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The Wasp (magazine)


The Wasp, also known as The Illustrated Wasp, The San Francisco Illustrated Wasp, The Wasp News-Letter and the San Francisco News- Letter Wasp, was a weekly satirical magazine based in San Francisco. Founded in 1876, it closed in 1941, the name of the magazine having been changed several times in the interim.

The Wasp was founded as a weekly satire magazine by the Bohemian expatriate Francis Korbel and his two brothers in San Francisco in 1876. The first issue was published on August 5, 1876. The magazine was somewhat unusual at the time, owing to the Korbels' expertise in mass-producing color lithographs in print, a process they had come to master in their first business, the manufacture of labeled cigar boxes. The magazine was sold in secret in 1881 to Charles Webb Howard, who hired Edward C. Macfarlane as publisher. Ambrose Bierce was hired as editor soon afterward, serving in that role from January 1, 1881, until September 11, 1885. During Bierce's editorial tenure, The Wasp published his column "Prattle" and several serialized installments of his satirical definitions later collected as The Devil's Dictionary.

Political cartoons from The Wasp are often cited in Asian-American anti-defamation materials as an example of early stereotyping of Chinese immigrants.

With the following name changes, the magazine ran from August 5, 1876, to April 25, 1941:

Railroad tycoons Collis P. Huntington and Leland Stanford robbing victims in the Mussel Slough Tragedy, July 8, 1881.

Oscar Wilde's San Francisco visit, 1882. For full color original and analysis see The Modern Messiah.

Hawaiian Bayonet Constitution cartoon showing King Kalakaua being toppled, July 16, 1887.


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