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Jonathan Leavitt (publisher)

Jonathan Leavitt (January 20, 1797 – May 6, 1852) was a bookbinder who later co-founded the New York City publishing firm of Leavitt & Trow, one of the nation's first publishing houses. Leavitt was also co-founder of another early New York publishing house with his brother-in-law Daniel Appleton. George Palmer Putnam, who went on to found a New York publishing dynasty, received his first job from Leavitt. Eventually Jonathan Leavitt went into business on his own, and after his death the firm was run by his son George Ayres Leavitt.

Jonathan Leavitt
BornJanuary 20, 1797
DiedMay 6, 1852
New York City
NationalityAmerican
Known forBookbinder
publisher

History

 
Early bookbindery. Jonathan Leavitt, publisher, began his career as apprentice bookbinder in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Jonathan Leavitt was born in 1797 at Hampton Falls, New Hampshire likely to Simeon Leavitt and his wife Betty (née) Tuck. An obituary in The Publishers' Weekly for Jonathan Leavitt's son George Ayers Leavitt, who followed his father into the publishing industry, indicates a family association with Effingham Falls (now simply Effingham), New Hampshire.[1] The New Hampshire town had once been named Leavitts Town, and was settled chiefly by members of the Leavitt family from Hampton, New Hampshire. Leavitt served as an apprentice bookbinder in Cambridge, Massachusetts and then moved to Andover, Massachusetts in 1812–13. In Andover, Leavitt and printers Abraham Gould and Timothy Flagg set up a press for the Andover Theological Seminary.[2] Leavitt and his two partners continued to operate their printing and bookbinding operation after Leavitt decided to relocate after over a decade in Andover.

Leavitt married the former Joan Ayres at Haverhill, Massachusetts, on July 8, 1820 at the age of 23. Although most accounts give the name of Leavitt's wife as Joan Ayres – and Ayres was subsequently the middle name of Leavitt's son George, who took over his father's publishing business – Sidney Perley, in his authoritative The Essex Antiquarian, lists under the 'Adams Genealogy' the information that Major John Adams of Andover, Massachusetts, had daughters Louisa (who married 'Jonathan Leavitt') and Hannah (who married "Daniel Appleton of Haverhill' of "the Appleton Publishing House of New York City.").[3] Leavitt's first wife Joan Ayer Leavitt died at Andover on November 7, 1824.[4] On 7 December 1825, Jonathan married his second wife Louisa Adams who was born at Andover December 28, 1803 daughter of John and Dorcas (Faulkner) Adams. Louisa's sister Hannah was the wife of Daniel Appleton.[5]

New York City

 
George Palmer Putnam, hired at 16 years old by Jonathan Leavitt as apprentice and right-hand man. Putnam went on to found a publishing powerhouse of his own.

In 1825, Leavitt moved to New York City and went into business with his brother-in-law Daniel Appleton, who formerly worked as a Boston dry goods merchant but who had founded D. Appleton & Co., a large store on Exchange Place opposite the Customs House, to sell books. Appleton put up the capital for the founding of a publishing business with his brother-in-law Leavitt. The store on Exchange Place was divided into two sections, with Appleton's son William later taking charge of the bookselling functions. After five years of partnership, and feeling he could continue his business without further capital infusions from his brother-in-law, Jonathan Leavitt went into business for himself, opening a store at Broadway and John Streets and hiring George Palmer Putnam (then aged 16) as his apprentice and right-hand man.[6] Appleton and his son subsequently moved their business to what was known as Clinton Hall, on Beekman Street, where they established themselves as well-known booksellers.[6] With his partnership with Appleton dissolved, Leavitt became the leading publisher of religious and theological works in New York city.[7][8][9]

Leavitt also acted as publisher for his early employee Putnam, who went on to open his own eponymous publishing firm, which became an industry fixture. "Mr. Leavitt is willing to publish the volume I have compiled", Putnam wrote to a correspondent during his term of employment with Jonathan Leavitt, "as soon as he is satisfied that it will be acceptable with the public."[10] In 1833, Leavitt publish Putnam's first book: Chronology, or An Introduction and Index to Universal History, Biography, and Useful Knowledge.[11] The volume, which Putnam had first compiled for his own use, received a then-enormous printing run of 1,000 copies. The book's success, and Putnam's increasing usefulness to Leavitt's business caused the proprietor to advance him to a salary of two dollars per week, and within a few months to four dollars per week.[9]

Broadway emerged early as center of the publishers who came to New York City, and Leavitt was among the pioneers of the business. Leavitt's brother-in-law Appleton had worked in the dry goods business in Boston, and took on management of the wholesale part of the new firm's printing business. Appleton later founded his own publishing firm, which later grew into one of the industry's largest, nearby at 200 Broadway.

