Hello Readers,
I read in the news last week that the storied New Orleans Times-Picayune will reduce their editions to three days a week, and it reminded me of another important event in newspaper history.
This week, an anniversary will pass that I’m sure few will be aware of. Seventy five years ago, an important newspaper ceased publication. The newspaper was the New York American, and it was Hearst’s flagship morning newspaper.
The New York American started out as a morning edition of the New York Journal, but it was renamed in 1901. Since the beginning, the Sunday had been known as the Journal, but it became the New York Sunday American. William Randolph Hearst liked to brand his newspapers with “American” in the title, like the Atlanta American, Baltimore American, Boston American, Chicago American, as opposed to newspapers already in existence that he acquired.

A 1922 ad for the expanded Sunday comic section.
The New York American had some strips that would often be designated for morning or evening newspapers in the chain. For instance, TILLIE THE TOILER or TOOTS AND CASPER would be “morning” strips and THIMBLE THEATRE and KRAZY KAT would be “evening” strips.

A 1926 page of the N. Y. American’s daily lineup.
The Great Depression was hard on the newspaper industry. Mr. Hearst had taken chances in the years before by expanding the chain. Unfortunately, many new titles didn’t succeed, especially in cities with more than one Hearst newspaper. In New York, there were three newspapers: The New York Daily American, the Evening Journal and the tabloid Mirror. The American drew the short straw, and ceased publication with its last edition on June 24, 1937.

The last issue breaks the news to its’ readers.
The two remaining broadsheets merged to form the New York Journal-American, which combined many of its features. For a comics fan, it was great because the newspaper was packed with a variety of comics. A typical late issue shows almost two pages of comic strips.
The New York Journal-American existed into the 1960s, until it became a casualty like its’ crosstown rivals the World-Telegram and the Herald-Tribune of too many strikes by the various trade unions that dominated the newspaper scene. The final issue of the New York Journal-American, as well as the World-Telegram was April 23, 1966, and the Herald Tribune ended its circulation the next day. The Mirror had ceased in 1963, leaving no Hearst-owned newspapers in the Big Apple.
In September 1966, an unlikely new paper, using a combination of all three papers names, the World-Journal-Telegram appeared as a newsstand-only daily, but it was far too little, too late. The demise of “The Widget” as it was nicknamed, came on another anniversary this year, the forty-fifth, on May 5, 1967.
And that concludes this week’s newspaper history lesson. Let’s move on to reader email…
To Bhob, Mr. Whoopee: Another boarding house strip would be Herriman’s STUMBLE INN. There’s probably more, but they would be pretty old and obscure. We just don’t see those places much anymore.
Yours,
The Archivist
Excellent article! Thanks!
A nice history. Thanks!
The “Announcement” mentions O.O. McIntyre, one of the most popular columnists of the 20th century, who is now almost totally forgotten.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O.O._McIntyre
An 8-page comics section? Wow! That would be enough to make me subscribe to the Sunday paper for the first time ever (not counting my parents getting it when I was little). Of course, I’d quickly run out of room in the house from saving the funnies.
@The Archivist: I know American comics get published in other countries and languages, but do you know of many that were started in other countries (&/or languages) that are now or have been popular in the U.S.?
Thanks!
The Journal American in the 50′s and early 60′s had a 12 page tabloid color comics on Saturday (with Popeye on the front) and a 12 page broadsheet comics on Sunday with 2 pages devoted to Disney strips and a full page Prince Valiant, plus the TV booklet Disney’ s True Life Adventures. I always wanted to go to my grandparents house because they got the Journal American every day.
This lists the strips that were in the Sunday Journal-American in 1946:
http://nyapril1946.blogspot.com/2010/10/blondie-and-rest-of-comic-strips-in.html
An eBay listing indicates that the Saturday Journal-American color tabloid had Popeye, Grandma, Little Woman, Mandrake the Magician, Glamor Girls, Grin and Bear it and Buck Rogers. Here’s what the Saturday tabloid looked like: http://bit.ly/MUOZGn
Dear Sirs, I am feeling quite nostalgic as I gain in years. Can you help me to recall a comic strip that appeared in the Sunday color section of the NY Journal American. Its central characters lived in the depths of hell. As a very young person perhaps no more than 8 in the mid fifties , I found it to be funny and scary. Do you remember its title, I would appreciate any help. Thank you, Tom Reale