Identity area
Reference code
Title
Date(s)
- 1850-1984 (Creation)
Level of description
Extent and medium
208 volumes, 166 boxes, 32 files, 2 card indexes
Context area
Name of creator
Biographical history
George Routledge set up in business as a retail bookseller with his brother-in-law W H Warne as assistant, and in 1836 published his first (unsuccessful) book, The Beauties of Gilsand (a guidebook), moving to no 36 Soho Square in 1843. W H Warne was taken into partnership and the Railway Library of cheap reprints of works of fiction begun in 1848. Frederick Warne, W H Warne's brother, was taken into partnership and the firm of George Routledge and Co was founded in 1851, removing to no 2 Farringdon Street in 1852, when the firm published Uncle Tom's Cabin. Founded on the success of cheap editions of works of fiction, the firm rapidly expanded into the reprint market, catering for the growing literate population of the Victorian age. Routledge and Co opened a New York branch in 1854. Robert Warne Routledge, George Routledge's son, entered the partnership in 1858 and the firm was restyled Routledge, Warne & Routledge. W H Warne died in 1859. In 1862 Every Boy's Magazine, edited by Edmund Routledge (George Routledge's son), was started. The firm entered a contract with Lord Tennyson in 1863. Frederick Warne left the firm, Edmund Routledge became a partner, and the firm was renamed George Routledge and Sons, removing to no 7 The Broadway, Ludgate, in 1865. Routledge and Sons' publications included Kate Greenaway's Under the Window (1878), her first Almanack (1883), and Morley's Universal Library (1883). George Routledge died in 1888. Routledge and Sons was reconstructed under Arthur E Franklin of Keyser & Co banking house, in collaboration with William Sonnenschein and Laurie Magnus, in 1902. The firm of J C Nimmo Ltd, founded in 1879 by John C Nimmo (d 1899) and publisher of fine scholarly editions, was taken over by Routledge & Sons in 1903. Cecil A Franklin, son of Arthur Franklin, entered Routledge & Sons in 1906.
The firm of H S King & Co was formed in 1868 and Henry S King introduced the International Scientific Series in 1871. His business was purchased by Charles Kegan Paul (King's literary adviser since 1874) in 1877, when Alfred Trench joined as a partner. Kegan Paul, Trench and Co, formed in 1878, continued to publish the list begun by King, who died in 1879. Kegan Paul published R L Stevenson's An Inland Voyage (1878), signed up George Meredith in 1879, and published Sir James Knowles' 19th Century Review the same year, its other publications including Henry George's Progress and Poverty (1880), Last Journals of General Gordon (1885), and The Silence of Dean Maitland by Maxwell Gray (Miss Tuttiett).
Nicholas Trübner started his business in 1851, its publications including Bibliographical Guide to American Literature (1855), the Record (started in 1865), Samuel Butler's Erewhon (1872), the Oriental Series (started in 1872), Catalogue of Dictionaries and Grammars of the Principal Languages of the World (1872), and Sir Edwin Arnold's Light of Asia (1879). Trübner died in 1884 and in 1889 Messrs Trübner & Co and also George Redway joined Kegan Paul, Trench & Co, amalgamated and converted by Horatio Bottomley into Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co Ltd, although Alfred Trench fell ill and resigned that same year. The firm removed to Paternoster House, Charing Cross Road, in 1891. In 1895 Kegan Paul's profits fell and its directors resigned, whereupon Arthur Waugh took over management of the firm. Charles Kegan Paul retired in 1899 and died in 1902.
Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co were incorporated with Routledge and Sons to form Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd, with Cecil Franklin and Sir William Crookes among the directors, in 1912.
Repository
Archival history
The usual form of record-keeping used by all the firms was that of a dual series of files called Publication Books and Publication Account Books. Publication Books, giving details of print orders, binding orders, paper cost, reprinting cost and advertising, are arranged by the title of the work produced and the date of the first edition, with subsequent editions on the same page until the page was filled, when a new entry was begun further on. Publication Account Books give a detailed profit and loss account of each new volume published and their arrangement follows the pattern of the Publication Books. Confidential stock books from 1948 are retained by Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd. Correspondence once held at University College London was transferred to Reading University Library in 1988.
