The first issue march 3, 1923

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Revisiting some of our most influential covers, with the people who lived that history. Stay tuned for more of this series on time.com and in upcoming issues

By Nancy Gibbs

100 YEARS OF TIME

Hadden, left, and Luce, center, in Cleveland with politician William R. Hopkins, who is reading a 1925 issue of the magazine
LUCE, HADDEN: THE LIFE PICTURE COLLECTION/SHUTTERSTOCK

HENRY LUCE AND BRITON Hadden and their scrappy team of 20-somethings piled into a cab to barrel across town to the printing plant on the last Tuesday in February 1923. There they spent the final hours cutting, pasting, and fine-tuning the first issue of the magazine that would come to define the American Century. It was a skinny issue, stripped-down stories slotted into 22 sections, designed for an age of information overload, to be read in an hour—its unique value proposition signaled in its very name.

The most important fact of this first cover is not the charcoal portrait or filigree border—it would be four years before a designer proposed the iconic red one. It was the name TIME (chosen over Facts), and even more, The Weekly News-Magazine. No such thing had existed before—no such artful, even arrogant, arrangement of all the world’s news into tidy categories. The “cover story” about the coming retirement of legendary GOP lawmaker “Uncle Joe” Cannon ran less than a column. From the first, this was news with attitude: “Never did a man employ the office of Speaker,” TIME declared of Cannon, “with less regard for its theoretical impartiality.”

The choice of Cannon for the cover spoke to Luce and Hadden’s conviction that people don’t just make news, they make history, destiny as personality, and so that week and every week to come for decades, it would almost always be a person or persons on the cover of TIME. Cannon had made plenty of news and his

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