Showing posts with label magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label magazine. Show all posts

Monday, March 20, 2017

Time Inc.

Time Inc. was founded in 1922 with a small share subscription of USD$85,675 organized by wealthy associates of Yale University graduates Henry Robinson Luce and Briton Hadden in order to publish a newly created magazine called Time. Time Inc. was incorporated on November 28, 1922.

Time was the first weekly news magazine of its kind. It was launched in 1923, proved enormously successful because it was the first publication to give comprehensive, of superficial, commentary on national and international news every week.
Time Inc. enjoyed continuing financial success during the 1930s, despite launching Fortune magazine four months after the stock market crash. The company added Life to its Fortune and Time magazine roster in 1936.

In March 1989, Warner Communications Inc and Time Inc announced plans for a merger, which would create the world’s largest communications organization. On January 10, 1990, the $14.9 billion merger of the two companies became official. The new identity was called Time Warner and lasted until the company was spun off on June 9, 2014.
Time Inc.

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Early History of National Geographic


The formation of the National Geographic Society, dedicated to the advancement and dissemination of specialized geographic knowledge.

The National Geographic Society origins, growing out of the meeting between a group vocational scholars and a few celebrated geographers and explorer in January 1888, in the prestigious Cosmos Club in Washington.

This society in addition to providing financial support for numerous expedition, has published the widely read National Geographic Magazine and numerous monographs.

The first National Geographic magazine was published in October 1888, as a slim, technical journal with an unassuming terra-cotta cover.

Federal scientists, including A. W Greely, John Wesley Powell, and Henry Gannet, established the society to improve intergovernmental communication on geographical issues, and also to inform people who were influential in Washington society and politics.

It too was to serve the community of scientists associated with the geographical work of the federal government , a category that included surveyors, topographers, statisticians, hydrographers, geologists and explorers.

Its first elected president was Gardiner Green Hubbard, a Boston lawyer and humanitarian who had help organize the first telephone company for Alexander Graham Bell, his son in law.

In 1903, the Hubbard and Alexander Graham Bell families presented the society with a permanent facility, Hubbard Memorial Hall, laying foundations for a tight family venture that rapidly became poplar national institution.

Expeditions are sent out under its auspices and in cooperation with other agencies.

By 1905 the Geographic was on its way to becoming one of the most ubiquitous sources of information and images about the world in American culture.
Early History of National Geographic

The Most Popular Posts