Neale Publishing Company
{{Short description|American publisher}}
The Neale Publishing Company was an American book publisher active between 1894 and 1933. It was a prolific publisher of books about the American Civil War and the Southern United States. Founded by Walter Neale, it published at least 596 titles, 215 were fiction, 279 were non-fiction, and 75 were poetry.
History
The Neale Publishing Company was founded by Walter Neale in 1894.{{Cite news |date=1933-09-29 |title=Walter Neale, 60, Found Dead in Bed |pages=19 |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1933/09/29/archives/walter-neale-60-found-dead-in-bed-_____-head-of-publishing-company.html |url-access=subscription |access-date=2023-01-23 |id={{Gale|100862039}}}} Neale, who had previously worked as a writer, established the company in Washington, D.C. and was one of only two employees. Neale began publishing books in 1896.{{Cite book |last=Krick |first=Robert T. |title=Neale Books: An Annotated Bibliography |publisher=Morningside Press |year=1977 |isbn= |pages=}}{{Rp|page=v}} In 1899 the company published a journal, Conservative Review, but the periodical lasted only two years. It was enough, however, to kick-start the rest of Neale's publishing operation, and forty books were published between 1900 and 1901.
Neale incorporated the company in March 1901. It began to rapidly expand and in 1902 was officially listed in the Publishers Trade List Annual.{{Rp|page=viii}} Sometime in this period, writer Ambrose Bierce wrote a scathing review of one of Neale's publications that extended to the company itself. The book in question quickly sold 6,000 copies as a result of the review and Bierce and Neale became close friends shortly thereafter.{{Rp|page=x}} The company would go on to publish nearly all of Bierce's future books.{{Rp|page=xi}}
From 1901 onwards, Neale became a prolific publisher books about the American Civil War and the Southern United States in general.{{Cite news |last=Du Bose |first=John W. |author-link= |date=1911-07-09 |title=Walter Neale in Southern Literature |page=28 |newspaper=Lexington Herald-Leader |location=Lexington, Kentucky |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/117134402/walter-neale-in-southern-literature/ |access-date=2023-01-24 |via=Newspapers.com}} Walter Neale was an openly racist and often criticized the policies of the Reconstruction era, however, he regularly published books critical of his own position.{{Cite journal |last=Parfait |first=Claire |date=2009 |title=Rewriting History: The Publication of W. E. B. Du Bois's "Black Reconstruction in America" (1935) |journal=Book History |volume=12 |pages=289 |doi=10.1353/bh.0.0022 |jstor=40930547 |s2cid=162457311 }}{{Rp|page=iv}} By 1910, the Neale Publishing Company had printed more books by Southern writers on the South than any other American publisher.{{Cite news |date=1910-05-26 |title=Authors of "The Betrayal," a Late Novel |page=2 |newspaper=Bossier Banner-Progress |location=Benton, Louisiana |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/117134464/authors-of-the-betrayal-a-late-novel/ |access-date=2023-01-24 |via=Newspapers.com}} The company offered its authors significant royalties for the time {{Mdash}} 20-to-25% of gross sales and 50% of income from republications {{Mdash}} and heavily advertised its books, spending more than $50,000 in advertising in the first half of the company's existence ({{Inflation|index=US|value=50000|start_year=1909|fmt=eq|cursign=$}}).{{Rp|pages=xii-xiv}}
In 1911 the company shut down its Washington, D.C. office and moved all operations to New York City.{{Rp|page=xvi}} In 1912, Walter Neale was arrested after sending a threatening letter to one of his authors, Elizabeth Meriwether.{{Cite news |date=1912-10-21 |title=Aged Author Causes Publisher's Arrest |pages=20 |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1912/10/21/archives/aged-author-causes-publishers-arrest-walter-neale-accused-of.html |url-access=subscription |access-date=2023-01-23 |id={{Gale|97328146}}}} Around this time, Neale ventured into publishing periodicals again, with the first issue of Neale's Monthly being published in January 1913. Despite projecting profits in excess of $250,000 ({{Inflation|index=US|value=250000|start_year=1913|fmt=eq|cursign=$}}), the journal only lasted eighteen months and it is unclear if it made any profit.{{Rp|pages=xvi-xvii}}
Beginning in 1915, the company began a gradual decline. It moved locations to a smaller and less expensive building, sold much of its back catalog at a significant discount, and stopped nearly all of its print advertising.{{Rp|page=xviii}} In 1919, the company's bindery was destroyed in a fire.{{Cite journal |last=Williams Jr. |first=Vernon J. |date=June 2022 |title=A Gifted Amateur: The Case of George Washington Ellis |journal=American Anthropologist |volume=104 |issue=2 |pages=548 |jstor=684004 }} No new books were published between 1920 and 1927 as Walter Neale focused his attention on several other business ventures, including two other publishing companies and a supply company. Publications resumed in 1927, culminating in Neale publishing a book of his own in 1929: Life of Ambrose Bierce, a tribute to his friend who had disappeared in 1913.{{Rp|pages=xviii-xix}} Neale died of heart disease in 1933 and, with his death, the company went defunct.{{Rp|page=xix}}
In 1977, Morningside Press published Neale Books: An Annotated Bibliography by Robert T. Krick, which documented all of the books Neale published over the course of its existence.