John F. Trow & Co.

In 1840, Leavitt became partners with fellow Andover native John F. Trow, a veteran of the Andover publishing firm Leavitt had helped found: Flagg & Gould, operator of the Codman Press.[12] The pair of Andover men founded two publishing firms – both located at 191 Broadway in Lower Manhattan.[13] They founded John F. Trow & Co., as well a second firm under their combined names, Leavitt & Trow, to do publishing and bookselling.

From the beginning, the new firm published a wide array of books and pamphlets. In 1841, for instance, its presses turned out Merciful Rebukes: A Sermon Preached in the Rutgers Street Church, New York, on Friday, May 14, 1841, On Occasion of the National Fast Recommended by the President of the United States.[14] Two years later, the firm published a more ambitious project: a four-volume set of the sermons and papers of Rev. Jonathan Edwards entitled The Works of President Edwards, in Four Volumes.[15] The firm, with the experienced Trow in command of the printing end, also published the classical series of Prof. John J. Owen, which was wildly popular and went through several printings.[6]

Leavitt's partner Trow was an early adapter of new printing technologies, and among the first to use power presses, then in 1840 a stereotype press as well. In 1843, the John F. Trow firm printed in 1843 Memoir of Mrs. Louisa Adams Leavitt by Rev. Asa Dodge Smith.[16] Leavitt & Trow became a prominent presence on the early New York publishing landscape, not least because of partner Trow's familiarity with the latest printing technologies, but also due to his heavy involvement in the business. "Our business has the personal attention of ourselves", Trow wrote to the public in 1845, "and we trust by unwearied application to receive from our patrons and the public in general a continuance of their patronage."[17] In 1847 the two Andover natives began publishing directories. (In the following years the Trow directories to New York became an established city institution).[18] The pair were soon joined in the business by George Ayres Leavitt, Jonathan's son, who had recently graduated from Phillips Academy in Andover, and who had served an early apprenticeship with publishers Robinson & Franklin.

About 1848 the two founding partners split their interests: Trow returned to running his own company (primarily his increasingly lucrative directory business, which he largely invented); and Leavitt went into business with his son until his death. The firm retained the name Leavitt & Trow up until Jonathan Leavitt's death.[19] George A. Leavitt continued his father's business as a sole proprietorship for a year until he joined forces with childhood playmate John K. Allen, who had been brought up in the publishing business.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b R.R. Bowker Company (Jun–Dec 1888). The Publishers Weekly. Vol. 34. F. Leypoldt. p. 1023. Retrieved 11 December 2008.
  2. ^ Montgomery, Susan J. (2000). Phillips Academy, Andover, The Campus Guide. Princeton Architectural Press. p. 62. ISBN 1-56898-230-5. Retrieved 11 December 2008.
  3. ^ Perley, Sidney (1898). "Adams Genealogy". The Essex Antiquarian: A Magazine Devoted to the Biography, Genealogy, History and Antiquities of Essex County, Massachusetts. The Essex antiquarian. 2: 79. Retrieved 11 December 2008.
  4. ^ Massachusetts: Vital Records, 1620-1850 (Online Database: AmericanAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2001-2016). Andover Deaths p 489
  5. ^ Essex County, MA: Probate File Papers, 1638-1881.Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2014. Case 259
  6. ^ a b c Derby, James Cephas (1884). Fifty Years Among Authors, Books and Publishers. G. W. Carleton & Co. pp. 175. Retrieved 11 December 2008. jonathan leavitt leavitt trow.
  7. ^ The Bookman. Vol. 10 (1899-1900). Dodd, Mead and Company. 1900. p. 559. Retrieved 12 December 2008.
  8. ^ Putnam, George Haven (1912). George Palmer Putnam: A Memoir, Together with a Record of the Earlier Years of the Publishing House Founded by Him. G. P. Putnam's Sons. pp. 19. Retrieved 12 December 2008. Leavitt publisher theological religious books.
  9. ^ a b Cutter, William Richard (1915). New England Families, Genealogical and Memorial, Third Series: Vol. I. Vol. I. Lewis Historical Publishing Company. p. 11. Retrieved 11 December 2008.
  10. ^ Greenspan, Ezra (2000). George Palmer Putnam: Representative American Publisher. Penn State Press. p. 57. ISBN 0-271-02005-9. Retrieved 11 December 2008.
  11. ^ Rosenberg, Daniel (2007). "Joseph Priestley and the Graphic Invention of Modern Time". American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies. American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies. 36 (1): 55–103. doi:10.1353/sec.2007.0013. S2CID 144554910. Retrieved 11 December 2008.
  12. ^ Bishop, John Leander (1868). A History of American Manufactures from 1608 to 1860, Vol. I. Vol. I. Edward Young & Co. p. 668. Retrieved 11 December 2008.
  13. ^ Jenkins, Stephen (1911). A Historical Tour of the Greatest Street in the World: Broadway: The story of Broadway, Old and New, from the Bowling Green to Albany. The Knickerbocker Press. Retrieved 11 December 2008.
  14. ^ Stevens, Kenneth R. (1998). William Henry Harrison: A Bibliography. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 185. ISBN 0-313-28167-X. Retrieved 11 December 2008.
  15. ^ Kling, David W. (2003). Jonathan Edwards at Home and Abroad: Historical Memories, Cultural Movements, Global Horizons. The University of South Carolina Press. p. 317. ISBN 1-57003-519-9. Retrieved 11 December 2008.
  16. ^ Smith, Asa Dodge (1843). Memoir of Mrs. Louisa Adams Leavitt: Comprised in a Sermon Occasioned by Her Death, and a Supplementary Sketch. J. F. Trow. Retrieved 11 December 2008.
  17. ^ Smyth, Thomas (1845). The Name, Nature, and Functions, of Ruling Elders. Leavitt, Trow & Co. p. 3. Retrieved 11 December 2008.
  18. ^ Trow, George W. S. (1997). Within the Context of No Context. Atlantic Monthly Press. pp. 6. ISBN 0-87113-674-0. Retrieved 11 December 2008. jonathan leavitt leavitt trow.
  19. ^ Huttner, Sid (March 20, 2007). "Index to Dictionary of Literary Biography Volume 49". The Lucile Project. Retrieved 11 December 2008.

