Crowell Collier Publishing Company

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Crowell-Collier Publishing Company is a now mostly defunct American publisher that owned Collier's Weekly and Woman's Home Companion as well as general interest books and references such as Collier's Encyclopedia and the Harvard Classic series of books. After shuttering the magazine operations in the 1950s, Crowell-Collier merged with the American Macmillan Company in 1960 and became a large educational company with subsidiaries for books, textbooks, correspondence schools and other educational tools and materials. The company officially changed its name to Macmillan, Inc. in 1973.

Early Years

The Crowell-Collier Publishing Company had its roots in the agricultural trade of the 19th century. Industrialist Phineas P. Mast, the owner of P.P. Mast, manufactured farm and agricultural tools, and he wanted a magazine to promote his products.[1] Mast made wind engines, pumps, plows and mowers in Springfield, Ohio.[1] Mast hired John C. Crowell away from the successful Home and Farm of Louisville in 1877 to manage the new bi-monthly farm journal called Farm & Fireside.[2][3] By the 1890s, Farm & Fireside maintained a circulation of over half a million.[3] Mast relinquished his role as acting executive in 1879, but he stayed on as an investor. Crowell along with T.J. Kirkpatrick (who was Mast's nephew) then changed the name of the publishing house to Mast, Crowell, and Kirkpatrick Publishers.[2]

File:US-OH(1891) p685 SPRINGFIELD, P.P. MAST & CO.jpg
US-OH(1891) p685 SPRINGFIELD, P.P. MAST & CO

From the one magazine the publisher grew and expanded into other markets. They constructed the Farm and Fireside building in Springfield, Ohio in 1881.[2] In 1883, they purchased the Home Companion magazine from a Harvey & Finn of Cleveland to meet the growing demand for content aimed at women.[4] They boughtYouth's Home Library a similar paper that had been published in Boston and merged it with their youth-oriented publication in Our Young People. They then changed the name of the three merged periodicals back to the title Home Companion a general family magazine and by 1890 the magazine's subscription had reached 100,000.[4] The Companion had a number of names but was changed to Woman's Home Companion in 1896. By the 1890s, Farm & Fireside was also publishing regional editions of the periodical.[3] After the death of P.P. Mast in 1898, the company changed the name to Crowell and Kirkpatrick Publishers.[2]

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Early 20th Century

1900 to 1930

As the twentieth-century began the company changed hands again and moved into mainstream magazine publishing. P.P. Mast died in 1898 (leaving an estate of a million and a half dollars).[4] In 1902, John S. Crowell obtained Kirkpatrick's interests and established it as the Crowell Publishing Company.[2][4] In 1906, Crowell turned around and sold his interest in the company to Joseph Knapp and George Hazen of New York, who incorporated in New Jersey and kept the name Crowell Publishing Company.[2][5] Crowell Publishing acquired American Magazine in 1911.[2][5] The magazine had muckraking roots but with the decline of muckraking journalism it had turned into a general interest magazine.[2]

In 1919, the Crowell Publishing Company bought another general interest magazine--Collier's: The National Weekly and assumed control of Collier's book publishing.[6] Collier's also had roots in muckraking journalism and social reform and had one of the largest magazine subscription audiences then around one million weekly.[5] The book publishing arm published popular and serious literature topics as well as the Collier's Encyclopedias and published six million copies a year of books.[5] <templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

By 1924 Collier's weekly circulation had grown to 1,250,000.[7] Crowell moved their print operations to Springfield, Ohio because of "excessive postage involved in mailing from a seaboard city under wartime postal rates,[7] The editorial and business departments remained in New York.[7]

1930s

In 1930 Farm & Fireside magazine changed its name to The Country Home.[2] And in 1939, Crowell Publishing merged the New York operations and changed the company name to The Crowell-Collier Publishing Co.[4][8] That same year, The Country Home was discontinued.[9][10]

Also in 1930, Crowell Publishing Company was sued by R.B. Creager, a Republican National Committeeman for Texas for libel and sought $500,000 in damages after an article appeared in Collier's Weekly called High-Handed and Hell-Bent. The article by Owen P. White covered a political situation on the Mexican border in Hidalgo County. The jury returned a verdict for Crowell Publishing.[11]

Jo-Cotten-American-FC-1931

1940s and World War II

It was in 1940 that the FTC began investigation into the sales methods used for their Encyclopedias. The publishing company and its officers and directors of the corporations were charged with misleading sale methods and representations in the sale of books and encyclopedias in 1940. The complaint charged that "contrary to claims made, none of the respondents' publications is ever given as the result of a drawing or free, and as a gift or gratuity; that the purchase price of so-called free goods is, in every instance, included in the price of other merchandise sold to the customer; that in no case do they sell at actual cost, that the sum of $59 represented as a reduced price is the regular price, and that other claims are 'also deceptive and misleading.'"[12]

