The Truth Seeker Explained

The Truth Seeker
Editor:Roderick Bradford
Editor Title:Editor-in-Chief
Frequency:Triannual
Category:History, secularism, censorship
Publisher:Roderick Bradford / The Truth Seeker Company
Based:San Diego, U.S.
Issn:0041-3712

The Truth Seeker is an American periodical published since 1873. It was considered the most influential Freethought publication during the period following the Civil War into the first decades of the 20th century, known as the Golden Age of Freethought. Though there were other influential Freethought periodicals, Truth Seeker was the only one with a national circulation. The headquarters is in San Diego, California. The Truth Seeker is the world’s oldest freethought publication, and one of the oldest periodicals in America. Among general-readership titles, only Harper’s Magazine, The Atlantic, Scientific American, and The Nation are older.[1]

Overview

In the first issue, on September 1, 1873, editor D. M. Bennett and his wife Mary Wicks Bennett proclaimed that the publication would devote itself to: "science, morals, free thought, free discussions, liberalism, sexual equality, labor reform progression, free education, and whatever tends to elevate and emancipate the human race."[2] Subsequent editors included Eugene and George E. Macdonald,[3] Charles Lee Smith (along with his associate editors Woolsey Teller and later Robert E. Kuttner), James Hervey Johnson, Bonnie Lange,[4] and Roderick Bradford.[5] For several years, Susan H. Wixon had editorial charge of the children's department.[6]

In 1988, Madalyn Murray O'Hair put out several issues under the masthead during the course of an unsuccessful attempt to take over the company; however, the courts ruled against her ownership.[7] Morris Altman, Mark Twain, Robert G. Ingersoll, Katie Kehm Smith,[8] Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Clarence Darrow, Harry Houdini, Steve Allen, Paul Krassner, and Gay Talese are or have been contributors, subscribers, and supporters of The Truth Seeker.[9]

Past racism

Starting in the 1950s, the Truth Seeker started publishing explicitly racist content.[10] Under the editorship of Charles Lee Smith beginning in 1937, Smith, Woolsey Teller and their successor James Hervey Johnson championed antisemitism, scientific racism and white supremacy.[11] Anthropologist Robert Sussman described the Truth Seeker as a "virulent anti-Semitic publication".[12] In 1995, authors Mark Fackler and Charles H. Lippy noted:

Freethought historian Tom Flynn noted that "1950 to 1988 marked its most troubled period, when the periodical embraced racism, eugenics, and anti-Semitism, but precisely because of that achieved the smallest impact in its history."[13]

After Johnson's death in 1988, Bonnie Lange assumed the role of publisher and editor and the "racism, anti-Semitism, white supremacism, eugenics advocacy, and other marginal interests of the Smith-Teller and Johnson years were conclusively abandoned."

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Tale of The Truth Seeker. 13 September 2018.
  2. Book: Susan Jacoby

    . Susan Jacoby. Susan Jacoby . Freethinkers: A history of American Secularism. Metropolitan Books. New York, NY. 155–156.

  3. Web site: George E. Macdonald. ffrf.org . https://web.archive.org/web/20150803034434/https://ffrf.org/news/day/dayitems/item/14300-george-e-macdonald . 2015-08-03 . dead.
  4. Web site: Truth Seeker Journal of Freethought Since 1873. https://web.archive.org/web/20120402164837/http://truthseekerjournal.com/. 2 April 2012. truthseekerjournal.com. 23 July 2015.
  5. Web site: Contact Us - The Truth Seeker. thetruthseeker.net.
  6. Book: Willard. Frances Elizabeth. Livermore. Mary Ashton Rice. A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life. Susan Helen Wixon . Public domain. 1893. Moulton.
  7. Web site: Jackson v. Truth Seeker Co., Inc., 884 F. Supp. 370 - Dist. Court, SD California 1994.
  8. Passet . Joanne E. . 2005 . Freethought Children's Literature and the Construction of Religious Identity in Late-Nineteenth-Century America . Book History . 8 . 107–129 . 30227374 . 1098-7371.
  9. Web site: The Truth Seeker Home Page.
  10. [J. Gordon Melton|Melton, J. Gordon]
  11. [Tom Flynn (author)|Flynn, Tom]
  12. Sussman, Robert W. (2014). The Myth of Race: The Troubling Persistence of an Unscientific Idea. Harvard University Press. p. 223.
  13. Web site: Flynn. Tom. 2018-09-13. The Tale of The Truth Seeker Center for Inquiry. 2022-02-15. en-US.