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Admire John McPhee, Bill Bryson, David Remnick, Thomas Merton, Richard Rohr and James Martin (and most open and curious minds)

6.11.09

Harold Ross

It's the birthday of the founder and first editor of The New Yorker magazine, Harold Ross, (books by this author) born in Aspen, Colorado (1892).

The money for the magazine was first put up by a man whose family made a fortune in the yeast business. Harold Ross looked for staff for the new magazine among his coterie of the Algonquin Round Table, a group that met for lunch daily during the 1920s and engaged in witty repartee between mouthfuls. They first met at the Oak Room of the Algonquin Hotel under the pretense of a practical joke and called themselves "the Board." They decided to continue having lunch together there, and after they got a waiter named Luigi, called themselves the "Luigi Board." Finally, they settled on referring to themselves as "The Vicious Circle."

This Vicious Circle helped launch The New Yorker magazine, which first hit newsstands on February 21, 1925. It lost a lot of money that first year, and Ross's poker game losses were a liability as well. But the magazine's prospects improved when E.B. White and James Thurber joined the New Yorker staff.

Thurber first joined as an editor, but soon was contributing cartoons and writings for the magazine. His association with the magazine lasted for many years, and in 1957 he published a biographical memoir called The Years with Ross. In the introduction, Thurber goes on at great length about Ross's use of profanity.

Other accounts describe how Harold Ross revered Fowler's Modern English Usage (a 1926 style manual to British English) out of a desire to compensate for his own lack of education. He was known as notorious overuser of commas and a man who scrawled into the margins "Who he?" on his writers' manuscripts.

Thurber wrote: "No one, I think, would have picked him out of a line-up as the editor of The New Yorker. Even in a dinner jacket he looked loosely informal, like a carelessly carried umbrella. He was meticulous to the point of obsession about the appearance of his magazine, but he gave no thought to himself. He was usually dressed in a dark suit, with a plain dark tie, as if for protective coloration."

A new edition of James Thurber's The Years with Ross (replete with Thurber's illustrations) was released in 2001. The new edition has a foreword by longtime New Yorker staff writer Adam Gopnick, who has written for every single editor of the magazine since (but not including) Harold Ross.

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