Further reading

  • Statement of John F. Trow, Leavitt, Trow & Co.
  • Edwards, Jonathan (1844). The Works of President Edwards in Four Volumes: A Reprint of the Worcester Edition, with Valuable Additions and a Copious General Index. Vol. 4. Leavitt, Trow, & Co. Retrieved 11 December 2008.
  • Smith, Rev. Asa Dodge (1843). Memoir of Mrs. Louisa Adams Leavitt Comprised in a Sermon Occasioned by Her Death, and a Supplementary Sketch. John F. Trow. Retrieved 11 December 2008.

jonathan, leavitt, publisher, jonathan, leavitt, january, 1797, 1852, bookbinder, later, founded, york, city, publishing, firm, leavitt, trow, nation, first, publishing, houses, leavitt, also, founder, another, early, york, publishing, house, with, brother, da. Jonathan Leavitt January 20 1797 May 6 1852 was a bookbinder who later co founded the New York City publishing firm of Leavitt amp Trow one of the nation s first publishing houses Leavitt was also co founder of another early New York publishing house with his brother in law Daniel Appleton George Palmer Putnam who went on to found a New York publishing dynasty received his first job from Leavitt Eventually Jonathan Leavitt went into business on his own and after his death the firm was run by his son George Ayres Leavitt Jonathan LeavittBornJanuary 20 1797Hampton Falls New HampshireDiedMay 6 1852New York CityNationalityAmericanKnown forBookbinderpublisher Contents 1 History 2 New York City 3 John F Trow amp Co 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingHistory Edit Early bookbindery Jonathan Leavitt publisher began his career as apprentice bookbinder in Cambridge Massachusetts Jonathan Leavitt was born in 1797 at Hampton Falls New Hampshire likely to Simeon Leavitt and his wife Betty nee Tuck An obituary in The Publishers Weekly for Jonathan Leavitt s son George Ayers Leavitt who followed his father into the publishing industry indicates a family association with Effingham Falls now simply Effingham New Hampshire 1 The New Hampshire town had once been named Leavitts Town and was settled chiefly by members of the Leavitt family from Hampton New Hampshire Leavitt served as an apprentice bookbinder in Cambridge Massachusetts and then moved to Andover Massachusetts in 1812 13 In Andover Leavitt and printers Abraham Gould and Timothy Flagg set up a press for the Andover Theological Seminary 2 Leavitt and his two partners continued to operate their printing and bookbinding operation after Leavitt decided to relocate after over a decade in Andover Leavitt married the former Joan Ayres at Haverhill Massachusetts on July 8 1820 at the age of 23 Although most accounts give the name of Leavitt s wife as Joan Ayres and Ayres was subsequently the middle name of Leavitt s son George who took over his father s publishing business Sidney Perley in his authoritative The Essex Antiquarian lists under the Adams Genealogy the information that Major John Adams of Andover Massachusetts had daughters Louisa who married Jonathan Leavitt and Hannah who married Daniel Appleton of Haverhill of the Appleton Publishing House of New York City 3 Leavitt s first wife Joan Ayer Leavitt died at Andover on November 7 1824 4 On 7 December 1825 Jonathan married his second wife Louisa Adams who was born at Andover December 28 1803 daughter of John and Dorcas Faulkner Adams Louisa s sister Hannah was the wife of Daniel Appleton 5 New York City Edit George Palmer Putnam hired at 16 years old by Jonathan Leavitt as apprentice and right hand man Putnam went on to found a publishing powerhouse of his own In 1825 Leavitt moved to New York City and went into business with his brother in law Daniel Appleton who formerly worked as a Boston dry goods merchant but who had founded D Appleton amp Co a large store on Exchange Place opposite the Customs House to sell books Appleton put up the capital for the founding of a publishing business with his brother in law Leavitt The store on Exchange Place was divided into two sections with Appleton s son William later taking charge of the bookselling functions After five years of partnership and feeling he could