Features and columns included: "Suburban Scenes", "The Listener", "The Nomad", "The Librarian", "Saturday Night Thoughts", and an extensive book reviews and music criticism.
The Transcript also had a
Washington, D.C. bureau, college sports pages, and a department of Bridge. In addition,
The Transcript had a well known genealogy column.
Harvard Medical School's first U.S. animal
vivisection lab raised concern from then editor-in-chief Edward Clement, and the paper subsequently ran a series of anti-vivisection editorials. In the summer of 1940, as Britain faced invasion in
World War II, children were being evacuated overseas under a British government scheme known as the
Children's Overseas Reception Board. The readers of the
Boston Evening Transcript readily responded and agreed to sponsor a group of children. A group of 48 children left England on
RMS Scythia from
Liverpool on 24 September 1940 bound for
Boston.
Genealogical columns Because of the genealogy column,
The Transcript is of value to historians and others. Gary Boyd Roberts of the
New England Historic Genealogical Society noted: The
Boston Evening Transcript, like the
New York Times today, was a
newspaper of record. Its genealogical column, which usually ran twice or more a week for several decades in the early twentieth century, was often an exchange among the most devoted and scholarly genealogists of the day. Many materials not published elsewhere are published therein.
Contributors •
Brooks Atkinson, police reporter, assistant to the drama critic, H. T. Parker, (1919–1922) •
Clarence W. Barron,
Transcript reporter (1875–1887) •
William Stanley Braithwaite, literary editor (1906–1931) •
Virginia Lee Burton, sketch artist •
Edward Downes, music critic •
John A. Holmes, served as poetry editor for eight years •
Francis H. Jenks, music and dramatic editor 1881–1894 •
Howard Mumford Jones, book editor •
Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., reporter •
Kenneth Macgowan, drama critic •
John P. Marquand, was a staff writer on the paper and later on its bi-weekly magazine after he graduated from Harvard College •
John U. Monro, journalist and later dean of
Harvard College •
Henry Taylor Parker, music, dance and drama critic (1905–1934) •
Edmund Pearson, (1880–1937) writer of the column,
The Librarian from 1906 to 1920 •
Lucien Price, (1907–1914) assistant music and drama critic, editorial writer, and journalist •
Epes Sargent, editor •
Paul Secon, music critic who also co-founded the
Pottery Barn •
Nicolas Slonimsky, music writer •
C. Antoinette Wood, early 20th century American woman writer and playwright ==In popular literature==