Canadian Magazine
The Canadian Magazine of Politics, Science, Art and Literature was the premiere monthly literary journal of Anglophone Canada for three decades.
History and profile
[edit | edit source]Edited first by James Gordon Mowat then by John Alexander Cooper, the first issue was printed in 1893.[1] Its president was James Colebrooke Patterson, concurrently federal Minister of Militia and Defence, while one of its vice-presidents was Thomas Ballantyne, then Speaker of the Ontario legislature.[1] It was meant to compete with the American offerings of Scribner's and Harper's, and was similarly priced, but focused on "cultivating Canadian patriotism and Canadian interests."[1] In 1897, the Magazine purchased Massey's Magazine thereby doubling its subscription.[1] Advertisers were railway companies, banks, insurance companies, schools and colleges, brand-name dry goods and liquor producers.[1] Eventually, its publisher would compete against the print cartel run by Hugh Cameron MacLean and William Southam.[1] It reached a circulation of 30,000 subscribers in 1922.[1] In 1925 the circulation of the magazine was 12,604 copies.[2]
The journal featured writers including Stephen Leacock, George Monro Grant, Kate Eva Westlake[3] and Goldwin Smith. Samuel Simonski reported from the front of the Boer War,[4] while John Joseph Mackenzie wrote a layman's guide to bacteria and James Wilberforce Longley wrote articles on Nova Scotian orchards.[1]
Canadian Magazine ended publication in 1938.[5]
References
[edit | edit source]- ^ a b c d e f g h biographi.ca: "Best, Thomas Henry"
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- ^ nytimes.com: Obituary for "Samuel Simonski", 15 Jan 1948
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External links
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