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  1. David Graham Phillips (October 31, 1867 – January 24, 1911) was an American novelist and journalist of the muckraker tradition.

  2. David Graham Phillips’s series “The Treason of the Senate” ( Cosmopolitan, 1906), which inspired Pres. Roosevelt’s speech in 1906, was influential in leading to the passage of the Seventeenth Amendment to the Constitution, which provided for popular senatorial elections.

  3. May 23, 2018 · The interests of David Graham Phillips (1867-1911), American journalist and novelist, ranged from the plight of women to corruption in Congress. David Graham Phillips was born on Oct. 31, 1867, in Madison, Ind.

  4. David Graham Phillips was an American novelist and journalist of the muckraker tradition.Phillips was born in Madison, Indiana. After graduating from high school, Phillips entered Asbury College (now DePauw University) - following which he received a degree from Princeton University in 1887.

  5. Jan 14, 2011 · David Graham Phillips, the author in question, had just been christened by H. L. Mencken as “the leading American novelist.” Now largely forgotten, he was a star of the first decade of the 20th...

  6. David Graham Phillips. (1867—1911) Quick Reference. (1867–1911), born in Indiana, began his journalistic career at Cincinnati (1887) and moved to New York (1890), where he worked on the Sun and World. In 1902 he began to ... From: Phillips, David Graham in The Oxford Companion to American Literature » Subjects: Literature. Reference entries.

  7. From the assassination of David Graham Phillips in 1911 until 1932 when Isaac Marcosson published the first biography of this once-popular novelist, Phillips had peacefully passed into those obsolescent realms inhabited by many a romancer of the muckrake age.

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