Carl Schoenhof

Carl Schoenhof (c. 1843 – 1911) was a bookseller and publisher in Boston, Massachusetts, in the 19th century. He specialized in foreign books.[1] Born in Carlsruhe, Germany, he attended University of Heidelberg. He moved to the U. States around 1864. Shortly thereafter he worked for Boston publishers DeVries, Ibarra & Co., and took over the business in 1870. His business ventures included Schoenhof & Moeller (c. 1870–1878, with Fanny Moeller), Cupples & Schoenhof (c. 1891), and Schoenhof Book Co. (ca.1890s).[2]

Advertisement for Schoenhof & Moeller, 1875

Henry James approved of Schoenhof & Moeller, describing it in 1878 as "a vastly better shop than any of the kind in London."[3] Around 1889, "Mr. Schoenhof [was] the general agent for the United States for Hachette & Co.'s (London and Paris) publications for the study of foreign languages ... [and] for Henry Holt & Co.'s (New York) publications. ... [He also sold] Steiger & Co.'s, Wm. R. Jenkins', Geo. R. Lockwood & Son's, MacMillan's, Appleton's, Barnes' publications in foreign languages."[4] Schoenhof's shop was located near the corner of Tremont and Winter Streets: at no.40 Winter St. (1875–1876),[5] no.146 Tremont (1880–1881),[6] no.144 Tremont (1887–1889),[7] and no.128 Tremont (1902–1911).[8] In 1893 he "sold out his interest to two of his employees, who continue[d] the business under the firm-name of Castor & Co."[9][10]

Schoenhof's brother, Jacob Schoenhof, was an authority on economics, and served as U.S. consul to England during the Cleveland administration.[11]

See also

References

Tremont Street, Boston, near Winter Street, 1903
  1. Old book dealer dead: Carl Schoenhof Had Been in Business in Boston for Fifty Years. New York Times, May 29, 1911
  2. Publishers' Weekly, June 3, 1911. Google books
  3. Henry James letter to Thomas Sergeant Perry, 1878; quoted in: Virginia Harlow. Thomas Sergeant Perry: a biography. Duke Univ. press, 1950. Cited in: Henry James, Philip Horne. Henry James: a life in letters. Penguin Classics, 2001
  4. "Carl Schoenhof, Foreign Book Seller and Importer, No.144 Tremont Street." cf. Illustrated Boston, the metropolis of New England, 2nd ed. NY: American publishing and engraving co., 1889
  5. Ad for Schoenhof & Moeller. Magenta (Cambridge, Mass.), 1875.
  6. Ad for Carl Schoenhof. Harvard Advocate, 1881
  7. Boston Almanac. 1889
  8. Publishers' Weekly, June 3, 1911.
  9. Publishers' Weekly, April 4, 1896. Google books
  10. Literary World, Dec. 30, 1893. Google books
  11. Death of Jacob Schoenhof. New York Times, March 15, 1903

Further reading

Published by Schoenhof & Moeller

Published by Carl Schoenhof

  • Karl Julius Ploetz, J.Noeroth. Easy and practical French grammar, 17th ed. 1880. Google books
  • Jean de La Fontaine. Fables. London and Paris: Hachette; Boston: Schoenhof, 1886 Google books
  • Wilhelm Bernhardt. German-English vocabulary to both volumes of "Deutsches Sprach- und Lesebuch." 1887. Google books
  • Wilhelm Bernhardt, ed. Freudvoll und Leidvoll: short stories by such noted writers of our day as Emil Peschkau, Ernst von Wildenbruch, Heinrich Seidel, Rudolf Baumbach, Helene Stökl, and Helene von Götzendorff-Grabowski, 3rd ed. 1894 Google books

Published by Cupples & Schoenhof

  • Edwy Wells Foster. Man: the story of his advent, life and development in the earth world and his continued life and progression in the spirit world, with a description in allegory of his principal aids and counsellors. 1900. Google books
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.