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Good Housekeeping

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American women's magazine

Good Housekeeping
Cover of Good Housekeeping US magazine with highlight of Your SEASON to SHINE
Editor-in-chiefJane Francisco
CategoriesLifestyle and product reviews
FrequencyBi-monthly
PublisherHearst Magazines
Total circulation
(2020)
4,014,028[1]
First issueMay 2, 1885; 140 years ago (1885-05-02)
CountryUnited States
Based inNew York City
LanguageEnglish
Websitegoodhousekeeping.com
ISSN0017-209X

Good Housekeeping is an American lifestyle media brand that covers a wide range of topics from home decor and renovation, health, beauty and food, to entertainment, pets and gifts. The Good Housekeeping Institute which opened its "Experiment Station" in 1900, specializes in product reviews by a staff of scientific experts. The GH Institute is known, in part, for the "Good Housekeeping Seal", a limited warranty program that evaluates products to ensure they perform as intended.[2]

Good Housekeeping was founded in 1885 by American publisher and poetClark W. Bryan. By the time of its acquisition by theHearst Corporation in 1911, the magazine had grown to a circulation of 300,000 subscribers. By the early 1960s, it had over five million subscribers and was one of the world's most popular lifestyle magazines.

History and profile

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Masthead for the first issue ofGood Housekeeping, May 2, 1885

On May 2, 1885,Clark W. Bryan foundedGood Housekeeping inHolyoke, Massachusetts, as a fortnightly magazine.[3][4] The magazine became a monthly publication in 1891.[5]

The magazine achieved a circulation of 300,000 by 1911, at which time it was bought by theHearst Corporation.[6] It topped one million in the mid-1920s, and continued to rise, even during theGreat Depression and its aftermath. In 1938, a year in which the magazine advertising dropped 22 percent,Good Housekeeping showed an operating profit of $2,583,202, more than three times the profit of Hearst's other eight magazines combined,[7] and probably the most profitable monthly of its time. Circulation topped 2,500,000 in 1943, 3,500,000 in the mid-1950s, 5,000,000 in 1962, and 5,500,000 per month in 1966. 1959 profits were more than $11 million.[8]

Good Housekeeping was one of the "Seven Sisters", a group of women's service magazines,[5] and is one of the three of them still published in print.[citation needed]

In 1922, the Hearst Corporation created a British edition along the same lines, namedBritish Good Housekeeping.[9]

Famous writers who have contributed to the magazine includeA. J. Cronin,[10][11]Robert Graves,[12]Betty Friedan,[13]Frances Parkinson Keyes,[14]Clara Savage Littledale,[15]Edwin Markham,[16]Somerset Maugham,[17][13]Edna St. Vincent Millay,[17][13]J. D. Salinger,[18]Evelyn Waugh,[17] andVirginia Woolf.[17] Other contributors includeadvice columnists,chefs, andpoliticians.[13]

Good Housekeeping Institute

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Cover from August 1908 made byJohn Cecil Clay

In 1900, the "Experiment Station", the predecessor to the Good Housekeeping Research Institute (GHRI), now known as the Good Housekeeping Institute, was founded. In 1902, the magazine was calling this "An Inflexible Contract Between the Publisher and Each Subscriber". The formal opening of the headquarters of the GH Institute – the "Model Kitchen", "Testing Station for Household Devices", and "Domestic Science Laboratory" – occurred in January 1910.[19]

In 1909, the magazine established the Good Housekeeping Seal. Products advertised in the magazine that bear the GH Seal are tested by GH Institute experts and are backed by a two-year limited warranty. About 5,000 products have been given the seal.[20]

In April 1912, a year after Hearst bought the magazine,Harvey W. Wiley, the first commissioner of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (1907–1912), became head of the Good Housekeeping Research Institute and a contributing editor whose "Question Box" feature ran for decades.[21] Beginning with a "Beauty Clinic" in 1932, departments were added to the Institute, including a "Baby's Center", "Foods and Cookery", and a "Needlework Room". Some functioned as testing laboratories, while others were designed to produce editorial copy.[citation needed]

