The Little Pilgrim
The Little Pilgrim (1853–1869) was a monthly children’s magazine, published in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania by Leander K. Lippincott, and edited by his wife, Sara Jane Lippincott, working under the pseudonym Grace Greenwood.[1] The magazine’s name references John Bunyan’s 1678 Christian allegory The Pilgrim's Progress, a book that many children of the mid-1800s would have been familiar with.[2] The Little Pilgrim had a peak subscription rate of 50,000, and published such well-known authors as John Greenleaf Whittier, James T. Fields, Lucy Larcom, Hans Christian Andersen, Charles Dickens and Louisa May Alcott.[2] In 1869 the magazine merged with The Little Corporal magazine.[2] FoundingThough it was a secular periodical The Little Pilgrim strove for a high moral tone. In the October 1853 inaugural issue the editor wrote:
A year earlier, in October 1852, The Friend of Youth, a children’s magazine with about 5,000 subscribers, had ceased publication, and the Lippincotts had obtained their subscription list. Readers were sent issues of the new publication to fulfill their lapsed subscriptions.[3] ContentsFrom 1853 to 1856 each issue of the magazine contained eight pages that were 12.75 by 9 inches. Over time the number of pages increased while the page sizes decreased. From 1868 to 1869 each issue contained 32 pages that were 7 by 5.25 inches.[3] The magazine had a few woodcut illustrations, and was filled with stories, poems, history articles, letters, puzzles and anecdotes. Much of the content was written by editor Sara Jane Lippincott, writing as Grace Greenwood. There were stories and poems by well-known authors, and readers were encouraged to send in puzzles and letters on topics that interested them.[2] John Greenleaf Whittier’s Barefoot Boy appeared in the January 1855 issue. In 1858 Louisa May Alcott had a few poems published, before she became famous. Between 1855 and 1867 Hans Christian Andersen had three stories published, and the Charles Dickens story A Child’s Dream of a Star was in the June 1868 issue.[2] Rebecca Sophia Clarke was a regular contributor with her Little Prudy series.[4] Children often wrote letters telling of the death of a loved one, and for much of the magazine’s history those obituaries were published. Both children and parents wrote in complaining about those death notices, but the editor felt it was important for grieving children to see their memorials published. Lippincott belatedly gave in to the complaints and, starting in 1864, the obituaries of non-famous people were no longer published.[2] Merger with The Little CorporalInside the front cover of the April 1869 issue was a notice informing readers that the magazine would no longer be published. Sara Jane Lippincott wrote:
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