GB 0103 ROUTLEDGE 1850-1984 Collection (fonds) 208 volumes, 166 boxes, 32 files, 2 card indexes George Routledge & Co , founded 1851 , publishers
Routledge, Warne and Routledge , named 1858 , publishers
George Routledge & Sons , named 1865 , publishers
Trübner & Co , founded 1851 , publishers
H S King & Co , founded 1868 , publishers
J C Nimmo Ltd , founded 1879 , publishers
Kegan Paul, Trench & Co , formed 1878 , publishers
Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co , named 1889 , publishers
Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd , formed 1912 , publishers
George Routledge set up in business as a retail bookseller with his brother-in-law W H Warne as assistant, and in 1836 published his first (unsuccessful) book, The Beauties of Gilsand (a guidebook), moving to no 36 Soho Square in 1843. W H Warne was taken into partnership and the Railway Library of cheap reprints of works of fiction begun in 1848. Frederick Warne, W H Warne's brother, was taken into partnership and the firm of George Routledge and Co was founded in 1851, removing to no 2 Farringdon Street in 1852, when the firm published Uncle Tom's Cabin. Founded on the success of cheap editions of works of fiction, the firm rapidly expanded into the reprint market, catering for the growing literate population of the Victorian age. Routledge and Co opened a New York branch in 1854. Robert Warne Routledge, George Routledge's son, entered the partnership in 1858 and the firm was restyled Routledge, Warne & Routledge. W H Warne died in 1859. In 1862 Every Boy's Magazine, edited by Edmund Routledge (George Routledge's son), was started. The firm entered a contract with Lord Tennyson in 1863. Frederick Warne left the firm, Edmund Routledge became a partner, and the firm was renamed George Routledge and Sons, removing to no 7 The Broadway, Ludgate, in 1865. Routledge and Sons' publications included Kate Greenaway's Under the Window (1878), her first Almanack (1883), and Morley's Universal Library (1883). George Routledge died in 1888. Routledge and Sons was reconstructed under Arthur E Franklin of Keyser & Co banking house, in collaboration with William Sonnenschein and Laurie Magnus, in 1902. The firm of J C Nimmo Ltd, founded in 1879 by John C Nimmo (d 1899) and publisher of fine scholarly editions, was taken over by Routledge & Sons in 1903. Cecil A Franklin, son of Arthur Franklin, entered Routledge & Sons in 1906.
The firm of H S King & Co was formed in 1868 and Henry S King introduced the International Scientific Series in 1871. His business was purchased by Charles Kegan Paul (King's literary adviser since 1874) in 1877, when Alfred Trench joined as a partner. Kegan Paul, Trench and Co, formed in 1878, continued to publish the list begun by King, who died in 1879. Kegan Paul published R L Stevenson's An Inland Voyage (1878), signed up George Meredith in 1879, and published Sir James Knowles' 19th Century Review the same year, its other publications including Henry George's Progress and Poverty (1880), Last Journals of General Gordon (1885), and The Silence of Dean Maitland by Maxwell Gray (Miss Tuttiett).
Nicholas Trübner started his business in 1851, its publications including Bibliographical Guide to American Literature (1855), the Record (started in 1865), Samuel Butler's Erewhon (1872), the Oriental Series (started in 1872), Catalogue of Dictionaries and Grammars of the Principal Languages of the World (1872), and Sir Edwin Arnold's Light of Asia (1879). Trübner died in 1884 and in 1889 Messrs Trübner & Co and also George Redway joined Kegan Paul, Trench & Co, amalgamated and converted by Horatio Bottomley into Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co Ltd, although Alfred Trench fell ill and resigned that same year. The firm removed to Paternoster House, Charing Cross Road, in 1891. In 1895 Kegan Paul's profits fell and its directors resigned, whereupon Arthur Waugh took over management of the firm. Charles Kegan Paul retired in 1899 and died in 1902.
Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co were incorporated with Routledge and Sons to form Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd, with Cecil Franklin and Sir William Crookes among the directors, in 1912.
The usual form of record-keeping used by all the firms was that of a dual series of files called Publication Books and Publication Account Books. Publication Books, giving details of print orders, binding orders, paper cost, reprinting cost and advertising, are arranged by the title of the work produced and the date of the first edition, with subsequent editions on the same page until the page was filled, when a new entry was begun further on. Publication Account Books give a detailed profit and loss account of each new volume published and their arrangement follows the pattern of the Publication Books. Confidential stock books from 1948 are retained by Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd. Correspondence once held at University College London was transferred to Reading University Library in 1988.
The archives were deposited by Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd on permanent loan in 1975. Ten Publishing Journals were deposited by Routledge in 1988. Further records were transferred from Reading University Library in 1988.
Records, 1850-1984, of Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd and its predecessors.