Crowell-Collier building, 2011

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During World War II, Crowell-Collier sponsored publication of a magazine for servicemen called Victory.[13]

Post War Years and Company Troubles

In 1946, the Vanderbilt mansion at Fifth Avenue and Fifty-First Street was slated to be razed and replaced with a 19 story office building for the Crowell-Collier Publishing Company.[14]

In the mid-fifties Crowell-Collier had heavy deficits and it decided to close both Collier's magazine and Woman's Home Companion. In 1955 American Magazine was discontinued and in 1956, both Women's Home Companion and Collier's were discontinued.[2] It also closed its plant in Springfield, Ohio which at one point employed over 2,000 people. The plant ceased operations in December 1956.[2] The closing shocked both publishers and readers.[15] At the time of the closing many in the magazine field deemed it "a foolish and impetuous move."[16] But as the company moved to reinvent itself as a producer of books and educational materials by the sixties the move was later seen as shrewd and far-visioned.[16]<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Magazines

  • Farm & Fireside (1877-1939)--The early content of Farm & Fireside served to advertise agricultural implements manufactured by P.P. Mast & Co.[2] After the farming had moved to being a commercialized industry, Farm & Fireside moved to address commercial and economic aspects of farming.[2] The magazine provides a first-hand account of America's conversion from a rural to an urban population.[2]
  • Women's Home Companion (1883-1950)--The popularity of the women's section of Farm & Fireside created a demand for a publication dedicated to women. The company acquired The Home Companion magazine in 1883 and changed the name to Ladies Home Companion and then later in 1987 to Women's Home Companion.[2]
  • The American Magazine (1911-1956)--began as Leslie's Popular Monthly in 1876 and was then sold in 1906 to muckrakers Ray Stannard Barker, Ida Tarbell, and Lincoln Steffans. The magazine which addressed the hopes and aspirations of the ordinary man was then purchased by Crowell-Collier in 1911.[2]
  • Collier's The National Weekly (1919-1956) The magazine was originally established by Peter Fenelon Collier in New York in 1888. It was purchased by Crowell Publishing in 1919 and[2] ceased publication in 1956.[17]
  • The Mentor (1921-1930): The Mentor focused on a variety of topics including Science, Art, History, Literature, and Travel. The Mentor merged with the World Traveler in 1930 as the Mentor-World Traveler but then ceased publication that same year.[2]

1960s and Reinvention as Educational Publisher

By the early 1960s, Crowell-Collier had recovered financially. Leaving behind its roots in magazine publishing, it now turned to the growing market for education produced by the baby boom in the United States. Book sales had surged for reference books, textbooks, and encyclopedias and like many of the large publishers of that era such as Random House and Simon & Schuster, Crowell-Collier embarked on a merger and acquisitions spree.[18][19] Crowell-Collier kicked off the decade by merging with the American Macmillan company and moved into the educational space. This was then followed by a number of mergers and acquisitions.[20] On the move into education, Chairman Raymond C. Hagel said, "We envision our major role as that of a developer of complete educational systems." He explained that an educational system was a "unified instructional package involving a variety of tools." and that "the business of education has become a successor to the defense industry. It is a security lifeline."[21] Crowell would end the decade as Crowell Collier & Macmillan, a large conglomeration of subsidiaries that included books, schools, magazines, educational tools, bookstores, book clubs and radio stations and with an annual revenue of $390 million.[22]

Merger with Macmillan

In 1960, Crowell-Collier merged with Macmillian Company[18][23] which published fiction, non-fiction, textbooks, reference books, religious books and children's books.[24] Macmillan was once the American division of the British Macmillan Publishers (opened in 1869) and had been run by generations of the Brett family who eventually bought the company from the British in 1896. Macmillan published some notable authors including Jack London, Margaret Mitchell, and Winston Churchill.

