George Ade (1866-1944) - Winifred Black (1863-1936) - Oliver K. Bovard (1872-1945) - Arthur Brisbane (1864-1936) Abraham Cahan (1860-1951) -Samuel S. Chamberlain (1851-1916) - Frank I. Cobb (1869-1923) - Irvin S. Cobb (1876-1944) - Elizabeth Cochrane (1867-1922) - George Creel (1876-1953) - M. H. de Young (1849-1925) - Rheta Childe Dorr (1866-1948) - Floyd Gibbons (1887-1939) - Morrill Goddard (1865-1937) - Charles H. Grasty (1863-1924) - William Randolph Hearst (1863-1951) - Ben Hecht (1894-1964) - E. W. Howe (1853-1937) - Clark Howell, Sr. (1863-1936) - Will Irwin (1973-1948) - James Keeley (1867-1934) - Moses Koenigsberg (1979-1945) - Ring Lardner (1885-1933) - Victor F. Lawson (1850-1925) - Alfred H. Lewis (1857-1914) - Charles MacAuthur (1895-1956) - Bernarr Macfadden (1868-1955) - Don Marquis (18178-1937) - C. K. McClatchy (1858-1936) - W. O. McGeehan (1879-1933) - O. O. McIntyre (1884-1938) - William L. McLean (1852-1931) - Frank A. Munsey (1854-1925) - Lucius W. Nieman (1857-1935) - Adolph S. Ochs (1858-1935) - Fremont Older (1856-1935) - Charles Edward Russell (1860-1941) - E. W. Scripps (1854-1926) - Frank L. Stanton (1857-1927) - Melvill Stone (1848-1929) - Herbert Bayard Swope (1882-1921) - Bert Leston Taylor (1866-1921) - Charles K. Taylor (1846-1921) - Carr Van Anda (1864-1945) - Oswald Garrison Villard (1872-1949) - Henry Watterson (1840-1921) - William Allen White (1868-1944).
Summary
Covers the transitional period when journalism was changing from the personalized journalism of the nineteenth century to the corporate journalism of today - a time when the existence of one newspaper publishing firm in each city was becoming the rule rather than the exception and in which surviving newspapers were increasingly being run as business enterprises by professional managers rather than as vehicles for the expression of the beliefs of individual editors.
Reproduction
Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mi: Gale, 2007. Available via World Wide Web.