The New England Magazine was a monthly literary magazine published in Boston, Massachusetts , from 1884 to 1917. It was known as The Bay State Monthly from 1884 to 1886.
3-505: The magazine was published by J. N. McClinctock and Company. The magazine has no connection to the 1830s publication The New-England Magazine . This article about a literary magazine published in the US is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . See tips for writing articles about magazines . Further suggestions might be found on the article's talk page . The New-England Magazine The New-England Magazine
6-470: The Breakfast-Table " series, which became his most popular prose works. Several of Nathaniel Hawthorne 's early short stories were published in the magazine, including " The Ambitious Guest " (November 1835) and " The Great Carbuncle " (December 1835). The magazine has no connection to The New England Magazine , a Boston publication published from 1884 to 1917. This article about
9-997: Was an American monthly literary magazine published in Boston, Massachusetts , from 1831 to 1835. The magazine was published by Joseph T. Buckingham and his son Edwin. The first edition was published in July 1831, and it published a total of 48 editions. After its final issue, in December 1835, the magazine merged with the New York -based American Monthly Magazine . The magazine has been described as "one of antebellum America's few worthwhile literary journals". Its contributors included Nathaniel Langdon Frothingham , Henry Wadsworth Longfellow , Edward Everett , and Samuel Gridley Howe . Beginning in November 1831, Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. included two essays that evolved into his " The Autocrat of
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