The New Yorker Makes a Shrine to Itself thumbnail

The New Yorker Makes a Shrine to Itself

The New Yorker was founded in 1925 as a humor weekly — a whimsical little Roaring Twenties bauble written largely by members of the fabled Algonquin round table for sophisticated urban readers. When its founding editor, the ribald Colorado-born newspaperman Harold Ross, died in 1951, the top job passed to the dour, buttoned-up William Shawn