PUBLIC LEDGER

(Redirected from Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger)
The '''Public Ledger''' (Philadelphia), formally, the '''Public Ledger Company''', was published from March 25, 1836 to January 1942. Its motto, displayed on its front page, as part of its logo, was "VIRTUE LIBERTY AND INDEPENDENCE". For a time, it was Philadelphia's most popular newspaper, but circulation declined in the mid-1930s.
Actually, as the references below show, the name "Public Ledger" designates at least two distinct papers existing between the years 1836-1934. In 1926, for that year, the paper did not exist. The first paper's publisher was Swain, Abell & Simons. The second paper's publisher was Curtis-Martin Newspapers.
Founded by William M. Swain, Arunah S. Abell, and Azariah H. Simmons, and edited by Swain, it was the first penny paper in Philadelphia, the first daily to make use of a pony express, and among the first papers to use the electromagnetic telegraph. From 1846, it was printed on the first rotary printing press.
In 1864, it was sold to George William Childs and Anthony J. Drexel. In 1870, Mark Twain, in his column for ''The Galaxy'', mocked the ''Ledger'' for its rhyming obituaries in a piece entitled "Post-Mortem Poetry":
:''There is an element about some poetry which is able to make even physical suffering and death cheerful things to contemplate and consummations to be desired.''
In 1902, ''New York Times'' owner Adolph Ochs bought the paper, merged in the ''Philadelphia Times'' (which he had bought the previous year), and installed his brother George as editor.
In 1913, Cyrus Curtis purchased the paper, launching an evening edition in 1914. On April 16, 1934, the morning and Sunday editions were merged into ''The Philadelphia Inquirer'' (also held by the heirs of Curtis), but the paper continued an independent life as the ''Evening Public Ledger''. Thus, technically speaking, the ''Public Ledge'', as such, no longer existed after 1934.
In 1941, the ''Evening Public Ledger'' was sold to Robert Cresswell, formerly of the ''New York Herald Tribune''. Mounting debts brought on a court-ordered liquidation, and the paper ceased publication in January, 1942.

Contents
References
Known editors
Public Ledger Building
See also

References



★ Title: Public ledger (Philadelphia, Pa. : 1836)
:Public ledger
:Imprint: Philadelphia [Pa.]: Swain, Abell & Simmons, 1836-1925

★ Title Public ledger (Philadelphia, Pa. : 1927)
:Public ledger
:Imprint: Philadelphia, Pa.: Curtis-Martin Newspapers, 1927-1934

Known editors



★ William M. Swain

William Henry Fry (1844-1846)

George Oakes

★ Charles Munro Morrison (1930-1939, 1941)

★ John McLaughlin

Public Ledger Building


The 'Public Ledger Building' (1924) at 600-606 Chestnut Street was designed in the Georgian Revival style by Horace Trumbauer and houses a sculpture of Benjamin Franklin by Joseph A. Bailly (1825-1883).

See also



List of defunct newspapers of the United States

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