Records of George Routledge & Co comprise six Publication Books, 1850-1902, with imperfect indexes; ten Publishing Journals, 1902-1948, containing publishing details of books first published between 1902 and 1930, including details of subsequent editions, and all containing letters and notes referring to the publications list; five volumes of contracts, 1853-1899; four Wage Books, 1869-1946, two of them indexed; Book of the Year 1897, described as a chronicle of the times and a record of events, mainly comprising letters of thanks to Edmund Routledge from or on behalf of recipients of his new work of that name, including the Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII), Lord Salisbury, and the Archbishop of Canterbury (Frederick Temple), and also including copies of a Sketch interview with Routledge, 1898, with a photograph of him; volume of miscellaneous sales extracts, 1898-1905; four Indexes, 1904-1914, giving a secondary arrangement of reprints of works according to their series or library.
Records of J C Nimmo Ltd comprise a folder of contracts with related correspondence, 1889-1904; notes assessing the value of bookstock near the time of the merger with Routledge, c1904.
Records of Nicholas Trübner comprise five Publication Books, 1851-1897; eight Publication Account Books, 1854-1893.
Records of Henry S King, continued in use under Kegan Paul, Trench & Co, and of Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co Ltd comprise nine Publication Books, 1871-1912; seven Publication Account Books, 1877-1883; three Publication Ledgers: Royalty and Commission Accounts, 1882-1893, 1896-1932, indexed; three undated Indexes to the Publication and Publication Account Books, two arranged by author, one by title; contracts with authors, 1871-1911, arranged alphabetically; 36 Publication Account Books to various categories of publications, 1883-1914; nine Print and Paper books, 1882-1915, indexed; two Sheet Stock & Binding Books, 1890-1907, indexed.
Records of Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd comprise 59 Stock Books, 1902-1948, including ten annual Commission Stock Books, 1912-1922; five Quire Stock Books, 1902-1937; ten Royalty Accounts, 1906-1939; two undated General Indexes; 13 volumes of Trade Accounts, giving details of business with British and foreign booksellers, 1933-1952; one volume of Bills Receivable, 1951; one Petty Cash book, 1953-1963; one box of Keyser & Co Account Books, 1928-1958; four boxes of book reviews, 1934-1956; one file of dividend warrants, 1950-1952; one box of miscellaneous catalogues, 1964-1973; nine boxes of undated prospectuses; one file of Louise Heilger's Course in Letter-writing, an undated manuscript; three packets of undated photographic plates.
Printed catalogues to published works, partial before 1912 but almost complete thereafter, comprise 41 volumes for George Routledge & Co, 1852-1909; seven volumes for Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co, c1877-1910; three volumes for Nicholas Trübner [1869], 1882, 1888; 57 volumes for Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1912-1973.
The records include no copybooks of general correspondence nor letters from authors except those attached to contracts.
Further records of Routledge & Kegan Paul (the second deposit), dating mainly from the 20th century, include minutes of Directors' meetings, 1902-1953 (6 volumes); register of members from 1905 (1 volume); typescript volumes recording dates of publication, 1900s-1960s (11 volumes); two card indexes with details of titles, 1950s-1970s; minutes of editorial meetings, 1979-1983 (1 file); printed flyers for books (1 box); book reviews, 1930s-1940s (1 box); papers relating to exhibitions, 1968-1970 (1 file); typescript minutes of sales seminars, 1977-1980 (1 file); typescript company newsletters, 1974-1983 (1 file); files relating to accounts and agents, largely dating from the 1970s (3 boxes); American correspondence, 1960s (4 boxes); correspondence, including sales, 1960s-1970s (3 boxes); financial records including royalty statements, 1970s (13 boxes); two sequences of royalty accounts, to the 1970s (37 boxes); files of correspondence on authors' royalties, 1970s (4 boxes); files on foreign royalties, 1970s (3 boxes). 'Historical documents' (3 boxes) comprise miscellaneous papers relating to the history of the company, including various contracts relating to company business, 1878-1903, and 20th-century staff contracts and agreements relating to premises; a register of seals, 1902-1946; cuttings on the history of the company, 1888-1951, including obituaries of founders of the constituent companies; a printing block for a diagram of the company structure. Financial records include ledgers, journals, payroll and accounts.
