Cholly Knickerbocker, pseudonym of a series of society and gossip columnists, especially those who wrote for the New York American and its successor, the New York Journal-American.
The first journalist to write under the byline of Cholly Knickerbocker was John W. Keller, in a society column for the New York Recorder (published 1891–96). The pseudonym combined Washington Irving’s character Diedrich Knickerbocker with a play on how upper-class New Yorkers purportedly pronounced “Charlie.” When Keller moved to a paper owned by William Randolph Hearst that by 1902 had become known as the New York American, he brought the name Cholly Knickerbocker with him. After being used by several other society writers for the paper, the byline was taken over in 1919 by Maury Paul.
As Knickerbocker, Paul chronicled the social life of the “Four Hundred”—members of the New York Social Register, a directory of the social elite, who were considered to be the traditional arbiters of American society. He also wrote about “café society” (a phrase he coined), which consisted of people in the arts, politics, and business whom he designated as up-and-coming but who were not members of the social elite. Paul’s lively approach to his subject found an engaged readership, and his daily column became widely syndicated. In 1937 the American merged with another of Hearst’s papers, the Evening Journal, and the Cholly Knickerbocker column thereafter appeared in the consolidated New York Journal and American (later the New York Journal-American) until Paul’s death in 1942.
Three years later, Igor Cassini stepped into the role of Cholly Knickerbocker for the Journal-American. In his initial column, he debunked the concept of an elite of “Four Hundred” and replaced it with “Forty Thousand,” writing that the Social Register should have no place in the United States and that a person’s chances for success should be determined by achievement and not by an accident of birth. During his tenure as Knickerbocker, Cassini (the brother of fashion designer Oleg Cassini) popularized the term jet set and employed as a ghostwriting assistant Liz Smith, who later became well known for her own syndicated gossip column. He was replaced by Charles A. Van Rensselaer in early 1963.
Several months later, however, the name Cholly Knickerbocker was effectively retired when the Journal-American dropped Van Rensselaer in favour of Aileen Mehle, who wrote under the name Suzy Knickerbocker. The newspaper itself ceased publication in 1966.