(Redirected from Saturday Evening Post):''Note: There have been other minor publications also called the Saturday Evening Post; several were/are local
British newspapers.''

A cover of the ''Saturday Evening Post'' from
1903, illustrated by
George Gibbs.
'''The Saturday Evening Post''' was a weekly
magazine published in the
United States from
August 4,
1821 to
February 8,
1969. From 1897, it was published by
Curtis Publishing Company. Curtis claimed to be descended from ''
The Pennsylvania Gazette'' founded in 1728 by
Benjamin Franklin, although the magazine's first issue was published more than 30 years after Franklin's death. According to historians, and the circulation numbers, the magazine gained prominent status under the leadership of his editor (1899-1937)
George Horace Lorimer.
Description and History
Its contents consisted primarily of articles on current events and pieces of well-written popular fiction in mainstream genres, at least one of which was usually run in serial format over several issues. These were supplemented by single-panel
cartoons, small human-interest, humorous or poetic filler pieces (often reader-contributed), editorials, a letter column, and quality interior
illustrations of both stories and advertising plus illustrated covers. In March 1916 Lorimer agreed to meet
Norman Rockwell, a 22 year old artist from New York. He immediately accepted two front covers he had produced and commissioned three more. Rockwell did covers and illustrations for the magazine through
1963, and gained his public fame by these works; several of these are among his critically best-acclaimed works. Other artists also gained fame by contributing ''Post'' covers, for example
Nebraska artist
John Philip Falter. Fiction authors included the likes of
John Steinbeck,
William Saroyan,
John P. Marquand,
Paul Gallico,
Kay Boyle,
C. S. Forester,
Hammond Innes,
Sax Rohmer,
Louis L'Amour,
F. Scott Fitzgerald,
Rex Stout,
Joseph C. Lincoln,
C.S. Lewis,
Brian Cleeve, and
Ray Bradbury.
Along with many other general-interest magazines, the ''Post'' saw a decline in the late
1950s and
1960s, generally attributed to the rise of
television. In addition, interest in the ''Post's style of fiction and its conservative editorial bent declined during the advent of American counterculture. "Name" authors were drawn to more libertine magazines like ''
Playboy'' as a high-status and high-paying venue for their work. Increasingly, the ''Post'' turned to articles on more current and fashionable topics, using cheaper photographic covers and advertisements.
An account of the final years of the ''Post'' (
1962-
1969) by
Otto Friedrich, the magazine's last managing editor, was published as ''Decline and Fall'' (Harper & Row, 1970). Friedrich acknowledged that times were against the ''Post'', but insisted that the magazine was of high quality and appreciated by its readers, attributing the financial difficulties largely to unimaginative and incompetent corporate management at Curtis.
The demise of the ''Post'' came after the magazine ran an article implying that
football coaches Paul "Bear" Bryant and
Wally Butts had conspired to "fix" a game between the
University of Alabama and the
University of Georgia. Butts sued and the case went all the way to the
Supreme Court, where it became a landmark
libel case (
Curtis Publishing Co. v. Butts, ). Butts ultimately won, and the magazine was ordered to pay $3,060,000 in
damages.
In
1971, the ''Post'' was revived, first as a quarterly, then as a bi-monthly publication specializing in health and medical breakthroughs. The magazine is currently published six times a year by the "Benjamin Franklin Literary & Medical Society", a
501(c)(3) non-profit organization.
Mad Magazine published a satire of the ''Post'' titled "The Saturday Evening Pest," whose first page shows a spoof of a
Norman Rockwell Thanksgiving scene (pipe-smoking painter "Norman Shockwell" smirks at the reader from one corner); the cover announces articles such as "Our
State Department--Do We Need It?" by Joseph and Stewart Allslop" (
Joseph and
Stewart Alsop) and "This Isn't Exactly What I Had in Mind" by
Benjamin Franklin.
Editors
(from the purchase by Curtis,
1898)
★
William George Jordan (
1898-
1899)
★
George Horace Lorimer (
1899-
1937)
★
Wesley Winans Stout (
1937-
1942)
★
Ben Hibbs (
1942-
1962)
★
Robert Fuoss (
1962)
★
Robert Sherrod (
1962)
★
Clay Blair, Jr. (
1962-
1964)
★
William A. Emerson, Jr. (
1965-
1969)
★
Beurt SerVaas (
1971-
1975)
★
Cory SerVaas, M.D. (
1975-present)
Cover Gallery
See also
★
Cyrus Curtis
★
Garet Garrett
★
Ladies Home Journal
★
J. C. Leyendecker
★
Norman Rockwell
★
John Philip Falter
★
Harry Simmons
Popular Culture
★
Steve Allen wrote a song inspired by the magazine's title.
Similar magazines
★ ''
Collier's Weekly''
★ ''
Reader's Digest''
★ ''
Life (magazine)
★ ''
Look (American magazine)''
[1]
External links
★
Saturday Evening Post website
★
Saturday Evening Post illustration archive
★
George Horace Lorimer