continue his business without further capital infusions from his brother in law Jonathan Leavitt went into business for himself opening a store at Broadway and John Streets and hiring George Palmer Putnam then aged 16 as his apprentice and right hand man 6 Appleton and his son subsequently moved their business to what was known as Clinton Hall on Beekman Street where they established themselves as well known booksellers 6 With his partnership with Appleton dissolved Leavitt became the leading publisher of religious and theological works in New York city 7 8 9 Leavitt also acted as publisher for his early employee Putnam who went on to open his own eponymous publishing firm which became an industry fixture Mr Leavitt is willing to publish the volume I have compiled Putnam wrote to a correspondent during his term of employment with Jonathan Leavitt as soon as he is satisfied that it will be acceptable with the public 10 In 1833 Leavitt publish Putnam s first book Chronology or An Introduction and Index to Universal History Biography and Useful Knowledge 11 The volume which Putnam had first compiled for his own use received a then enormous printing run of 1 000 copies The book s success and Putnam s increasing usefulness to Leavitt s business caused the proprietor to advance him to a salary of two dollars per week and within a few months to four dollars per week 9 Broadway emerged early as center of the publishers who came to New York City and Leavitt was among the pioneers of the business Leavitt s brother in law Appleton had worked in the dry goods business in Boston and took on management of the wholesale part of the new firm s printing business Appleton later founded his own publishing firm which later grew into one of the industry s largest nearby at 200 Broadway John F Trow amp Co EditIn 1840 Leavitt became partners with fellow Andover native John F Trow a veteran of the Andover publishing firm Leavitt had helped found Flagg amp Gould operator of the Codman Press 12 The pair of Andover men founded two publishing firms both located at 191 Broadway in Lower Manhattan 13 They founded John F Trow amp Co as well a second firm under their combined names Leavitt amp Trow to do publishing and bookselling From the beginning the new firm published a wide array of books and pamphlets In 1841 for instance its presses turned out Merciful Rebukes A Sermon Preached in the Rutgers Street Church New York on Friday May 14 1841 On Occasion of the National Fast Recommended by the President of the United States 14 Two years later the firm published a more ambitious project a four volume set of the sermons and papers of Rev Jonathan Edwards entitled The Works of President Edwards in Four Volumes 15 The firm with the experienced Trow in command of the printing end also published the classical series of Prof John J Owen which was wildly popular and went through several printings 6 Leavitt s partner Trow was an early adapter of new printing technologies and among the first to use power presses then in 1840 a stereotype press as well In 1843 the John F Trow firm printed in 1843 Memoir of Mrs Louisa Adams Leavitt by Rev Asa Dodge Smith 16 Leavitt amp Trow became a prominent presence on the early New York publishing landscape not least because of partner Trow s familiarity with the latest printing technologies but also due to his heavy involvement in the business Our business has the personal attention of ourselves Trow wrote to the public in 1845 and we trust by unwearied application to receive from our patrons and the public in general a continuance of their patronage 17 In 1847 the two Andover natives began publishing directories In the following years the Trow directories to New York became an established city institution 18 The pair were soon joined in the business by George Ayres Leavitt Jonathan s son who had recently graduated from Phillips Academy in Andover and who had served an early apprenticeship with publishers Robinson amp Franklin About 1848 the two founding partners split their interests Trow returned to running his own company primarily his increasingly