In 1924, the British Good Housekeeping magazine set up its own Good Housekeeping Institute at 49 Wellington Street in Covent Garden, London. Its first director wasDorothy Cottington Taylor who ran the "a highly organised laboratory for testing and investigating every kind of household appliance, method, and recipe" for sixteen years.[22][23]

After the passage of theFederal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938, Assistant Secretary of Agriculture Rexford Tugwell sought to promote a government grading system. The Hearst Corporation opposed the policy in spirit, and began publishing a monthly tabloid attacking federal oversight. In 1939, theFederal Trade Commission filed a complaint againstGood Housekeeping for "misleading and deceptive" guarantees including the Seal, and "exaggerated and false" claims in its advertisements. The publisher fought the proceedings for two years, during which time competing editors from theLadies Home Journal andMcCall's testified againstGood Housekeeping. The FTC's ultimate ruling was against the magazine, forcing it to remove some claims and phraseology from its ad pages. The words "Tested and Approved" were dropped from the Seal. But the magazine's popularity was unaffected, steadily rising in circulation and profitability. In 1962, the wording of the Seal was changed to a guarantee of "Product or Performance", while dropping its endorsement of rhetorical promises made by the advertisers. In its varying forms, the Seal became inextricably associated with the magazine, and many others (e.g.,McCall's,Parents, andBetter Homes and Gardens) mimicked the practice.[citation needed]

International editions

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Good Housekeeping began to be published in the United Kingdom in 1922.[24]William Randolph Hearst appointedAlice Maud Head initially as assistant editor. Head rose to be the managing director, as well as purportedly being the highest paid woman in Europe. As Hearst's deputy, Head would make decisions on his behalf about not just editing, but also buying for himSt Donat's Castle, expensive art objects, and threegiraffes for his zoo. Head remained head until 1939.[25]

InLatin America, a Spanish version of the magazine, titledBuenhogar, was published in the United States and Latin America by theEditorial América corporation in Mexico from 1965, under license from the Hearst Corporation.[26][27]

In Russia, the magazine was published first asDomashny Ochag ("Good Home, or Hearth"), before changing its name toNovy Ochag ("New Home, or Hearth") sometime in July 2022.[28][29] Published by Independent Media, and described as "a resource for women who take care of their homes, raise children, have successful careers and help others",Novy Ochag recorded a digital readership of 13 million in October 2023.[30]

Good Housekeeping launched two editions in South Africa in 2011, in English asGood Housekeeping and in Afrikaans asGoeie Huishouding.[31] The magazine closed in 2020.

