In 1886, McClure's college friend, John Sanborn Phillips, joined the Syndicate, and his cousin, Henry Herbert McClure, was also on the staff. Samuel McClure's brother, Robert McClure, was in charge of the London office.
Allen Sangree had a position with the McClure Syndicate in 1892. In 1914, the McClure family sold the Syndicate to J. C. Brainard, who acquired the
Wheeler Syndicate in 1916. Brainard sold the McClure Syndicate to Richard H. Waldo in 1928. After Waldo died in 1943, his widow, Adelaide P. Waldo, ran the syndicate for three years, passing it on to James L. Lenahan in 1946. Lenahan's failure to meet a due payment on the stock led to a September 1952 auction when it was acquired by
Ernest Cuneo, head of the
Bell Syndicate-
North American Newspaper Alliance group, with Louis Ruppel installed as president and editor. The company briefly dabbled into comic book production in 1936 under the leadership of Max Gaines, where partnered with
Dell Publishing, to produce three of Dell's comic books,
The Funnies,
Popular Comics and
The Comics, and Dell would finance and distribute these comics, until Gaines quit McClure to start
All-American Publications in 1939. ==Writers==