Books
{{Category see also|Neale Publishing Company books}}
The Neale Publishing Company released at least 596 titles between 1894 and 1933. Of those, 215 were fiction, 279 were non-fiction, and 75 were poetry.{{Rp|page=xx}} The company published several books by Ambrose Bierce as well as books by G. Moxley Sorrel, Eugenie Jones-Bacon, Armistead C. Gordon, Robert Hamill Nassau, Charles Massie Long, Henry E. Shepherd, William Estabrook Chancellor, John Wilson Townsend, Cuthbert Lee, Percival Pollard, Katie Daffan, James Havelock Campbell, Charles William Super, Virginia Mason, Elmer Willis Serl, Walter Neale, Mary Newton Stanard, Carl Holliday, Marcus Joseph Wright, William Montgomery Meigs, James Parker, Edwin Du Bois Shurter, Lawrence Wilson, Wilson J. Vance, Wayland Fuller Dunaway, Anne Wilson,https://openlibrary.org/publishers/The_Neale_publishing_company John Thompson Gray, Annie L. Sloan, Elizabeth May Montague, Eliza C. Tulloch, Pattie Stone, Roe R. Hobbs, Samuel Jackson Shields, Thomas Lane Carter Jr.https://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/lookupname?key=Neale%20Publishing%20Company%2C%20pbl and John Goode.http://worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n77015970/
Publishings
- Selected Poems of Henry Ames Blood (1901) by Henry Ames Blood{{Rp|page=18}}
- A Memoir of Robert M. T. Hunter (1903) by Martha T. Hunter{{Rp|page=86}}
- Haiti: Her History and Her Detractors (1907) by Jacques Nicolas Léger{{Rp|page=99}}
- My Life and My Lectures (1908) by Lamar Fontaine{{Rp|page=53}}
- The Red Moon (1910) by Mrs. Eugenie Jones-Bacon{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xOZEAQAAMAAJ&q=the+red+moon+rosamund | title=The Red Moon | date=1910 | publisher=Neale }}
- The Devil's Dictionary (1911) by Ambrose Bierce{{Cite journal |last=Ironside |first=R. G. |date=2000 |title=Canadian Northern Settlements: Top-Down and Bottom-Up Influences |journal=Geografiska Annaler |volume=82 |issue=2 |pages=103–114 |doi=10.1111/j.0435-3684.2000.00077.x |jstor=491068 |s2cid=143660965 }}
- Fighting by Southern Federals (1912) by Charles Anderson{{Rp|page=8}}
- The Facts of Reconstruction (1913) by John R. Lynch{{Cite journal |last=Behrend |first=Justin |date=Fall 2012 |title=Facts and Memories: John R. Lynch and the Revising of Reconstruction History in the Era of Jim Crow |journal=The Journal of African American History |volume=97 |issue=4 |pages=427–448 |doi=10.5323/jafriamerhist.97.4.0427 |jstor=10.5323/jafriamerhist.97.4.0427 |s2cid=149154065 }}
- The Valley Campaigns (1914) by Thomas Ashby{{Rp|page=4}}
- Recollections of a California Pioneer (1917) by Carlisle S. Abbott{{Cite news |date=1917-05-18 |title=Recollections of a California Pioneer |page=5 |newspaper=The Californian |location=Salinas, California |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/117167880/recollections-of-a-california-pioneer/ |access-date=2023-01-24 |via=Newspapers.com}}
- Below the James: A Plantation Sketch (1918) by William Cabell Bruce
- Life of Ambrose Bierce (1929) by Walter Neale{{Cite news |date=1929-07-20 |title=Walter Neale Writes a Life of Ambrose Bierce |page=8 |newspaper=The Boston Globe |location=Boston, Massachusetts |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/117134475/walter-neale-writes-a-life-of-ambrose/ |access-date=2023-01-24 |via=Newspapers.com}}{{Rp|page=23}}
- The Carolinians: An Old-Fashioned Love Story of Stirring Times in the Early Colony of Carolina by Annie L. Sloan
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{Commons category-inline}}
- The Neale Publishing Company at Wikisource
{{Authority control}}
Category:1894 establishments in Washington, D.C.
Category:1933 disestablishments in New York (state)
Category:Publishing companies based in New York City
Category:Publishing companies established in 1894