To-Morrow (Chicago magazine) explained

To-Morrow was a Chicago magazine first established in 1903 under the title Bulletin of the Morris Society, Chicago. It ran until 1909.

History

The magazine was first published in November 1903 by followers of the Arts and Crafts movement and William Morris. The Society had no direct connection with the William Morris Society (founded 1955, in England).[1]

The magazine's name was changed to To-Morrow in 1905. Two months after the name change the editor became Parker H. Sercombe who advertised it as A Rational Monthly Magazine.[2] The magazine was left-leaning and socialist, and published the early poems of Carl Sandberg.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Boos . Florence S. . The First Morris Society: Chicago, 1903-1905 . Journal of William Morris Studies . Winter 2014 . 21 . 1 . 35–48 . 20 November 2021.
  2. Roche . John F. . Scattered Leaves: Morris’s Men in America and the Polemical Magazine . The Journal of Pre-Raphaelite Studies . Fall 1995 . 4 . 95.
  3. Knox . George . Idealism, Vagabondage, Socialism: Charles A. Sandburg in "To-Morrow" and the "Fra" . Huntington Library Quarterly . February 1975 . 38 . 2 . 161–188 . University of Pennsylvania Press.