Edward Bok

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Edward Bok
Bok c. 1918
Bok c. 1918
BornEduard Willem Gerard Cesar Hidde Bok
(1863-10-09)October 9, 1863
Den Helder, Netherlands
DiedJanuary 9, 1930(1930-01-09) (aged 66)
Lake Wales, Florida, US
Occupation
  • Editor
  • author
NationalityAmerican
Notable works
  • Successward
  • The Young Man in Business
  • The Young Man & The Church
  • The Americanization of Edward Bok
Notable awardsPulitzer Prize
Spouse
(m. 1896)

Edward William Bok (born Eduard Willem Gerard Cesar Hidde Bok)[1] (October 9, 1863 – January 9, 1930)[1] was a Dutch-born American editor and Pulitzer Prize-winning author. He was editor of the Ladies' Home Journal for 30 years (1889–1919). He also distributed popular homebuilding plans and created Bok Tower Gardens in central Florida.

Life and career

Bok was born in Den Helder, Netherlands to a wealthy, prominent family. After his father lost most of his wealth due to bad investment decisions, the family immigrated to Brooklyn, New York when Edward was six years of age. In Brooklyn, he washed the windows of a bakery shop after school to help support his family. His family was so poor that in addition he used to go into the street with a basket every day and collect stray bits of coal that had fallen in the gutter where the coal wagons had delivered fuel.[2] By the time Bok was in his early teens, he was required to quit school to aid his family with financial support. His first full-time job, in 1876, was as an office boy with the Western Union Telegraph company.[3]

In 1882, Bok began work with Henry Holt and Company as a stenographer while also taking classes in the evenings.[4] In 1884, he accepted an offer from Charles Scribner's Sons to became its advertising manager. From 1884 until 1887, Bok was the editor of The Brooklyn Magazine, and in 1886, he founded the Bok Syndicate Press, "the country's third syndicate with 137 newspapers subscribed".[4]

After moving to Philadelphia in 1889, he obtained the editorship of Ladies' Home Journal when its founder and editor Louisa Knapp Curtis stepped down to a less intense role at the popular, nationally circulated publication. It was published by Cyrus Curtis, who had an established publishing empire that included many newspapers and magazines.[5]

In 1896, Bok married Mary L. Curtis, the daughter of Louisa and Cyrus Curtis.[6] She shared her family's interest in music, cultural activities, and philanthropy and was very active in social circles. Shortly before his marriage, he published an advice book for young men. He noted among other things, that "A man who truly loves his mother, wife, sister or sweetheart never tells a story which lowers her sex in the eyes of others."[7] During his editorship, the Journal became the first magazine in the world to have one million subscribers and it became very influential among readers by featuring informative and progressive ideas in its articles.[8] The magazine focused upon the social issues of the day. When Bok's autobiography, The Americanization of Edward Bok, appeared in 1920, and later received a Pulitzer Prize, the writer H. L. Mencken reviewed it with an interest based on long acquaintance with the magazine. Mencken observed that Bok showed an irrepressible interest in things artistic:

When he looked at the houses in which his subscribers lived, their drab hideousness made him sick. When he went inside and contemplated the lambrequins, the gilded cattails, the Rogers groups, the wax fruit under glass domes, the emblazoned seashells from Asbury Park, the family Bible on the marble-topped center-table, the crayon enlargements of Uncle Richard and Aunt Sue, the square pianos, the Brussels carpets, the grained woodwork—when his eyes alighted upon such things, his soul revolted, and at once his moral enthusiasm incited him to attempt a reform. The result was a long series of Ladies' Home Journal crusades against the hideousness of the national scene—in domestic architecture, in house furnishing, in dress, in town buildings, in advertising. Bok flung himself headlong into his campaigns, and practically every one of them succeeded. ... If there were gratitude in the land, there would be a monument to him in every town in the Republic. He has been, aesthetically, probably the most useful citizen that ever breathed its muggy air.[9]

The Journal also became the first magazine to refuse patent medicine advertisements.[10]

In 1919, Bok retired from publishing.[4]

The Singing Tower

In 1923, Bok proposed the American Peace Award. Bok also established a number of awards including the $100,000 American Peace Award in 1923, given for the "best practicable plan for U.S. cooperation in world peace".[11][12]

Original caption from his 1922 autobiography: "Where Edward Bok is happiest: in his garden".[8] Date and place are uncertain.

