The final issue of
Our Young Folks, dated December 1873, gave no indication that the magazine was about to cease being published. An editorial piece in
Our Letter Box announced a new serial for 1874, as well as an “unusually interesting variety of articles by our best writers.” Readers were told that the publisher had promised to send a chromo (colored picture) to every subscriber who sent in the full subscription price for 1874. Subscribers received the January 1874 issue of
St. Nicholas Magazine, which contained
A Card from the Editor of Our Young Folks.
John Townsend Trowbridge wrote: "Through the courtesy of the conductor of ST. NICHOLAS, I am enabled to say a few words to the readers of ‘Our Young Folks,’ in place of the many I should have wished to say in the last number of that lamented magazine, had it been known to be the last when it left the editorial hands. That number was sent to its readers in the full faith that all it promised them for the coming year was to be more that fulfilled. But it had scarcely gone forth, when came the sudden change by which ‘Our Young Folks’ ceased to exist – the result of a purely commercial transaction, wholly justifiable, I think, on the part of the publishers, J. R. Osgood and Company, of whose honorable and liberal conduct in all that related to the little magazine, up to the very last, I can speak with the better grace now that my editorial connection with their house has ceased." In 1874, eight months after the periodical's last issue had been published, a poll taken amongst readers of
The Literary World ranked
Our Young Folks to be "the best of modern American juvenile magazines". ==References==