American editors

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See also

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References

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  1. ^"eCirc for Consumer Magazines".Audit Bureau of Circulations. June 30, 2020. RetrievedOctober 7, 2020.
  2. ^Ewoldt, John (October 4, 2018)."Will anyone unfamiliar with the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval 'get' MOA's new store?".Star Tribune. RetrievedAugust 2, 2020.
  3. ^Belkin, Lisa (June 15, 1985)."Good Housekeeping's Seal Stamps Its Approval".Milwaukee Journal. RetrievedJune 18, 2010.[permanent dead link]
  4. ^"Top 100 U.S. Magazines by Circulation"(PDF).PSA Research Center. n.d. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on January 28, 2018. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2016.
  5. ^ab"Good Housekeeping".Encyclopedia.com. July 23, 2020. RetrievedAugust 2, 2020.
  6. ^Ibrahim, Magda (February 12, 2015)."Magazines ABCs: Women's monthlies led by Good Housekeeping".MediaWeek. RetrievedApril 24, 2016.
  7. ^Printers' Ink, Vol. 186, March 16, 1939, pg. 16.
  8. ^Mott, Frank Luther (1968).A History of American Magazines. Harvard University Press. pp. 140–143.
  9. ^Hart, Carolyn (October 24, 2014)."Good Housekeeping Institute: meet the team testing every item in your home".Daily Telegraph.ISSN 0307-1235. RetrievedDecember 4, 2019.
  10. ^Nugent, Frank S. (March 9, 1940)."THE SCREEN; 'Vigil in the Night,' a Sobersided Drama of Nursing, Opens at the Roxy--'Three Cheers for the Irish'".The New York Times. RetrievedDecember 2, 2021.VIGIL IN THE NIGHT, from the novel by A. J. Cronin published serially in Good Housekeeping Magazine...
  11. ^Davies, Alan (January 1, 2018).A.J. Cronin. Alma Books. p. 150.ISBN 978-0-7145-4541-7.
  12. ^url=https://reader.library.cornell.edu/docviewer/digital?id=hearth6417403_1413_004#page/44/mode/1up
  13. ^abcd"Good Housekeeping".America's Mailing Industry.National Postal Museum,Smithsonian Institution. RetrievedAugust 2, 2020.
  14. ^Carr, Jane Greenway (April 7, 2016)."Frances Parkinson Keyes (1885–1970)".Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Humanities. RetrievedAugust 2, 2020.
  15. ^"Mother of Two Children, She Helped Raise A Million More: Former Newspaper Woman Directs Staff of Experts Who Write Magazine on Child Rearing Read by Five Hundred Thousand Parents".Lewiston Sun-Journal. September 7, 1937. p. 15A. RetrievedAugust 2, 2020.
  16. ^Delco Times (August 20, 2021)."'Good Housekeeping' hit the stands May 2".Delaware County Daily Times.
  17. ^abcd"Good Housekeeping, 1910".Modernist Journals Project.Brown University andUniversity of Tulsa. n.d. RetrievedAugust 2, 2020.
  18. ^Salinger, J. D. (February 1948). "A Girl I Knew".Good Housekeeping. Hearst Communications, Inc.
  19. ^"The 100th Anniversary of the Good Housekeeping Research Institute".Good Housekeeping. Hearst Communications, Inc. Archived fromthe original on January 4, 2008. RetrievedJanuary 12, 2008.
  20. ^Nicholls, Walter (January 2, 2008)."Surviving the Test of Time: At Good Housekeeping, A Modern Makeover And Old-Fashioned Appeal".Washington Post.
  21. ^"Dr. Wiley's Debut as Editor; He Says He Will Be a Watchdog for the Nation's Housekeepers".The New York Times. April 26, 1912. p. 9.
  22. ^B, Lizzie (May 22, 2022)."Dorothy Cottington Taylor (1891-1944)".Women Who Meant Business. RetrievedNovember 6, 2023.
  23. ^"Dorothy Daisy Cottington-Taylor (née Gale) - National Portrait Gallery".www.npg.org.uk. RetrievedNovember 6, 2023.
  24. ^Ping Shaw (1999). "Internationalization of the women's magazine industry in Taiwan context, process and influence".Asian Journal of Communication.9 (2):17–38.doi:10.1080/01292989909359623.
  25. ^Pugh, Martin (2004)."Head, Alice Maud (1886–1981)".Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press.doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/50062. RetrievedApril 20, 2017.
  26. ^"Editorial Television, S.A. de C.V."Encyclopedia.com. March 3, 1997. RetrievedJanuary 8, 2024.
  27. ^Levine, Felicia (December 16, 1996)."Televisa launching four new magazines for U.S. Hispanics".The Business Journals. RetrievedJanuary 8, 2024.
  28. ^"Independent Media, медиахолдинг. Территория контента, креатива и технологий".Independent Media (in Russian). December 25, 2023. RetrievedJanuary 8, 2024.
  29. ^"Domashny Ochag in June 2014".Independent Media (in Russian). May 2014. RetrievedJanuary 6, 2024.
  30. ^"Novy Ochag Sets Another Record".Independent Media (in Russian). November 2023. RetrievedJanuary 8, 2024.
  31. ^"Hearst Magazines International to Launch Good Housekeeping in South Africa - HEARST".HEARST. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2025.
  32. ^Saxon, Wolfgang. (1 November 1987).Herbert Mayes, 87, A Former Top Editor of Magazines, Dies,The New York Times, p. 52
  33. ^abSteigrad, Alexandra (November 12, 2013)."Good Housekeeping Names Jane Francisco; Longtime editor in chief Rosemary Ellis is leaving the publication to "pursue new opportunities"".Women's Wear Daily. RetrievedAugust 2, 2020.

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