In 1924, Mary Louise Bok founded the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, which she dedicated to her father, Cyrus Curtis, and in 1927, the Boks embarked upon the construction of Bok Tower Gardens, near their winter home in Mountain Lake Estates, Lake Wales, Florida, which was dedicated on February 1, 1929, by the president of the United States, Calvin Coolidge. Bok Tower is sometimes called a sanctuary and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as a National Historic Landmark. Bok is used as an example in Dale Carnegie's How to Win Friends and Influence People.[13]

Bok died after a heart attack on January 9, 1930, in Lake Wales, within sight of his beloved Singing Tower and was buried at the tower's base.[14] Two of his grandsons are folk singer Gordon Bok and former Harvard University President Derek Bok.

Edward Bok and American domestic architecture

Edward Bok with dogs

In 1895, Bok began publishing in Ladies' Home Journal plans for building houses which were affordable for the American middle class – from $1,500 to $5,000 – and made full specifications with regional prices available by mail for $5. Later, Bok and the Journal became a major force in promoting the "bungalow", a style of residence which derived from India. Plans for these houses cost as little as a dollar, and the 1+12-story dwelling, some as small as 800 square feet, soon became a dominant form of new domestic architecture in the country.[15]

Some architects complained that by making building plans available on a mass basis, Bok was usurping their prerogatives, and some, such as Stanford White openly discouraged him—although White later came around, writing

I believe that Edward Bok has more completely influenced American domestic architecture for the better than any man in this generation. When he began ... I refused to cooperate with him. If Bok would come to me now, I would not only make plans for him, but I would waive my fee for them in retribution for my early mistake.[15]

Bok advocated using the term living room for the room then commonly called a parlo[u]r or drawing room, and is sometimes erroneously credited with inventing the term. This room had traditionally been used only on Sundays or for formal occasions such as the displaying of deceased family members before burial; it was the buffer zone between the public sphere and the private one of the rest of the house. Bok believed it was foolish to create an expensively furnished room that was rarely used, and promoted the alternative name to encourage families to use the room in their daily lives. He wrote, "We have what is called a 'drawing room'. Just whom or what it 'draws' I have never been able to see unless it draws attention to too much money and no taste ..."[16]

Bok's overall concern was to preserve his socially conservative vision of the ideal American household, with the wife as homemaker and child-rearer, and the children raised in a healthy, natural setting, close to the soil. To this end, he promoted the suburbs as the best place for well-balanced domestic life.[15]

Theodore Roosevelt said about Bok:

[He] is the only man I ever heard of who changed, for the better, the architecture of an entire nation, and he did it so quickly and effectively that we didn't know it was begun before it was finished.[15]

Opposition to women's suffrage

Ladies' Home Journal, 1913

At the Ladies' Home Journal, Bok authored more than twenty articles opposed to women's suffrage which threatened his "vision of the woman at home, living the simple life".[17] One of his first commentaries on the issue clearly stated that "women were not yet ready for the vote".[18] The Journal's wide reach among American middle-class women made Bok a key ally of the anti-suffrage movement.[19]

Bok also opposed the concept of women working outside the home, some aspects of the woman's clubs, and education for women. He wrote that feminism would lead women to divorce, ill health, and even death. Bok solicited articles against women's rights from former presidents Grover Cleveland and Theodore Roosevelt (though Roosevelt would later change his mind to become a supporter of women's suffrage). Bok viewed suffragists as traitors to their sex, saying "there is no greater enemy of woman than woman herself."[19] On the other hand, the magazine was an advocate of causes such as "conservation, public health, birth control, sanitation, and educational reform".[18]

Because of criticism of some of their programs and methods in the Journal, women's clubs attempted to organize a boycott of the publication, for which Bok threatened them with legal action. He did not proceed with that and reached a compromise with the General Federation of Women’s Clubs. The magazine would start a new department, with content provided by the Federation.[20]

Awards and honors

Bok's 1920 autobiography The Americanization of Edward Bok: The Autobiography of a Dutch Boy Fifty Years After[8] won the Gold Medal of the Academy of Political and Social Science and the 1921 Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography.

The World War II Liberty ship SS Edward W. Bok was named in his honor.

The Edward W. Bok Technical High School in Philadelphia, opened in 1938 and closed in 2013, was named in his honor.

