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The Saturday Evening Post

There have been many publications called the Saturday Evening Post; several were/are local British newspapers.
A cover of the Saturday Evening Post from 1903

The Saturday Evening Post was a weekly magazine published in the United States from August 4, 1821 to February 8, 1969. For much of that period, it was published by Curtis Publishing Co. Curtis claimed to have been founded by Benjamin Franklin, though the magazine's first issue was published more than 30 years after Franklin's death.

Thereafter, there have been several attempts to revive it as a monthly (or even less frequent) publication specializing in nostalgia. The magazine is currently published six times a year by an organization called the "Benjamin Franklin Literary and Medical Society".

Aside from the decline of most general-interest magazines in the 1950s and 1960s, which is generally attributed to the rise of television, the demise of the original Post was hastened by its being ordered to pay $360,000, then a quite-considerable sum, in damages for libel after being sued for an article implying that football coaches Paul "Bear" Bryant and Wally Butts had conspired to "fix" a game between the University of Alabama and the University of Georgia.

Artist Norman Rockwell did covers and illustrations for the magazine from 1916 through 1963; several of these are among his best-known works.

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