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George Matthew Adams (1878–1962) was born in Saline, Michigan, and spent much of his working life in New York, where he built one of the most widely read newspaper syndicates in America. After early jobs in journalism, he founded the George Matthew Adams Service in 1907, which at its height distributed columns, features, and commentary to hundreds of daily papers across the country.
Adams wrote prolifically for a general readership—short, direct pieces on self-improvement, motivation, and the beauty of human resilience. His column Today’s Talk ran for decades, reaching an audience of millions. He had a gift for the plainspoken maxim and distrusted ornament for its own sake, a quality that earned him loyal readers who might never have picked up a literary magazine.
Alongside his syndicate work, Adams ran a small publishing imprint under his own name, championing books he believed deserved wider attention. He was a collector of manuscripts and letters, and his personal library reflected an appetite for the practical and the humane rather than the fashionable.
He is less remembered today than the writers he helped bring to readers, which is perhaps fitting. Adams saw himself as a conduit rather than a monument—a working journalist who happened to believe, without embarrassment, that words could make a person’s day go better.