The original deposit and the Publishing Journals received in 1988 are arranged according to the firm which administered them and comprise the following sections: George Routledge and Co (Ref: 1-17); J C Nimmo Ltd (Ref: 18-23); Routledge & Kegan Paul 1913-1948 (Ref: 24-99); Nicholas Trübner (Ref: 100-113); Henry S King (Ref: 114-135); Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co (Ref: 136-206); Routledge & Kegan Paul 1948-1973 (Ref: 282-326). They include Printed Catalogues for George Routledge and Co (Ref: 207-247), Kegan Paul (Ref: 248-254), Nicholas Trübner (Ref: 113), and Routledge and Kegan Paul (Ref: 255-326). The later, uncatalogued, deposit, is as received by University College London.
Open. The original deposit and the Publishing Journals are open, although some Printed Catalogues (details of which are available at University College London Special Collections) were temporarily returned to the owning company in 1996. The second deposit is restricted, pending cataloguing
Readers wishing to publish or quote from the records should refer to Routledge (now part of the Taylor and Francis Group).
English
The Book of the Year 1897 (Ref: 12b) is in a fragile condition.
The first deposit is described in Gillian Furlong, The Archives of Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd (1853-1973): a handlist (The Library, University College London, Occasional Publication no 6, 1978). Besides listing the papers, this includes an outline history of the firms; appendices providing detailed lists of the Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co Ltd Publication Account Books (Appendix I) and of the firms' Printed Catalogues (Appendix II); and a concordance of the archival references to the index of the microfilm publication of parts of the archives (Appendix III). Further descriptive detail is inserted in the copy of the handlist at University College London Special Collections, including a list of the Publishing Journals. The second deposit (almost half of the papers) is not fully catalogued and only a summary list exists.
Early groups in the archive (items 1-11, 13-15, 100-206, totalling 33 reels) have been microfilmed by Chadwyck-Healey Ltd in their series on the history of publishing and the book trade. Copies are available at the British Library, catalogue no Mic B 53/28-33 (George Routledge & Co, 1853-1902) and B 53/71-99 (Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Henry S King), with an introduction by Brian Maidment. See Sandy Merritt, Index of Authors and Titles: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Henry S King 1858-1912 (Chadwyck-Healey Ltd, Bishops Stortford, 1974), compiled from and giving references to the microfilm copy.
Reading University Library holds records of Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd, 1935-1990, including correspondence (Ref: MS 1489), which complements the material at University College London. Durham University Library, Archives and Special Collections, Palace Green Section, holds George Routledge's letters to Lord Carlisle, 1879-1885 (Ref: II 25,27). Hertfordshire Archives and Local Studies holds his letters to Lord Lytton, 1853-1871 (Ref: D/EK). Cambridge University, King's College Archive Centre, holds 129 letters from Charles Kegan Paul and his firm to Oscar Browning, 1860-1911 (Ref: OB). Cambridge University, Trinity College Library, holds 23 letters from Kegan Paul to Henry Sidgwick, 1865-1900 (Ref: Add Ms c95/4-26).
Sources: Gillian Furlong, The Archives of Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd (1853-1973): a handlist (The Library, University College London, Occasional Publication no 6, 1978); Routledge and Kegan Paul: 150 Years of Great Publishing [1986]; National Register of Archives; Reading University Library website. Compiled by Rachel Kemsley as part of the RSLP AIM25 project. Compiled in compliance with General International Standard Archival Description, ISAD(G), second edition, 2000; National Council on Archives Rules for the Construction of Personal, Place and Corporate Names, 1997. Jun 2001 Accounting Advertising Authors Book industry Book reviews Books Booksellers Bookselling Catalogues Cecil , Robert Arthur Talbot , Gascoyne- , 1830-1903 , 3rd Marquis of Salisbury , statesman x Salisbury , 3rd Marquis of x Gascoyne-Cecil , Robert Arthur Talbot Communication personnel Communication process Communication skills Editing Editors Edward VII , 1841-1910 , King of Great Britain and Ireland Enterprises Europe Finance Financial administration Financial statements George Routledge & Co , founded 1851 , publishers George Routledge & Sons , named 1865 , publishers Heilger , Louise , fl ? late 19th cent , teacher of letter writing H S King & Co , founded 1868 , publishers J C Nimmo Ltd , founded 1879 , publishers Kegan Paul, Trench & Co , formed 1878 , publishers Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co , named 1889 , publishers Keyser & Co , banking house King , Henry S , d 1879 , publisher Letter writing Literary agents Literary criticism Literature Marketing Markets Nimmo , John C , d 1899 , publisher North America Paul , Charles , Kegan , 1828-1902 , publisher x Kegan Paul , Charles Personnel Personnel management Photographs Publications Publishers Publishing Publishing industry Routledge , Edmund , fl 1862-1865 , publisher Routledge , George , 1812-1888 , publisher Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd , formed 1912 , publishers Routledge , Robert Warne , fl 1858-1865 , publisher Routledge, Warne and Routledge , named 1858 , publishers Secondary documents Temple , Frederick , 1821-1902 , Archbishop of Canterbury Trade Trübner & Co , founded 1851 , publishers Trübner , Nicholas , 1817-1884 , publisher x Trubner , Nicholas Trench , Alfred , fl 1877-1889 , publisher UK USA Visual materials Wages Warne , Frederick , fl 1851-1865 , publisher Warne , W H , d 1859 , publisher Western Europe Writers Writing Communications media Information sciences People by occupation People London England Organization and administration Health services administration Public administration Government
Immediate source of acquisition or transfer
The archives were deposited by Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd on permanent loan in 1975. Ten Publishing Journals were deposited by Routledge in 1988. Further records were transferred from Reading University Library in 1988.
