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Samuel Hopkins Adams

Samuel Hopkins Adams (1871–1958) was a American writer, best known for his investigative journalism.

Adams was born in Dunkirk, New York. In 1891, he graduated from Hamilton College.

From 1891 to 1900, he was a reporter for the New York Sun and then joined McClure's Magazine, where he gained a reputation as a muckraker for his articles on the conditions of public health in the United States.

In a series of eleven articles he wrote for Collier's Weekly in 1905, "The Great American Fraud", Adams exposed many of the false claims made about patent medicines, pointing out that is some cases these medicines were damaging the health of the people using them. The series had a huge impact and lead to the passage of the 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act.

In 1911 the Supreme Court ruled that the prohibition of falsifications referred only to the ingredients of the medicine. This meant that companies were again free to make false claims about their products. Adams returned to the attack and another series of articles in Collier's Weekly, Adams exposed the misleading advertising that companies were using to sell their products.

Adams was a prolific writer, who wrote fiction as well. His best-known novel, Revelry (1926), based on the scandals of the Harding administration, was later followed by Incredible Era (1939), a biography of Harding. Among his other works are The Great American Fraud (1906), The Harvey Girls (1942), Grandfather Stories (1955), and Tenderloin (1959).

Adams was a close friend of the investigative reporter Ray Stannard Baker.

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Referenced By

Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay | Academy Awards/Writing Screenplay Adaptation | Collier's Weekly | Foreign correspondent | Journalist | Journalists | Muckraker | Muckraking | Patent medicine | Reporter
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Samuel Hopkins Adams".

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Posted by rstaples@hargray.com October 9th, 2003
I am looking or an article published by Samuel H. Adams in Volume 33, July 1949 issue of True Magazine, entitled, Dr. Bug, Dr. Buzzard and the U.S.A."

Is there a place online I can find that or where I may be able to get an old copy of the magazine? Thanks .

Posted by dretihomir@abv.bg February 11th, 2004
no
Posted by postmaster@glenncalderwood.dem February 29th, 2004
In September 1917 the British Ambassador in Washington, Sir Cecil Spring Rice, described some information passed on to him from samuel Hopkins as coming from an absolutely reliable source. This information concerned a clandestine separatist movement in Canada, details of which had been in the papers of von Igel, the clerk of the German Attache von Papen. The note from Hopkins was written on the back of stationery from the Bureau of Investigation, Washington, D.C.
Posted by EMott1423@aol.com March 12th, 2004
Hello...... My name is Ellen Adams Mott. Samuel Hopkins Adams was my Dad's cousin!
Posted by bbrandt1@verizon.net February 17th, 2005
I am looking for any connect Samuel Hopkins Adams had to Venezuela or C.N. Clark in the period around 1908.
Posted by Anonymous January 18th, 2006
hi
Posted by Anonymous February 12th, 2007
I had to write a sample obituary on this guy (even though he died forty nine years ago) for a journalism class. There is little informaton available on him. All the sites carried the exact same thing. There is a whopping one picture of him available on the internet. He is not the easiest person to research!!

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Books by Samuel Hopkins Adams

Average Jones
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The Unspeakable Perk
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