John F. Kennedy, In Memoriam
As an entire country lay in mourning in 1963, the Post released a special tribute issue to the fallen president just weeks after his death.
As an entire country lay in mourning in 1963, the Post released a special tribute issue to the fallen president just weeks after his death.
Mary Doyle Keefe was a 19-year-old phone operator in Arlington, Vermont, when Rockwell called and asked if she wouldn’t mind posing for the soon-to-be iconic cover. Read the Post’s 2013 interview with Mary, who passed away this week at age 92.
Join us in a fun look at ’50s dads (or should we say daddy-os?). They just may remind you of someone you love.
When Rockwell painted this May 26, 1945, cover, Homecoming G.I., redhead Ardis Edgerton was at its center, but the painter didn’t stop there. He also turned every one of the central characters into redheads.
From mowing and tree planting to a neighborhood nonconformist, 1950s-style, these timeless covers are just in time to inspire you to tackle that yard.
“My name is Coles Phillips,” he said, “and I’ve dropped in with a rather important bit of news. I’m going to work for you.” The brash young man applying for work came to define Roaring ’20s chic.
We are over it! We’re through with snow and slush, and we’re seeking hints of spring from our finest cover artists: Rockwell, Leyendecker, Dohanos, Falter, Clymer and more.
Fate certainly had other intentions for would-be farmer Gene Pelham.
Wherever there is romance, there are overseers, observers or, to put it bluntly, eavesdroppers.
Join us for an engaging peek at country life in the ’40s and ’50s, including Rockwell’s beloved Farmer and the Bird.
Five decades of adolescence depicted by Rockwell, Dohanos, Falter, and other great Post illustrators.
Post artists have been poking fun at our perennial and well-intentioned efforts to lose weight since Teddy Roosevelt was in the White House.
These 10 stories, from travel to crime to political issues, were the most popular for Post readers in 2012.
During the Great Depression, Rockwell’s illustrations helped lift the spirit of the nation.
We’ve uncovered some holiday scenes from the archive that you won’t see anywhere else: even an almost forgotten Rockwell Santa!
Tickle your funny bone with poems from our Limerick Laughs Contest winners from the latest issues of The Saturday Evening Post!