Newspaper The New York Herald (New York, N.Y.) 1920-1924 Combined New York morning newspapers / Combined New York Sunday newspapers

About The New York Herald (New York, N.Y.) 1920-1924
The New York Sun debuted on September 3, 1833, becoming the first successful penny daily, popular with the city’s less affluent, working classes. Its publisher, Benjamin H. Day, emphasized local events, police court reports, and sports in his four-page morning newspaper. Advertisements, notably help-wanted ads, were plentiful. By 1834, the Sun had the largest circulation in the United States. Its rising popularity was attributed to its readers’ passion for the Sun‘s sensational and sometimes fabricated stories and the paper’s exaggerated coverage of sundry scandals. Its success was also the result of the efforts of the city’s ubiquitous newsboys, who the innovative Day had hired to hawk the paper. The Sun added a Saturday edition in 1836. A number of weekly and semiweekly titles were also published, such as the Weekly Sun (1851-69), which shares the same masthead as the Sun with “Weekly” appearing in the title ornament.
The paper’s true glory days began in 1868 when Charles A. Dana, former managing editor of the New York Tribune, became part owner and editor. Dana endeavored to apply the art of literary craftsmanship to the news. Under him, the Sun became known as “the newspaperman’s newspaper,” featuring editorials, society news, and human-interest stories. A Sunday edition was added in 1875 and, later, a Saturday supplement appeared, offering book notices, essays, and fictional sketches by Bret Harte, Henry James, and other well-known writers. In the 1880s, the paper’s size increased to eight pages and in 1887 the Evening Sun hit the streets in two editions: Wall Street and Night
On September 21, 1897, in response to a letter from eight-year-old reader Virginia O’Hanlon (“Papa says ‘If you see it in The Sun it’s so.’ Please tell me the truth, is there a Santa Claus?”), the paper published “Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus.” This opinion piece by veteran newspaperman Francis P. Church, insisting that Santa Claus “exists as certainly as love and generosity and devotion exist,” caused an immediate sensation. It became one of the most famous editorials in newspaper publishing history; the Sun would reprint this editorial annually until 1949.
By 1910 the paper averaged some 15 pages, with Sunday editions triple that length. In 1916 entrepreneur Frank A. Munsey, owner of multiple other newspapers, purchased the Sun, and a series of mergers followed. In July 1916, the Sun briefly became the Sun and New York Press and then reverted to the Sun by the end of the month. In 1920, the Sun merged with the New York Herald, and the titles were combined to create the Sun and the New York Herald which appeared daily from February to September of 1920. In October 1920, the daily was split into the New York Herald and the Sun, absorbing the Evening Sun in the process. The Sun continued until January 5, 1950, when it merged with the New York World-Telegram and became the New York World-Telegram and the Sun. In 1966 that title became part of the World Journal Tribune; the latter folded the following year.
The Sun morgue of clipped newspaper articles is held by the Humanities and Social Sciences Library of the New York Public Library. The Library of Congress Prints and Photograph Division holds an estimated one million photographs, which were assembled by the Sun and subsequent papers between the 1890s and 1967, in the New York World-Telegram and the Sun Newspaper Photograph Collection.
Provided By: New York Public Library, New York CityAbout this Newspaper
- Title
- The New York Herald (New York, N.Y.) 1920-1924
- Other Title
- Combined New York morning newspapers
- Combined New York Sunday newspapers
- Dates of Publication
- 1920-1924
- Created / Published
- New York, N.Y. : Sun-Herald, 1920-1924.
- Subject Headings
- - New York (N.Y.)--Newspapers
- - New York County (N.Y.)--Newspapers
- - New York (State)--New York
- - New York (State)--New York County
- - United States--New York--New York--New York
- Genre
- Newspapers
- Notes
- - Daily
- - Vol. 86, no. 32 (Oct. 1, 1920) ; v. 85, no. 33 (Oct. 2, 1920)-v. 88, no. 201 (Mar. 18, 1924).
- - Available on microfilm from Library of Congress, Photoduplication Service, and New York Public Library.
