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The Philadelphia Record

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113: 263:, and the rivalry between the publications significantly increased. The two papers, whose buildings were within sight of each other, engaged in a "duel of keep-the-lights-on", in which their employees attempted to log longer workdays than their competitors. Both newspapers during this time accused the other of attempts to steal stories. 175:"held its own", and sold 57,000,000 copies in 1893. At that time, it was the most widely read newspaper in the city and equaled the combined circulation of any two of its Philadelphian competitors. Its printing facilities were lauded as modern and both its foreign and domestic reporting as accurate and prompt. The 327:
had a reputation for social activism. It ran stories that broke up bogus medical colleges, stopped the sale of dead bodies, campaigned against Sunday blue laws, and recommended going off the gold standard. Once, outraged at the high price of coal, the newspaper bought the output of a coal mine and
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as "the first black writer to cover general assignments for a mainstream white newspaper in the United States;" as a staff writer, Evans covered many topics including segregation in the armed services during
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February 28, 1997, pp. 32, 34, 37-38. Article includes reprinted editorial page "All-Negro Comics: Presenting Another First in Negro History" from
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from 1877 until 1947. It became among the most circulated papers in the city and was at some points the circulation leader.
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was a newspaper first published in Philadelphia on May 14, 1870; it was founded by William J. Swain, son of
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s weekday circulation had fallen to 204,000 and its Sunday edition to 362,783. During the late 1930s, the
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praised it as "one of the best and most widely circulated newspapers in the United States." Despite the
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had a weekday circulation of 328,322 and Sunday circulation of 369,525. By comparison, it led the
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was only 123,000 when he bought it, Stern was able to raise it to 315,000 within a few years.
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during the week, when the competitor sold 280,093 copies, but trailed on Sundays, when the
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s headquarters were at 917-919 Chestnut Street, in a building designed by
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in November of that year from 917-919 Chestnut Street to the former
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became one of only two morning newspapers in the city after the
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at 317-319 N. Broad Street. Though the circulation of the
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acquired the small-circulation paper and renamed it the
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In the 1930s, as the competition stiffened between the
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Archived from 721:1947 disestablishments in Pennsylvania 693: 610: 432:Philadelphia Graveyards and Cemeteries 294:-aligned publication led by publisher 194:died in 1928, the paper was bought by 572: 428: 378: 376: 374: 372: 370: 422: 405: 403: 401: 399: 397: 278:terms). From July 1936 to 1938, the 716:1877 establishments in Pennsylvania 706:Publications disestablished in 1947 625: 566: 500: 125:was a daily newspaper published in 13: 711:Defunct newspapers of Philadelphia 640:from the original on March 7, 2009 597: 527:Pennsylvania Historical Commission 469: 435:. Arcadia Publishing. p. 45. 383:Success of The Philadelphia Record 367: 214:Packard Motor Corporation Building 14: 732: 675:(1870-72 as of October 2014), at 666: 394: 492:– via Chronicling America 464:Backstage with a Great Newspaper 410:Williams, Edgar (20 June 2003). 255:sold 669,152 copies. That year, 507:Paul Comly French, ed. (1937). 701:Newspapers established in 1877 1: 361: 316:, was a sportswriter for the 107:The Public Record (newspaper) 523:Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 7: 573:Ogden, Christopher (1999). 412:"A history of The Inquirer" 10: 737: 132: 127:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 104: 85:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 632:Christopher, Tom (2002). 429:Keels, Thomas H. (2003). 