For five years, between 1803 to 1811, Mr. Savage was an associate editor of the "Monthly Anthology", preparing the way for the "North American Review."
It was organized in response to the first publication, and first failure for want of patronage, of the Monthly Anthology.
The club's publication, the Monthly Anthology and Boston Review, or Magazine of Polite Literature, and had contributors including John Quincy Adams, Daniel Webster, and many scholars.
A Literary Adventure of the Early Republic: The Anthology Society and the Monthly Anthology.
In 1803, a young Harvard graduate by the name of Phineas Adams established the magazine The Monthly Anthology, or Magazine of Polite Literature.
He was a frequent contributor to the magazines, including Blackwood's, North American Review, Monthly Anthology, and New York Review.
In 1804, Emerson founded the Anthology Club, a Boston literary society, and wrote articles for the club's The Monthly Anthology.
The Monthly Anthology and Boston Review was a miscellaneous magazine published by the Anthology Club of Boston, Massachusetts from 1804-1811.
"The Birth of Secular High Culture: "The Monthly Anthology and Boston Review" and Its Critics."
He was the most brilliant member of the Anthology Club, an early editor of the Monthly Anthology, and in 1811 was appointed Dexter Lecturer at Harvard where he occupied the first Chair in Scripture.