Henry Holt (publisher)

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Henry Holt (January 3, 1840 – February 13, 1926), was a book publisher and author.

Henry Holt was born in Baltimore, Maryland on January 3, 1840.[1]

He graduated from Yale in 1862.[1]

After a year at Columbia Law School, Holt married Mary Florence West and left school for work.[1]

He joined the publishing company of Frederick Leypoldt in 1866, which became Henry Holt and Company in 1873. Holt's company specialized in publishing and did not sell books at retail. Holt remained active in the company until about 1916.[1]

Seven years after his wife's death, he wed Florence Taber. Holt had 3 sons and 3 daughters.[1]

In 1914 he found The Unpopular Review, later renamed The Unpartizan Review, which ceased publication in 1920.[1]

Holt authored novels as well. Both Calire (1892) and Sturmsee: Man and Man (1905) were first published anonymously and then reissued under his name. The New York Times described them: "In Sturmsee the economic problems of the present day are treated in an interesting fashion. The theory of 'social service' is set forth in it., and there are many satirical touches. The scope of the other novel, Calmire, is somewhat broader."[2]

Holt served on the Simplified Spelling Board, and was its President and the man to whom the Board's founding benefactor Andrew Carnegie addressed his 25 February 1915 letter expressing dissatisfaction with the progress of the board, saying of the board that "a more useless body of men never came into association, judging from the effects they produce."[3]

Holt published his autobiography, Garrulities of an Octogenarian Editor in 1923.[4]

He died at his home in New York City on February 13, 1926 and was buried in Greenwood Cemetery.[1]

Works

  • Fiction
    • Calire (1892)
    • Sturmsee: Man and Man (1905)
  • Non-fiction
    • Talks on Civics (1901)
    • Garrulities of an Octogenarian Editor (1923)

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 New York Times: "Henry Holt, Dean of Publishers, Dies," February 1, 1926, accessed January 6, 2011
  2. New York Times: "Henry Holt, Novelist," March 1, 1906, accessed January 6, 2011
  3. Carnegie, Andrew. "My views about Improved Spelling 1906-1915", Columbia University, Brander Matthews' Manuscript Collection, 893
  4. Kessinger Publishing, 2005, ISBN 1-4179-1813-6

External links

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