240:The Philadelphia Inquirer 90: 80: 70: 62: 52: 44: 29: 21: 519:Federal Writers' Project 105:Not to be confused with 243:in 1933. In 1936, the 122:The Philadelphia Record 17:The Philadelphia Record 673:Public Record archives 636:. TomChristopher.com. 144:, who had founded the 117: 466:, Philadelphia (1936) 351:Philadelphia Bulletin 142:William Moseley Swain 115: 653:Comics Buyer's Guide 418:on 19 February 2007. 683:Philadelphia Record 525:; sponsored by the 494:Library of Congress 482:Chronicling America 320:from 1936 to 1945. 169:dire economic state 155:William M. Singerly 53:Political alignment 34:William M. Singerly 18: 517:; compiled by the 388:The New York Times 354:after a drawn-out 276:inflation-adjusted 206:Camden, New Jersey 164:The New York Times 118: 72:Ceased publication 48:1877 (by Singerly) 16: 677:Fultonhistory.com 622:(August 8, 1971). 603:Gerry Wilkinson, 590:978-0-316-09244-9 536:978-1-62376-058-8 442:978-0-7385-1229-7 304:state governments 171:at the time, the 138:The Public Record 103: 102: 728: 661: 658:All-Negro Comics 649: 647: 645: 629: 623: 614: 608: 601: 595: 594: 570: 564: 560: 554: 550: 548: 540: 515:Harry L. Hopkins 513:. Introduction: 504: 498: 497: 491: 489: 473: 467: 460: 447: 446: 426: 420: 419: 407: 392: 380: 292:Democratic Party 225:Great Depression 192:Rodman Wanamaker 185:Linotype machine 73: 57:Democratic Party 19: 15: 736: 735: 731: 730: 729: 727: 726: 725: 691: 690: 669: 664: 650:Reprinted from 643: 641: 630: 626: 615: 611: 602: 598: 591: 583:. p. 166. 571: 567: 552: 551: 542: 541: 537: 505: 501: 487: 485: 475: 474: 470: 461: 450: 443: 427: 423: 408: 395: 391:, June 5, 1894. 381: 368: 364: 257:Moses Annenberg 198:, owner of the 135: 110: 71: 12: 11: 5: 734: 724: 723: 718: 713: 708: 703: 689: 688: 679: 668: 667:External links 665: 663: 662: 624: 620:New York Times 609: 596: 589: 565: 535: 499: 468: 448: 441: 421: 393: 365: 363: 360: 334:Orrin C. Evans 313:New York Times 296:J. David Stern 196:J. David Stern 181:Willis G. Hale 134: 131: 101: 100: 95: 88: 87: 82: 78: 77: 74: 68: 67: 64: 60: 59: 54: 50: 49: 46: 42: 41: 38:J. David Stern 31: 27: 26: 23: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 733: 722: 719: 717: 714: 712: 709: 707: 704: 702: 699: 698: 696: 686: 685:May-June 1915 684: 680: 678: 674: 671: 670: 659: 655: 654: 639: 635: 628: 621: 618: 613: 606: 600: 592: 586: 582: 581:Little, Brown 578: 577: 569: 563: 558: 546: 538: 532: 528: 524: 520: 516: 512: 511: 503: 495: 484: 483: 478: 472: 465: 459: 457: 455: 453: 444: 438: 434: 433: 425: 417: 413: 406: 404: 402: 400: 398: 390: 389: 384: 379: 377: 375: 373: 371: 366: 359: 357: 353: 352: 347: 344:In 1947, the 342: 340: 335: 331: 326: 321: 319: 315: 314: 309: 305: 301: 297: 293: 289: 285: 281: 277: 273: 269: 264: 262: 258: 254: 250: 246: 242: 241: 236: 235: 234:Public Ledger 230: 226: 221: 219: 215: 211: 207: 203: 202: 197: 193: 188: 186: 182: 178: 174: 170: 166: 165: 160: 156: 151: 149: 148: 147:Public Ledger 143: 139: 130: 128: 124: 123: 114: 108: 99: 96: 93: 89: 86: 83: 79: 75: 69: 65: 61: 58: 55: 51: 47: 43: 39: 36:(1877-1898); 35: 32: 28: 25:Morning daily 24: 20: 682: 657: 651: 642:. Retrieved 627: 619: 612: 599: 575: 568: 509: 502: 486:. Retrieved 480: 471: 463: 462:The Record, 431: 424: 416:the original 386: 349: 345: 343: 339:World War II 329: 324: 322: 317: 311: 287: 283: 279: 271: 267: 265: 260: 252: 248: 244: 238: 232: 228: 222: 217: 209: 201:Courier-Post 199: 189: 176: 172: 162: 158: 152: 145: 137: 136: 121: 120: 119: 81:Headquarters 553:|work= 259:bought the 223:During the 40:(1928-1947) 695:Categories 362:References 204:in nearby 555:ignored ( 545:cite book 308:Red Smith 153:In 1877, 98:15262211 30:Publisher 638:Archived 488:13 March 272:Inquirer 261:Inquirer 253:Inquirer 249:Inquirer 63:Language 644:July 1, 562:Alt URL 300:federal 284:Record' 177:Record' 133:History 66:English 45:Founded 587:  533:  439:  356:strike 346:Record 330:Record 325:Record 318:Record 288:Record 280:Record 268:Record 245:Record 229:Record 227:, the 218:Record 210:Record 190:After 173:Record 159:Record 94:number 646:2011 585:ISBN 557:help 531:ISBN 490:2020 437:ISBN 323:The 302:and 290:, a 116:1891 92:OCLC 76:1947 22:Type 306:. 697:: 660:#1 579:. 549:: 547:}} 543:{{ 479:. 451:^ 396:^ 385:, 369:^ 358:. 341:. 187:. 648:. 593:. 559:) 539:. 496:. 445:. 109:.

Index

William M. Singerly
J. David Stern
Democratic Party
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
OCLC
15262211
The Public Record (newspaper)

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
William Moseley Swain
Public Ledger
William M. Singerly
The New York Times
dire economic state
Willis G. Hale
Linotype machine
Rodman Wanamaker
J. David Stern
Courier-Post
Camden, New Jersey
Packard Motor Corporation Building
Great Depression
Public Ledger
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Moses Annenberg
inflation-adjusted
Democratic Party
J. David Stern
federal
state governments

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