Works

References

  1. ^ a b "Edward Bok". Internet Accuracy Project. Retrieved January 22, 2011.
  2. ^ Edward William Bok (1915). Why I Believe In Poverty. Curtis Publishing Company. pp. 6–9. LAGE-4427767.
  3. ^ "Edward William Bok [1863-1930]". New Netherland Institute. Retrieved February 17, 2023.
  4. ^ a b c "Bok". Penn State University Libraries. Retrieved February 17, 2023. its weekly letter on women's topics, written by journalist Ella Wheeler Wilcox, grew to an entire women's page
  5. ^ "Cyrus H.K. Curtis, 6/18/1850 - 6/7/1933". Penn State University Libraries. April 11, 2018. Retrieved February 17, 2023.
  6. ^ Hamersly, Lewis R. (1904). Who's who in Pennsylvania: A Biographical Dictionary of Contemporaries. L.R. Hamersly & Co. p. 66.
  7. ^ P. 142 of Successward: A Young Man's Book for Young Men, by Edward William Bok, 1895
  8. ^ a b c d Bok, Edward William (1922). The Americanization of Edward Bok: The Autobiography of a Dutch Boy Fifty Years After. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. ISBN 978-0-7222-8996-9.
  9. ^ Mencken, H. L. "The Incomparable Bok", Smart Set (January 1921), pp. 140–142. Review of The Americanization of Edward Bok (New York: Scribner, 1920)
  10. ^ Bok, Edward William (1921). "Cleaning Up the Patent-Medicine and Other Evils". The Americanization of Edward Bok.
  11. ^ "American Peace Award". Archived from the original on March 21, 2013.
  12. ^ "Cyrus H.K. Curtis, 6/18/1850 - 6/7/1933". Penn State University Libraries. April 11, 2018. Retrieved February 17, 2023.
  13. ^ He appears in Part Two, Chapter 4 ("How to Become a Good Conversationalist").
  14. ^ "Edward W. Bok Dies in Florida Home". New York Times. Retrieved February 17, 2023.
  15. ^ a b c d Jackson, Kenneth T. (1985), Crabgrass Frontier: The Suburbanization of the United States, New York: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-504983-7, p.186
  16. ^ Anonymous. "The Living Room is Born". Ladies Home Journal. 125 (6): 12.
  17. ^ Richie, Rachel (March 22, 2019). Women in Magazines, Research, Representation, Production and Consumption. Routledge. p. 217. ISBN 9780367263959.
  18. ^ a b "Women's Clubs and Woman Suffrage". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved February 17, 2023.
  19. ^ a b Marshall, Susan E. (1997). Splintered Sisterhood. University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 85, 104. ISBN 9780299154639.
  20. ^ "XXVII. Women's Clubs and Woman Suffrage". Bartleby's. Retrieved February 17, 2023. Bok immediately engaged counsel in the city where the club was situated, and instructed his lawyer to begin proceedings, for violation of the Sherman Act

Further reading

  • Bogardus, Ralph F. "Tea Wars: Advertising Photography and Ideology in the Ladies' Home Journal in the 1890s." Prospects 16 (1991) pp: 297–322.
  • Damon-Moore, Helen. Magazines for the millions: Gender and commerce in the Ladies' Home Journal and the Saturday Evening Post, 1880–1910 (SUNY Press, 1994)
  • Kitch, Carolyn. "The American Woman Series: Gender and Class in The Ladies' Home Journal, 1897." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 75.2 (1998): 243–262.
  • Knight, Jan. "The Environmentalism of Edward Bok: The Ladies' Home Journal, the General Federation of Women's Clubs, and the Environment, 1901–09." Journalism History 29.4 (2004): 154.
  • Krabbendam, Hans. The Model Man: A Life of Edward William Bok, 1863–1930 (Rodopi, 2001)
  • Lewis, W. David. "Edward Bok: the editor as entrepreneur." Essays in Economic & Business History 20 (2012).
  • Mott, Frank Luther. A history of American magazines. vol 4. 1885–1905 (Harvard UP, 1957) pp 536–555. covers Ladies Home Journal.
  • Shi, David. " Edward Bok & The Simple Life" American Heritage (1984) 36#1 pp 100–109
  • Snyder, Beth Dalia. "Confidence women: Constructing female culture and community in" Just Among Ourselves" and the Ladies' Home Journal." American Transcendental Quarterly 12#4 (1998): 311.
  • Steinberg, Salme Harju. Reformer in the Marketplace: Edward W. Bok and the Ladies' Home Journal (Louisiana State University Press, 1979)
  • Ward, Douglas B. "The Geography of the Ladies' Home Journal: An Analysis of a Magazine's Audience, 1911–55." journalism History 34.1 (2008): 2+

External links