Merry's Museum

"How Maggie Paid the Rent," Merry's Museum, April 1871.

Merry's Museum (1841–1872) was an illustrated children's magazine established by Samuel Griswold Goodrich in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1841. Louisa May Alcott served as editor for a year or so, and also contributed stories, as did Lucretia Peabody Hale, Caroline M. Hewins, Rebecca Sophia Clarke, Helen W. Pierson, and others. Goodrich continued to oversee the magazine until 1854.[1] For some time it was published in New York. In 1868 Boston's Horace B. Fuller bought the enterprise, and remained as publisher until 1872, when the magazine ceased.[2]

Editors included Goodrich (1841–1850); Rev. S.T. Allen (ca.1850);[3] and Alcott (ca.1868–1870).[4] Among the many contributors were Mary Bedford; Katherine Bertha; Emer Birdsey; Kitty Carroll; Margaret Field; Lilian Louise Gilbert; E.B. Greene; Mary B. Harris; Annie Moore; Anna North; Annie Phillips; Mary N. Prescott; Rose Scott; M.G. Sleeper; Olive Thorne; and Elisabeth A. Thurston.

References

  1. Samuel Griswold Goodrich. Recollections of a lifetime: or men and things I have seen, v.2. 1857; p.543.
  2. "A Visit to Merry's Museum". Merrycoz. Retrieved 23 August 2016.
  3. Goodrich. 1857; p.543.
  4. Frank Luther Mott. A history of American magazines: 1741–1850, Volume 3. Harvard University Press, 1938; p.714+

Further reading

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Merry's Museum.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.