Content and structure area
Scope and content
Records, 1850-1984, of Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd and its predecessors.
Records of George Routledge & Co comprise six Publication Books, 1850-1902, with imperfect indexes; ten Publishing Journals, 1902-1948, containing publishing details of books first published between 1902 and 1930, including details of subsequent editions, and all containing letters and notes referring to the publications list; five volumes of contracts, 1853-1899; four Wage Books, 1869-1946, two of them indexed; Book of the Year 1897, described as a chronicle of the times and a record of events, mainly comprising letters of thanks to Edmund Routledge from or on behalf of recipients of his new work of that name, including the Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII), Lord Salisbury, and the Archbishop of Canterbury (Frederick Temple), and also including copies of a Sketch interview with Routledge, 1898, with a photograph of him; volume of miscellaneous sales extracts, 1898-1905; four Indexes, 1904-1914, giving a secondary arrangement of reprints of works according to their series or library.
Records of J C Nimmo Ltd comprise a folder of contracts with related correspondence, 1889-1904; notes assessing the value of bookstock near the time of the merger with Routledge, c1904.
Records of Nicholas Trübner comprise five Publication Books, 1851-1897; eight Publication Account Books, 1854-1893.
Records of Henry S King, continued in use under Kegan Paul, Trench & Co, and of Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co Ltd comprise nine Publication Books, 1871-1912; seven Publication Account Books, 1877-1883; three Publication Ledgers: Royalty and Commission Accounts, 1882-1893, 1896-1932, indexed; three undated Indexes to the Publication and Publication Account Books, two arranged by author, one by title; contracts with authors, 1871-1911, arranged alphabetically; 36 Publication Account Books to various categories of publications, 1883-1914; nine Print and Paper books, 1882-1915, indexed; two Sheet Stock & Binding Books, 1890-1907, indexed.
Records of Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd comprise 59 Stock Books, 1902-1948, including ten annual Commission Stock Books, 1912-1922; five Quire Stock Books, 1902-1937; ten Royalty Accounts, 1906-1939; two undated General Indexes; 13 volumes of Trade Accounts, giving details of business with British and foreign booksellers, 1933-1952; one volume of Bills Receivable, 1951; one Petty Cash book, 1953-1963; one box of Keyser & Co Account Books, 1928-1958; four boxes of book reviews, 1934-1956; one file of dividend warrants, 1950-1952; one box of miscellaneous catalogues, 1964-1973; nine boxes of undated prospectuses; one file of Louise Heilger's Course in Letter-writing, an undated manuscript; three packets of undated photographic plates.
Printed catalogues to published works, partial before 1912 but almost complete thereafter, comprise 41 volumes for George Routledge & Co, 1852-1909; seven volumes for Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co, c1877-1910; three volumes for Nicholas Trübner [1869], 1882, 1888; 57 volumes for Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1912-1973.
The records include no copybooks of general correspondence nor letters from authors except those attached to contracts.