lucrative directory business which he largely invented and Leavitt went into business with his son until his death The firm retained the name Leavitt amp Trow up until Jonathan Leavitt s death 19 George A Leavitt continued his father s business as a sole proprietorship for a year until he joined forces with childhood playmate John K Allen who had been brought up in the publishing business 1 See also EditGeorge Ayres LeavittReferences Edit a b R R Bowker Company Jun Dec 1888 The Publishers Weekly Vol 34 F Leypoldt p 1023 Retrieved 11 December 2008 Montgomery Susan J 2000 Phillips Academy Andover The Campus Guide Princeton Architectural Press p 62 ISBN 1 56898 230 5 Retrieved 11 December 2008 Perley Sidney 1898 Adams Genealogy The Essex Antiquarian A Magazine Devoted to the Biography Genealogy History and Antiquities of Essex County Massachusetts The Essex antiquarian 2 79 Retrieved 11 December 2008 Massachusetts Vital Records 1620 1850 Online Database AmericanAncestors org New England Historic Genealogical Society 2001 2016 Andover Deaths p 489 Essex County MA Probate File Papers 1638 1881 Online database AmericanAncestors org New England Historic Genealogical Society 2014 Case 259 a b c Derby James Cephas 1884 Fifty Years Among Authors Books and Publishers G W Carleton amp Co pp 175 Retrieved 11 December 2008 jonathan leavitt leavitt trow The Bookman Vol 10 1899 1900 Dodd Mead and Company 1900 p 559 Retrieved 12 December 2008 Putnam George Haven 1912 George Palmer Putnam A Memoir Together with a Record of the Earlier Years of the Publishing House Founded by Him G P Putnam s Sons pp 19 Retrieved 12 December 2008 Leavitt publisher theological religious books a b Cutter William Richard 1915 New England Families Genealogical and Memorial Third Series Vol I Vol I Lewis Historical Publishing Company p 11 Retrieved 11 December 2008 Greenspan Ezra 2000 George Palmer Putnam Representative American Publisher Penn State Press p 57 ISBN 0 271 02005 9 Retrieved 11 December 2008 Rosenberg Daniel 2007 Joseph Priestley and the Graphic Invention of Modern Time American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies 36 1 55 103 doi 10 1353 sec 2007 0013 S2CID 144554910 Retrieved 11 December 2008 Bishop John Leander 1868 A History of American Manufactures from 1608 to 1860 Vol I Vol I Edward Young amp Co p 668 Retrieved 11 December 2008 Jenkins Stephen 1911 A Historical Tour of the Greatest Street in the World Broadway The story of Broadway Old and New from the Bowling Green to Albany The Knickerbocker Press Retrieved 11 December 2008 Stevens Kenneth R 1998 William Henry Harrison A Bibliography Greenwood Publishing Group p 185 ISBN 0 313 28167 X Retrieved 11 December 2008 Kling David W 2003 Jonathan Edwards at Home and Abroad Historical Memories Cultural Movements Global Horizons The University of South Carolina Press p 317 ISBN 1 57003 519 9 Retrieved 11 December 2008 Smith Asa Dodge 1843 Memoir of Mrs Louisa Adams Leavitt Comprised in a Sermon Occasioned by Her Death and a Supplementary Sketch J F Trow Retrieved 11 December 2008 Smyth Thomas 1845 The Name Nature and Functions of Ruling Elders Leavitt Trow amp Co p 3 Retrieved 11 December 2008 Trow George W S 1997 Within the Context of No Context Atlantic Monthly Press pp 6 ISBN 0 87113 674 0 Retrieved 11 December 2008 jonathan leavitt leavitt trow Huttner Sid March 20 2007 Index to Dictionary of Literary Biography Volume 49 The Lucile Project Retrieved 11 December 2008 Further reading EditStatement of John F Trow Leavitt Trow amp Co Edwards Jonathan 1844 The Works of President Edwards in Four Volumes A Reprint of the Worcester Edition with Valuable Additions and a Copious General Index Vol 4 Leavitt Trow amp Co Retrieved 11 December 2008 Smith Rev Asa Dodge 1843 Memoir of Mrs Louisa Adams Leavitt Comprised in a Sermon Occasioned by Her Death and a Supplementary Sketch John F Trow Retrieved 11 December 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jonathan Leavitt publisher amp oldid 1065259405, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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