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At the time, the majority of Macmillan's sales came from textbooks[19][25][26] and for Macmillan the merger meant access to cash and capital to grow their textbook market.[19] Crowell-Collier ran Macmillan as a subsidiary but in 1965 Crowell-Collier officially changed their name to Crowell Collier & Macmillan, Inc.[27] Publishing was dropped from the company name to reflect their broadened scope into education.[28]

Encyclopedias, Books and Educational Materials

Textbooks and encyclopedias were a booming business in 1959—while general books accounted for $408 million in sales—textbooks and encyclopedias totaled $597 million.[19] Crowell's subsidiary P.F. Collier and Sons published revised the Collier's Encyclopedia and released a new 24-volume set in 1962.[29] Since 1909 they also published the fifty-one volume Harvard Classics-an anthology of classic and world literature.[29] They expanded the line of Encyclopedias by announcing that they would use the resources of Crowell-Collier, Macmillian and Free Press to begin work on a new multi-volume set on Social Sciences.[30] W. Allen Wallis, named Chairman of the editorial board for the Encyclopedia said, "In the past few years we have stressed the physical sciences because of our concern for defense, and the biological sciences because of our interest in better health. Perhaps of even greater importance to the continued survival of our country and, therefore, the whole free world, will be our ability to solve some of the great social problems of the day."[30]

File:UBN Collier's Encyclopedia.JPG
UBN Collier's Encyclopedia

The FTC (Federal Trade Commission) again cited Crowell-Collier and subsidiary P.F. Collier and Sons with making false claims through the door-to-door salesmen of the encyclopedias.[31] In an article on stockholder questions in the New York Times, shareholders at a meeting in 1963 complained about tactics used by door-to-door encyclopedia salesmen.[32] Nine years later in 1969, the F.T.C. ordered the distributors of Collier's Encyclopedias to stop the use of deceptive sales promoting the publication. The agency charged the company with "Implying through promotional literature and door-to-door salesmen that a set of the encyclopedias would be given free or at a reduced price if yearly supplements were purchased."[33]

In 1960, Crowell began to expand further into general book markets. Collier Books was the paperback division of Crowell-Collier Publishing company which began publishing in October 1961 at the rate of fifty paperbacks a month.[34][35] The list included scholarly books, non-fiction and fiction reprints and original works.[35][36] Crowell-Collier Press was a hardcover publisher started in 1962 with a focus on adult nonfiction and children's books.[34] The children's series, the Modern Masters Books for Children, was edited by anthologist Louis Untermeyer and included picture books by Robert Graves (The Big Green Book), Shirley Jackson (9 Magic Wishes) and Phyllis McGinley (The B Book).[37] The books were created using a controlled vocabulary of fewer than 800 words created by elementary educators.[38]

In 1962, Crowell also purchased book club distributor Scientific Materials, Inc., which included Library of Science, Science Book Club, Natural History Book Club, and Basic Book Service. In addition to the four professional level book clubs, two others aimed at young adults including the Young Adults' Division and Junior Scientists Division of the Library of Science were also a part of the acquisition. Crowell-Collier later that same year turned around and sold the toy manufacturing arm of Scientific Materials, Inc. to Allis-Chalmers manufacturing[39][40]

In 1962, Crowell made another push into the book market with a purchase of book clubs and retail bookstores. In the same year, they purchased 16 Brentano's bookstores. At the time bookstores were heavily competing with department stores and discount houses offering reduced rates for bestsellers.[41] By 1967, the Brentano's chain had grown to 21 stores and had sales of $7 million.[42]

In 1962, Crowell-Collier Publishing Company created a new division called Crowell-Collier Educational Corporation. The educational arm was created to develop instructional and reference materials as well as teaching aids for us in schools, colleges, adult education, business, and industrial training and home study.[43]

Other acquisitions included:

  • English Language Services, Inc. (1962), instructional materials used abroad to teach English-as-a-second language.[44]
  • Publication Corporation (1968)[45]
  • Associated Films, Inc. (1968), an educational film distribution company[45]
  • P.J. Kenedy & Sons (1968), a publisher of Catholic religion and educational books.[46]
  • Hagstram Company, Inc (1968), creator of educational materials and services.[47]
  • Fleetwood Films, Inc. (1968), films for home and educational use.[47]
  • Pandex, Inc, (1968) a reference company.[47]
  • Brandon (1968), another education and film distribution company.[48]
  • G. Schirmer, Inc.,(1968) a music and publishing company
  • Studio Vista, Ltd. (1968)--British publisher of books on graphic arts, architecture and design.[49]
  • Benziger brothers (1969)--publishers of religious and education books.[50]
  • Cassell & Co. Holdings, Ltd, (1969). a British publishing company.[51]
  • Standard Rate & Data Services, Inc., a publisher of advertising and marketing data.[52]

Home Study and Vocational Training

Vocational training became big business in the 1960s as companies attempted fill a void between a high school diploma and college degrees and Crowell-Collier made significant acquisitions expanding into this market.[53] In 1960, Crowell purchased the La Salle Extension University—a correspondence school.[20][21] In 1965 Crowell Collier & Macmillan, Inc. purchased Berlitz Schools of Languages of America, Inc.and Berlitz Publications for $5 million.[54][55] Crowell purchased Katherine Gibbs School, Inc. a secretarial school.[56] It also attempted to acquire Famous Artists Schools, Inc. a writing and art correspondence school by purchasing 25% of shares which it later sold to institutional investors in 1968.[57][58]

