Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Masthead for the first issue of Good Housekeeping, May 2, 1885. On May 2, 1885, Clark W. Bryan founded Good Housekeeping in Holyoke, Massachusetts, as a fortnightly magazine. [3] [4] The magazine became a monthly publication in 1891. [5] The magazine achieved a circulation of 300,000 by 1911, at which time it was bought by the Hearst ...
The "Good Wife's Guide" is a magazine article rumored to have been published in the May 13, 1955 issue of Housekeeping Monthly, describing how a good wife should act, containing material that reflects a very different role assignment from contemporary American society.
While all seven of the magazines were aimed at women, they all had divergent beginnings. Family Circle and Woman's Day were both originally conceived as circulars for grocery stores (Piggly Wiggly and A&P); [2] McCall's and Redbook were known for a text-heavy format focusing on quality fiction; Good Housekeeping was aimed at affluent housewives; [3] and Ladies' Home Journal was originally a ...
The offices of the publishing firm, Clark W. Bryan & Company, after it was moved from Holyoke to Springfield; the building still stands at 39–43 Lyman Street today. Clark W. Bryan was a publisher, writer, poet, and journalist who is best known today for creating the home economics magazine Good Housekeeping that he would manage from 1885 until his death in 1899, during which time he ...
Young Money magazine, Jan 2007. Cover story features Jenna Lee of Fox Business Network. ... Good Housekeeping (US and UK) Grand Hotel (Italy) Grazia (Italian-based)
Housekeeping is the management and routine support activities of running and maintaining an organized physical institution occupied or used by people, like a house, ship, hospital or factory, such as cleaning, tidying/organizing, cooking, shopping, and bill payment.
The London Scene is the name given to a series of six essays that Virginia Woolf wrote for Good Housekeeping magazine in 1931 and 1932. The title was not chosen by Woolf but comes from the 1975 republication of five of the essays. Originally the essays were referred to as 'Six Articles on London Life'. [1]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more