Arthur's Lady's Home Magazine

Arthur's Home Magazine (1852-ca.1898) or Ladies' Home Magazine was an American periodical published in Philadelphia by Timothy Shay Arthur. Editors Arthur and Virginia Francis Townsend selected writing and illustrations intended to appeal to female readers. Among the contributors: Mary Tyler Peabody Mann and Kate Sutherland.[1] In its early years the monthly comprised a selection of articles originally published in Arthur's weekly Home Gazette.[2][3] Its nonfiction stories contained occasional factual inaccuracies for the sake of a good read.[4] A contemporary review judged it "gotten up in good taste and well; and is in nothing overdone. Even its fashion plates are not quite such extravagant caricatures of rag-baby work as are usually met with in some of the more fancy magazines."[5] Readers included patrons of the Mercantile Library Association of San Francisco.[6]

Arthur's Home Magazine, 1867

Alternate titles

  • Arthur's Home Magazine[7]
  • Arthur's Illustrated Home Magazine[8][9][10]
  • Arthur's Lady's Home Magazine[11]
  • The Home Magazine[7]
  • Ladies' Home Magazine[7]
  • Lady's Home Magazine
gollark: Early attempts at AI back in the last millennium tried to create AIs by giving them logical reasoning abilities and a large set of facts. This didn't really work; they did some things, hit the limits of the facts they had, and didn't do anything very interesting.
gollark: They don't even have *memory* - you just train the model a bunch, keep that around, feed it data, and then get the results; next time you want data out, you use the original model from the training phase.
gollark: They don't really have goals, only the training code does, and that goal is something like "maximize prediction accuracy with respect to the data".
gollark: They're big networks which are trained to detect patterns, sometimes very deep ones, in large amounts of data.
gollark: Current AI stuff doesn't have "minds" comparable to that of humans.

References

  1. Alice Fahs (1999). "The Feminized Civil War: Gender, Northern Popular Literature, and the Memory of the War, 1861-1900". Journal of American History. 85.
  2. Bertha Monica Stearns (1945). "Philadelphia Magazines for Ladies: 1830-1860". Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 69.
  3. "About Arthur's home gazette. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1850-1855". US Newspaper Directory. Washington DC: Library of Congress. Retrieved March 27, 2013.
  4. Dorothy Bundy Turner Potter (2010), Food for Apollo: cultivated music in antebellum Philadelphia, Bethlehem: Lehigh University Press, OL 24902445M
  5. Wisconsin Farmer and North-Western Cultivator. 1857. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  6. "Annual report of the president of the Mercantitle Library Association of San Francisco". 1855. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  7. Advertisement for "Arthur's Home Magazine for 1861. The Ladies' Home Magazine. Volumes XVII and XVIII. Edited by T.S. Arthur and Virginia F. Townsend. Devoted to social literature, art, morals, health, and domestic happiness." (In: Godey's Lady's Book. January 1861. Missing or empty |title= (help))
  8. Arthur's Illustrated Home Magazine, 45, Philadelphia: T.S. Arthur & Co., January 1877
  9. Phillips' Newspaper Rate-Book. 1884. Arthur's Illustrated Home Magazine. Monthly. Literary. Illustrated. Established 1855.
  10. "Timothy Shay Arthur". The Cyclopædia of temperance and prohibition. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. 1891. OCLC 3666170.
  11. American Newspaper Directory. Rowell. 1872.

Further reading

  • Arthur's Home Magazine. Philadelphia: T.S. Arthur & Co. Missing or empty |title= (help)

Images

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.