File:La Salle Extension University Alumni Pin.png
La Salle Extension University Alumni Pin

In 1969, Crowell filed a lawsuit against National Home Study Council of Washington which was a private accrediting agency. The suit said that National Home was a monopoly and had denied re-accreditation to the U.S. School of Music, Inc. and La Salle Extension University.[59] By 1969, Crowell made 22% of its revenue from La Salle Extension University, Berlitz, and Katharine Gibbs.[60] The lawsuit settled but at the same time, the entire mail-order schooling came under fire from the New York Times for dubious practices including "overblown advertising, fast talking salesmen, questionable instruction and marginal results."[61]

Return to Magazines

In 1968 the company merged with Publication Corporation, a leading printer of Sunday magazines for newspapers and the publisher of This Week magazine. The companies had a shared history—Joseph P Knapp, who had helped develop the Crowell Publishing Company had founded Publication Corporation as American Lithograph Company in 1891. The Publication had also been a principal stockholder of Crowell-Collier—owning 24% at one point.[62] The goal for the merger was to distribute periodicals efficiently in the education market.[62] By 1969, Crowell made the decision to shut down the This Week magazine which had a circulation of 9 million as a weekend supplement for papers such as The Providence Journal and the Kansas City Star.[63]

In 1969 Crowell Collier & Macmillan went back to publishing magazines but with a focus on education.[64] They acquired six magazines including Grade Teacher, the Catholic School Journal, Industrial Arts and Vocational Education, College Management, School Management and Business Management.[64] These magazines made up a subsidiary CCM magazines based in Greenwich, Conn.[64]

Other Media

Crowell‐Coilier Broadcasting operated radio stations in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Minneapolis.[25][65]

In 1969 Crowell-Collier purchased the Gump's store in San Francisco.[66]

Crowell-Collier purchased C.G. Conn a manufacturer of musical instruments in 1968.[67]

In 1966 the company consolidated 1400 employees into a new building on 866 3rd Avenue called the Crowell Collier & Macmillan building.[68]

1970s

By the start of the seventies, Crowell Collier & Macmillan was now a $400 million multinational producer of books and educational materials.[69] Crowell Collier & Macmillan decided to change the name of the company to Macmillan, Inc. First, though, they encountered a legal battle over the name with Macmillan, Ltd. of London—who had spun-off from the original American Macmillan in 1896. For the name to take effect on January 1, 1973,[70] the companies agreed to some conditions including the American company using Crowell-Collier or another name to distinguish the businesses in which the British Macmillan operated. The British Macmillan stated that the name had already been causing confusion with the public resulting in misdirected book orders and the fear that the American company was planning to use the name to compete unfairly in markets where the British company was active. The case cited the Lanham Act, the trademark act of 1946.[69]

File:Harvard Classics books on a bookshelf.jpg
Harvard Classics books on a bookshelf

This wasn't the only legal battle that the now Macmillan, Inc. faced at the start of the seventies. Macmillan sued Charles F. Berlitz, grandson of the founder of Berlitz to prohibit him from using the Berlitz name in travel and writing businesses.[71] Berlitz won the lawsuit and was awarded $376,000 and the right to use his name as an author of books on foreign languages.[72] The Justice Department filed a civil anti-trust suit against Crowell, Collier & Macmillan, Inc. in 1970 and requested that it divest itself from C.G. Conn, Ltd (a manufacturer and retailer of musical instruments) and Uniforms by Ostwald, Inc. (manufacturer and retailer of band uniforms).[73]

Crowell-Collier was also under fire by the FTC again in 1972 and accused of using deceptive practices in selling it's Harvard Classics and in billing encyclopedia buyers and also in recruiting of encyclopedia salesmen. Of the Harvard Classics, the FTC stated that while the company marketed that one or several volumes were offered free or for $1 each "with the understanding that additional volumes priced at $3.98 would be shipped periodically for free examination" when in fact many volumes would be shipped in a bulk shipment. Buyers were subjected to repeated mailings of bills. Crowell responded that they had already discontinued the Harvard Classics "continuity" program and that any "isolated" occurrences or procedures had been changed. For the encyclopedias, Crowell was accused of raising the price on Encyclopedia annual supplements called Yearbooks. They were also accused of advertising positions for encyclopedia salesman as "administrative assistant trainees" and "marketing and public relations personnel. Crowell issued a statement disavowing any violations but agreed to negotiate a consent order.[74]<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

References

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External links