The title was changed to The New International Encyclopedia in 1902, with editors Harry Thurston Peck, Daniel Coit Gilman and Frank Moore Colby.
With Peck and Gilman deceased, Colby was joined by a new editor, Talcott Williams.
[2] A third edition was published in 1923, however this was mostly a reprint with the addition of a history of the First World War in volume 24, which had previously been a reading and study guide.
[5] More than 500 men and women submitted and composed the information contained in The New International Encyclopedia.
1903 edition, from the Ontario Council of University Libraries digitized in 2009, in the Internet Archive: