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Word: editorship (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...editor-in-chief of the Harvard Monthly. After graduating from the College and Law School, he became dramatic and literary critic for the "New York Commercial Advertiser" and for the "Bookman," and has been actively engaged in newspaper and magazine work since then. In 1903, he assumed the editorship of "Collier's Weekly," and under his guidance that paper has become one of the most widely read and most influential of the popular periodicals...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRACTICAL JOURNALISM | 4/6/1908 | See Source »

...degree from both the College and the Law School here, Mr. Hapgood began newspaper work in 1893 and since then has been actively engaged in journalism. He was dramatic and literary critic for the New York Commercial Advertiser and for the "Bookman" until 1902, when he assumed the editorship of "Collier's Weekly." Under his guidance, that paper has since become one of the most widely read and most influential of the popular periodicals...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Hapgood's Lecture Monday Night | 4/4/1908 | See Source »

...degree from both the College and the Law School here, Mr. Hapgood began newspaper work in 1893 and since then has been actively engaged in journalism. He was dramatic and literary critic for the New York Commercial Advertiser and for the "Bookman" until 1902, when he assumed the editorship of "Collier's Weekly." Under his guidance, that paper has since become one of the most widely read and most influential of the popular periodicals...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Hapgood to Speak on Journalism | 3/21/1908 | See Source »

...publication of The American Nation, -- a monumental work in twenty seven stout octavo volumes, --under the general editorship of Professor Hart, marks the first very serious attempt to apply the principle of the division of labor to a narrative of the annals of the American people. Despite the elaborate scale on which the undertaking was projected, the whole series has been issued from the press within the comparatively short space of less than four years, an unusual achievement for an enterprise of its kind. Upon the general editor has devolved the task of delimiting the scope of the various numbers...

Author: By W. B. Munro ., | Title: Review of "The American Nation" | 3/17/1908 | See Source »

Atlantic--"Literature (1857-1907)," by T. W. Henderson '41; "Recollections of an Atlantic Editorship," by W. D. Howells h.'67; "Atlantic Dinners and Diners." by A. Gilman h.'04; "verses," by J. R. Lowell '38; "The Launching of the Magazine," by C. E. Norton '46; "Science (1857-1907)," by H. S. Pritchett h.'01; "Politics (1857-1907)," by W. Wilson...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Magazine Articles by Graduates | 11/6/1907 | See Source »

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