INDEX OF PUBLISHING HOUSES
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-F-
Farrar & Rhinehart
1929
Farrar & Strauss
1946
Fleet, Thomas 1924
Fox,
Duffield 1903
Frank-Maurice 1925
Franklin Watts 1942
Fredrick Praeger
1950
Fredrick Fell 1943
Funk
& Wagnalls 1877
Funk, Wilfred 1940
1877---FUNK & WAGNALLS
Founded by Isaac Kaufmann Funk, a Lutheran
minister who in 1876 began editing and publishing tow magazines, the Homiletic
Review and the Voice, the latter for the Prohibition Party. Unfortunately,
neither magazine paid its way. The following year he teamed with A.W. Wagnalls,
a lawyer and accountant, who got Funk on sounder financial footing.
They began by publishing pamphlets and
booklets for the clergy, mostly commentaries on the Bible. For more general
audiences, they issued a reprint of Spurgeon's The Treasury of David, in
seven volumes, issued by subscripiton one at a time for $1.00 each. The
success of this led to the more ambitious 27 volume set of Dr. Joseph Parker's
People's Bible, also sold by subscription one at a time. This in turn led
to the Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge by Schaff-Herzogg.
The big break for the two men came in 1884
when Funk, watching the explosion of the so-called Second Paperback Revolution,
thought there might be a market for religious paperbacks. he issued the
"Standard Series", quarto-sized soft bound books.
The first was John Ploughman's Talks by
Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Next came Imitation of Christ, followed by Carlyle's
Essays and Macaulay's Essays.
In 1886, Funk switched the size to 12 mo
to give his series a more distinctive look. At the same time, he aggressively
marketed the series as a subscription service; for $4.00 a year, a subscriber
would receive a book every foru weeks. He sold over 16,000 subscriptions
without knowing what titles he would include in the series.
In 1888, Funk began publishing the annual
"Missionary Review of the World".
He founded a new magazine, "The Literary
Digest", one of the the most important magazines of the early 20th
century and the fore-runner of Time Magazine.
But Funk and Wagnalls really made its name
with reference works which were merely a secular extension of their work
in religious reference books. The most famous of these was the "Standard
Dictionary".
They also issued a limited number of fiction
titles, the best known of these being the Samantha series by "Josiah
Allen's Wife".
They purchased Cassell in 1933.
Funk died in 1912 and the house eventually
became a subsidiary of Thomas Y Crowell Co.
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1903---FOX DUFFIELD
& CO.
Rector K. Fox, brother of successful novelist John Fox, Jr., was an
editor with R.H. Russell Publishing when he teamed with Pitts Duffield
of Scribner's to firm this company.
First book: The Autobiography of a Thief and Everyman, morality play
with wood-cut illustrations.
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