Further records of Routledge & Kegan Paul (the second deposit), dating mainly from the 20th century, include minutes of Directors' meetings, 1902-1953 (6 volumes); register of members from 1905 (1 volume); typescript volumes recording dates of publication, 1900s-1960s (11 volumes); two card indexes with details of titles, 1950s-1970s; minutes of editorial meetings, 1979-1983 (1 file); printed flyers for books (1 box); book reviews, 1930s-1940s (1 box); papers relating to exhibitions, 1968-1970 (1 file); typescript minutes of sales seminars, 1977-1980 (1 file); typescript company newsletters, 1974-1983 (1 file); files relating to accounts and agents, largely dating from the 1970s (3 boxes); American correspondence, 1960s (4 boxes); correspondence, including sales, 1960s-1970s (3 boxes); financial records including royalty statements, 1970s (13 boxes); two sequences of royalty accounts, to the 1970s (37 boxes); files of correspondence on authors' royalties, 1970s (4 boxes); files on foreign royalties, 1970s (3 boxes). 'Historical documents' (3 boxes) comprise miscellaneous papers relating to the history of the company, including various contracts relating to company business, 1878-1903, and 20th-century staff contracts and agreements relating to premises; a register of seals, 1902-1946; cuttings on the history of the company, 1888-1951, including obituaries of founders of the constituent companies; a printing block for a diagram of the company structure. Financial records include ledgers, journals, payroll and accounts.
Appraisal, destruction and scheduling
Accruals
System of arrangement
The original deposit and the Publishing Journals received in 1988 are arranged according to the firm which administered them and comprise the following sections: George Routledge and Co (Ref: 1-17); J C Nimmo Ltd (Ref: 18-23); Routledge & Kegan Paul 1913-1948 (Ref: 24-99); Nicholas Trübner (Ref: 100-113); Henry S King (Ref: 114-135); Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co (Ref: 136-206); Routledge & Kegan Paul 1948-1973 (Ref: 282-326). They include Printed Catalogues for George Routledge and Co (Ref: 207-247), Kegan Paul (Ref: 248-254), Nicholas Trübner (Ref: 113), and Routledge and Kegan Paul (Ref: 255-326). The later, uncatalogued, deposit, is as received by University College London.
Conditions of access and use area
Conditions governing access
Open. The original deposit and the Publishing Journals are open, although some Printed Catalogues (details of which are available at University College London Special Collections) were temporarily returned to the owning company in 1996. The second deposit is restricted, pending cataloguing
Conditions governing reproduction
Readers wishing to publish or quote from the records should refer to Routledge (now part of the Taylor and Francis Group).
Language of material
- English
Script of material
- Latin
Language and script notes
English
Physical characteristics and technical requirements
Finding aids
The first deposit is described in Gillian Furlong, The Archives of Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd (1853-1973): a handlist (The Library, University College London, Occasional Publication no 6, 1978). Besides listing the papers, this includes an outline history of the firms; appendices providing detailed lists of the Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co Ltd Publication Account Books (Appendix I) and of the firms' Printed Catalogues (Appendix II); and a concordance of the archival references to the index of the microfilm publication of parts of the archives (Appendix III). Further descriptive detail is inserted in the copy of the handlist at University College London Special Collections, including a list of the Publishing Journals. The second deposit (almost half of the papers) is not fully catalogued and only a summary list exists.
Allied materials area
Existence and location of originals
Existence and location of copies
Early groups in the archive (items 1-11, 13-15, 100-206, totalling 33 reels) have been microfilmed by Chadwyck-Healey Ltd in their series on the history of publishing and the book trade. Copies are available at the British Library, catalogue no Mic B 53/28-33 (George Routledge & Co, 1853-1902) and B 53/71-99 (Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Henry S King), with an introduction by Brian Maidment. See Sandy Merritt, Index of Authors and Titles: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Henry S King 1858-1912 (Chadwyck-Healey Ltd, Bishops Stortford, 1974), compiled from and giving references to the microfilm copy.
Related units of description
Reading University Library holds records of Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd, 1935-1990, including correspondence (Ref: MS 1489), which complements the material at University College London. Durham University Library, Archives and Special Collections, Palace Green Section, holds George Routledge's letters to Lord Carlisle, 1879-1885 (Ref: II 25,27). Hertfordshire Archives and Local Studies holds his letters to Lord Lytton, 1853-1871 (Ref: D/EK). Cambridge University, King's College Archive Centre, holds 129 letters from Charles Kegan Paul and his firm to Oscar Browning, 1860-1911 (Ref: OB). Cambridge University, Trinity College Library, holds 23 letters from Kegan Paul to Henry Sidgwick, 1865-1900 (Ref: Add Ms c95/4-26).
Publication note
Notes area
Note
Alternative identifier(s)
Access points
Subject access points
Place access points
Name access points
Genre access points
Description control area
Description identifier
Institution identifier
Rules and/or conventions used
Compiled in compliance with General International Standard Archival Description, ISAD(G), second edition, 2000; National Council on Archives Rules for the Construction of Personal, Place and Corporate Names, 1997.
Status
Level of detail
Dates of creation revision deletion
Language(s)
- English