

New York Tattler[edit]

New York Tattler

Vol. 1, No. 1, March 1934
cover
New York Tattler???[2]
January 7, 1927, Vol. 1, No. 1???
Andrew A. Jackson, Jr.???
Wilfred R. Bain???

Broadway Tattler (1933–1937)[edit]

Broadway Tattler – the lowdown on everything

  • Founded by Stephen G. Clow (1873–1941), who, in 1916, founded the nation's first gossip magazine (aka scandal sheet or saloon journalism), Broadway Brevities and Society Gossip, which he edited until 1925. Clow, in Time magazine, described himself as "the most famous and wicked blackmailer in world history." On his death, the US newspaper columnist Westbook Pegler called him "the originator of saloon journalism."
OCLC 4652943, 504157189

Tattler, Muskogee, Oklahoma[edit]

Harlem Tattler[edit]

Harlem Tattler – gossip, features, fotos

Revived by John Lewis Clark, formerly of the Amsterdam News, was outlawed August 27, 1940, by Mayor Fiorello La Guardia.[4] From 1936 to 1937, he was secretary of the pro baseball organization, the Negro National League.

Re: Louis Armstrong

  • "Special Jive" (re: Louis Armstrong) Harlem Tattler, Vol. 1, No. 1, July 12, 1940, p. 7
  • "Special Jive" (re: Louis Armstrong) Harlem Tattler, Vol. 1, No. 2, July 19, 1940, pps. 7, 19
July 19, 1940, Harlem Tattler, cover featuring Frankie Manning & Ann Johnson in a photo by Morgan and Marvin Smith, lindy hoppers Frankie Manning and Ann Johnson perform an airstep on the July 19, 1940, cover of the magazine Harlem Tattler. Also featured in this issue was an article by Louis Armstrong titled "Special Jive."
Pinterest

Dayton Tattler[edit]

Archives[edit]

Serial information


The New York Tattler
P. Rogers, publisher
Clifford Mack, editor
OCLC 1107791165

Chronicling America reference identifications at the Library of Congress


"African American Newspapers, Series 2, 1835–1956," Readex, a division of NewsBank

Links[edit]

Notes and references[edit]

General[edit]

Notes[edit]

Inline[edit]

  1. ^ The Tattler (Mineral Wells High School), provided by the Boyce Ditto Public Library, City of Mineral Wells, digitally archived by the Portal to Texas History (retrieved April 8, 2020)
  2. ^ "Harlem May Have Two 'Tattlers,'" Pittsburgh Courier, January 1, 1927, p. 2nd ed., p. 3 (accessible via fultonhistory.com)
  3. ^ "The Looking Glass: Schools,", The Crisis, Vol. 12, No. 3, Whole No. 69, July 1916, p. 132
  4. ^ "Harlem Tattler Is Outlawed in Drive on Lurid Sheets," Pittsburgh Courier, August 31, 1940, p. 13 (accessible via Newspapers.com; subscription required)