- - Archived issues are available in digital format from the Library of Congress Chronicling America online collection.
- - New-York tribune (New York, N.Y. : 1866 : Daily) 1941-0646 (DLC)sn 83030214 (OCoLC)9405688
- - New York herald, New York tribune (DLC)sn 83030215 (OCoLC)9405828
- Medium
- 4 volumes : illustrations
- Call Number/Physical Location
- Newspaper
- Library of Congress Control Number
- sn83045774
- OCLC Number
- 9630227
- ISSN Number
- 2576-6953
- Preceding Titles
- The Sun and the New York Herald (New York [N.Y.]) 1920 to 1920
- Succeeding Titles
- New-York Tribune (New York [N.Y.]) 1866 to 1924
- The New York Herald, New York Tribune (New York [N.Y.]) 1924 to 1926
- LCCN Permalink
- https://lccn.loc.gov/sn83045774
- Additional Metadata Formats
- MARCXML Record
- MODS Record
- Dublin Core Record
Part of
Format
Locations
City
Country
County
State
Str
Languages
Subjects
Libraries That Have It
HOLDING: Center For Res Libr, Newsp Proj, Chicago, IL
Available as: Microfilm Service Copy
Dates:
- s=<1920:10:1-1924:3:18>
HOLDING: Danbury Scott Fanton Mus & Hist Soc, Danbury, CT
Available as: Original
Notes: Magazine section only
Dates:
- <1920:12:12>
HOLDING: Huntington Libr Art Gallery & Gardens, San Marino, CA
Available as: Microfilm Service Copy
Dates:
- <1920:10:1-1924:3:18>
HOLDING: Library of Congress, Washington, DC
Available as: Microfilm Service Copy
Dates:
- 1920:Oct.1-1924:Mar.18
HOLDING: New York Pub Libr Res Libr, New York, NY
Available as: Microfilm Service Copy
Dates:
- s=<1920:10:1-1924:3:18>
HOLDING: New York Pub Libr Res Libr, New York, NY
Available as: Microfilm Master
Dates:
- m=<1920:10:1-1924:3:18>
HOLDING: New York State - Rgn, Albany, NY
Available as: Original
Notes: RGNNH07 American Irish Historical Society
Dates:
- <1921:3:25, 4:13,17, 8:15,21,27,28, 9:5, 12:25> <1922:4:16, 7:2,9> <1923:7:8,15, 10:28>
HOLDING: New York State - Xfl, Albany, NY
Available as: Original
Notes: Montgomery County Dept. of History & Archives, Fonda, N.Y.
Dates:
- <1923:9:19>
HOLDING: New York State - Xfl, Albany, NY
Available as: Original
Notes: Schenectady City History Center, Schenectady, N.Y.
Dates:
- <1923:9:20-26>
HOLDING: New York State Hist Asn, Cooperstown, NY
Available as: Original
Dates:
- <1923:9:22>
HOLDING: New York Univ, New York, NY
Available as: Microfilm Service Copy
Dates:
- s=<1920:10:1-1924:3:24>
HOLDING: North Haven Hist Soc, N Haven, CT
Available as: Original
Notes: Rotogravure section only
Dates:
- <1923:1:14>
HOLDING: Princeton Univ, Princeton, NJ
Available as: Microfilm Service Copy
Dates:
- s=<1920:10:1-1924:3:18>
HOLDING: Town of Chester Historian, Chestertown, NY
Available as: Original
Dates:
- <1921:7:12> <1922:1:18>
HOLDING: Univ of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA
Available as: Microfilm Service Copy
Dates:
- s=<1920:10:1-1924:3:18>
HOLDING: Univ of Rochester, Rochester, NY
Available as: Original
Dates:
- <1923:9:19>
HOLDING: Western Rsv Hist Soc, Newsp Proj, Cleveland, OH
Available as: Original
Notes: Scattered issues held 1920; 1 issue held 1924
Dates:
- <1920:10:1-11:30> <1924:3:18>
Rights & Access
Cite This Item
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