Arkell, W. J. (William J.), 1856-1930
William J. Arkell (1860-1930) was an American publisher and journalist from Canajoharie, New York. His publishing company, founded by his father, owned and published Judge, Frank Leslie's Illustrated Weekly, Demarest Magazine, and other popular American newspapers and magazines of the time.
The Judge was a weekly satirical magazine established in 1881 by former artists of the popular weekly Puck . Arkell purchased it in 1885 and used it in part to attack the Democratic administration of Grover Cleveland. Republican support boosted the magazine's circulation and by the early 1890s it reached 50,000. Cartoonists Eugene Zimmerman, Bernard Gillam, Art Young, Richard Outcault and James Montgomery Flagg were regular contributors.
Arkell sold his magazine interests in 1905 and moved from New York City to California, where he ventured into stock brokering and horse racing, organized the George Washington Coffee Company, and was active in politics. His brother, Bartlett Arkell, was founder of the Beech-Nut Packing Company and its president for 50 years.
[Portions of this biographical sketch adapted from William J. Arkell's obituary in the New York Times, Dec 31, 1930, p. 18.]
From the guide to the William J. Arkell Collection, 1881-1894, (Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries)
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referencedIn | Levi P. Morton Correspondence, 1860-1912 | Syracuse University. Library. Special Collections Research Center | |
creatorOf | William J. Arkell Collection, 1881-1894 | Syracuse University. Library. Special Collections Research Center |
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Birth 1856
Death 1930